Приклади вживання Blue gene Англійська мовою та їх переклад на Українською
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The IBM Blue Gene/ Q.
Blue Gene/ L Each Blue Gene/ P Compute.
The first racks of the Blue Gene/P shipped in fall 2007.
This Blue Gene/Q system uses 786,432 cores to hit 8.6 petaflops.
More recently she helped design software for IBM's Blue Gene supercomputer.
The Blue Gene/ L.
In November 2006,there were 27 computers on the TOP500 list using the Blue Gene/L architecture.
This is Blue Gene, the fastest computer in the world.
As of November 2006,there are 27 computers on the Top500 list using the Blue Gene/L architecture.
The IBM Blue Gene/Q, for instance, has 16 cores with 64 threads.
I estimate 10 to the 16 bits per second,which is actually about very similar to what Blue Gene does.
The project uses a Blue Gene supercomputer to model the columns.
Blue Gene/Q continues to expand and enhance the Blue Gene/L and/P architectures.
IBM built a prototype, called"Dawn", capable of 500 teraflops,using the Blue Gene/P design, to evaluate the Sequoia design.
A standard Blue Gene/P configuration will house 4,096 processors per rack.
The chip also integrates the logic for node-to-node communication,using the same network topologies as Blue Gene/L, but at more than twice the bandwidth.
Sequoia is a Blue Gene/Q design, based on previous Blue Gene designs.
Sequoia will be used primarily for nuclear weapons simulation,replacing the current Blue Gene/L and ASC Purple supercomputers at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.
In 2012, a 6-rack Blue Gene/P was installed at Rice University and will be jointly administered with the University of Sao Paulo.
A compute card contains a Blue Gene/P chip with 2 or 4 GB DRAM, comprising a"compute node".
It is the most powerful supercomputing centre for scientific research in Italy, as stated in the TOP500 list of the most powerful supercomputers in the world: Fermi,the supercomputing system IBM Blue Gene/Q installed in June 2012, and ranked at the 7th position on the list, in 2015 is ranked at the 23rd position.
IBM's Blue Gene supercomputers were awarded the National Medal of Technology and Innovation by U.S. President Barack Obama on September 18, 2009.
The third supercomputer design in the Blue Gene series, Blue Gene/Q has a peak performance of 20 Petaflops, reaching LINPACK benchmarks performance of 17 Petaflops.
A Blue Gene/P-System should reach about 0.35 GFLOPS/Watt and is therefore an order of magnitude more effective than a common x86 based supercomputer for a similar task.
By using many small, low-power, densely packaged chips, Blue Gene/P exceeded the power efficiency of other supercomputers of its generation, and at 371 MFLOPS/W Blue Gene/P installations ranked at or near the top of the Green500 lists in 2007-2008.
The first Blue Gene/P in the ASEAN region was installed in 2010 at the Universiti of Brunei Darussalam's research centre, the UBD-IBM Centre.
A 2-rack Blue Gene/P was installed in September 2008 in Sofia, Bulgaria, and is operated by the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences and Sofia University.
On November 12, 2007, the first Blue Gene/P installation, JUGENE, with 16 racks(16,384 nodes, 65,536 processors) was running at Forschungszentrum Jülich in Germany with a performance of 167 TFLOPS.
In June 2007, IBM unveiled Blue Gene/P, the second generation of the Blue Gene series of supercomputers and designed through a collaboration that included IBM, LLNL, and Argonne National Laboratory's Leadership Computing Facility.