The international supercomputer race may soon have a new contender: Japan is reportedly eyeing the world's fastest-ever machine.
Reuters this week revealed
the country's plans to spend ¥19.5 billion ($173 million) on the
construction of a machine capable of making 130 quadrillion calculations
per second—or 130 petaflops.
For comparison, the world's current top-ranking supercomputers—Sunway
TaihuLight (China), Tianhe-2 (China, pictured), Titan Cray XK7
(US)—boast Linpack marks of 93 petaflops, 34 petaflops, and 24
petaflops, respectively.
In an attempt to win back the industry crown and keep
jobs in Japan, the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI) will
spend billions to construct the most nimble supercomputer in history.
The machine's processing power will be available for a fee to
organizations focused on driverless cars, robotics, and medical
diagnostics.
"As far as we know, there is nothing out there that is as fast,"
Satoshi Sekiguchi, a director general at Japan's National Institute of
Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST), where the
supercomputer will be built, told the news site.
Neither METI nor AIST immediately responded to PCMag's requests for comment.
According to the recent 48th TOP500 list,
Japan's fastest supercomputers—Fujitsu's Oakforest-PACS and K
computer—landed in sixth and seventh; the Fujitsu machines recorded
Linpack marks of 13.6 petaflops and 10.5 petaflops, respectively.
China and the US, however, are the countries to beat,
claiming 171 systems each in the latest rankings, accounting for
two-thirds of the list. Germany comes next with 32 systems, followed by
Japan (27), France (20), and the UK (17).
Nvidia, meanwhile, earlier this year unveiled
its DGX-1 supercomputer, which CEO Jen-Hsun Huang billed as the world's
first deep-learning supercomputer. Using eight Tesla P100 cores, the
$129,000 machine will deliver 17 petaflops of peak performance to
universities and hospitals engaging in AI research.
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