Wednesday, December 06, 2023

Xinhua: China launches new homegrown supercomputer




Xinhua: China launches new homegrown supercomputer



A Chinese flag is displayed next to a ‘Made in China’ sign seen on a printed circuit board with semiconductor chips, in this illustration picture taken February 17, 2023. China unveiled a new domestically developed supercomputing system today that state news agency Xinhua said was many times more powerful than a previous version. — Reuters pic

Wednesday, 06 Dec 2023 9:13 PM MYT



BEIJING, Dec 6 — China unveiled a new domestically developed supercomputing system today that state news agency Xinhua said was many times more powerful than a previous version. The supercomputing system called “Tianhe Xingyi”, was unveiled by the National Supercomputing Centre in Guangzhou, at an industry event in the capital of southern China’s Guangdong Province, Xinhua said.


Xinhua did not give more details on the new system’s computing power.

But the report cited Lu Yutong, director of the centre, as saying that the new computer used domestically designed architecture and has outperformed Tianhe-2, one of China’s fastest supercomputers, in capacities such as CPU computing power, networking, storage, and applications.


Tianhe-2 is being developed by the National University of Defence Technology (NUDT) and is hosted at the National Supercomputing Centre in Guangzhou.


Tianhe-2 topped a list of the world’s 500 fastest systems for three consecutive years from 2013 but dropped out of the top position in 2016, the year after the US government placed the NUDT on a blacklist that eliminated the university’s access to the Intel processors it uses in its supercomputers.

Other prominent Chinese supercomputing systems include Sunway TaihuLight, developed by the National Supercomputing Centre in Wuxi, which ranked seventh on the June 2023 list while Tianhe-2 placed tenth. — Reuters

2 comments:

  1. If they are anything like the disappointing batch of items my organisation purchased from a China company last month, nothing to shout about.

    "Made In China" is usually not a mark of Quality

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Mfer, if u paid peanut DON'T expect gold nugget!

      Truly cheapskate of the nth.

      Delete