A Japanese computer has taken first place on the Top 500 supercomputer list,  ending China's reign at the top after just six months. At 8.16  petaflops, the K computer is more powerful than the next five systems  combined.
The K computer's performance was measured using 68,544 SPARC64 VIIIfx  CPUs each with eight cores, for a total of 548,352 cores, almost twice  as many as any other system on the Top500 list. The computer is still  under construction, and when it enters service in November 2012 will  have more than 80,000 SPARC64 VIIIfx CPUs according to its manufacturer,  Fujitsu.
Japan's ascension to the top means that the Chinese Tianhe-1A  supercomputer, which took the number 1 position in November last year,  is now in second spot with its 2.57 petaflops. But China continues to  grow the number of systems it has on the list, up from 42 to 62 systems.  The change at the top also means that Jaguar, built for the US  Department of Energy (DOE), is bumped down to third place.
The latest iteration of the bi-annual list was released Monday at the 2011 International Supercomputing Conference.
Unlike other recent supercomputers, the K computer doesn't use  graphics processors or other accelerators. It uses the most power, but  is also one of the most energy efficient systems on the list, according  to Top500.org. The supercomputer is installed at the RIKEN Advanced  Institute for Computational Science (AICS) in Kobe. When complete, it is  intended to run at over 10 petaflops.
This is the first time Japan has had the most powerful supercomputer  since the country's Earth Simulator was surpassed by the DOE's IBM  BlueGene/L and by Nasa's Columbia in November 2004.
For the first time, all of the top 10 systems achieved performance  over 1 petaflop, although they are the only systems on the list that  reach that level. The US has five systems in the top 10, Japan and China  have two each and France has one.
The DOE's Roadrunner, the first system to break the petaflop barrier  in June 2008, is now in tenth place. The performance of computers on the  list is measured using the Linpack benchmark, a set of routines that solve linear equations.
The last system on the new list was at position 262 six months ago,  meaning almost 48 percent of the list has changed in the last six  months, and the turnover rate has steadily increased during the last few  lists, according to Top500.org which publishes the list. While  performance at the top is advancing by leaps and bounds, movements lower  down the list are more modest. The entry point for the top 100  increased to 88.92 teraflops from 75.76 teraflops six months ago.
IBM is the dominant manufacturer on the list with 213 systems in the Top 500, compared to HP with 153.
Intel continues to provide the processors for a majority of the  systems on list, followed by AMD and IBM. Intel's Westmere processors  are now used by 178 systems, up from 56 systems 6 months ago.
The Top 500 list is compiled by Hans Meuer of the University of  Mannheim, Erich Strohmaier and Horst Simon of NERSC/Lawrence Berkeley  National Laboratory and Jack Dongarra of the University of Tennessee.
By Mikael Ricknäs taken from http://news.techworld.com/data-centre/3286946/japan-builds-worlds-most-powerful-supercomputer/
 
 
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