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Japan's "K Computer" does 10 quadrillion calculations a second [^]
On Wednesday, Japanese IT giant Fujitsu and the government-funded RIKEN research lab announced that the supercomputer they’ve built in Kobe can speed through 10.51 quadrillion floating point operations per second.
Known as the "K Computer," this is the first megamachine to achieve 10 quadrillion operations a second — aka 10 petaflops — and it will be named the world’s fastest supercomputer when the official Top 500 list is unveiled next week.
// ♫ 99 little bugs in the code,
// 99 bugs in the code
// We fix a bug, compile it again
// 101 little bugs in the code ♫
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Sharing and reusing code is a big challenge. We've solved it.
Source: MSDN Magazine
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Everything you ever wanted to know about math and F#... and then some.
Source: TomasP.Net
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Resistance is futile. You will be assimilated... by the cloud.
Source: Yield Thought
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"Ten millimeter with over-and-under thirty millimeter pump action grenade launcher..."
Source: TechRepublic
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Can ARM wrestle its way into the server market?
Source: GigaOM
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Allard vs. Sinofsky, the final battle.
Source: CNET
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"Always... no, no... never... forget to check your references."
Source: The Endeavour
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The ability to befuddle a user is insignificant next to the potential of the Force.
Source: A List Apart
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Excuse me mister, can you tell me the <data>?
Source: Wired
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From responsive Web design to future friendly thinking.
Source: LukeW
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Hey, I'm just the messenger!
Source: CNET
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Bigger is better?
Source: prog21
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