From: jya@pipeline.com (John Young)
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: 7ad6d20b6cbcc610d3c1373df91e181f47d2ac8cca0b366d82d4f3d3ae0284db
Message ID: <199609291316.NAA15248@pipe4.ny2.usa.pipeline.com>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1996-09-29 14:58:47 UTC
Raw Date: Sun, 29 Sep 1996 22:58:47 +0800
From: jya@pipeline.com (John Young)
Date: Sun, 29 Sep 1996 22:58:47 +0800
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: PET_ard
Message-ID: <199609291316.NAA15248@pipe4.ny2.usa.pipeline.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
Sci, 20 Sept 1996:
"Redefining the Supercomputer"
The word is petaflops, computer jargon for 1000
trillion computations per second. Think of it as a
year's labor for a powerful workstation compressed
into 30 seconds. Think of it, also, as 1000 times the
speed of the current computing benchmark, a trillion
operations a second -- teraflops -- which is on the
verge of becoming a reality at Sandia National
Laboratories after 5 years of effort. Now the federal
government's high-performance computing program is
aiming for a petaflops, and researchers are exploring
new technologies, sketching new architectures, and
pondering the software challenge of harnessing this
staggering computational power.
The NSA is a petaflops enthusiast, says a researcher,
but "we're not allowed to think about their
applications."
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http://jya.com/petard.txt (20 kb)
PET_ard
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