Frontier, the barrier-breaking supercomputer hosted at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, is no longer the fastest in the world.
El Capitan dethrones Frontier as the world's fastest supercomputer with 1.74 exaFLOPS of double precision performance.
El Capitan” takes top spot in global supercomputer race, helping tackle daunting challenges in national security and science.
Newcomer El Capitan unseated five-time No. 1 system Frontier and is now the third exascale machine in the TOP500 ...
The supercomputer, housed at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, achieves 1.742 exaFLOPs. China's machines could be even ...
Now Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) in California has created El Capitan, which is capable of 1.742 exaFLOPS, ...
Every couple of years, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory gets to install the world’s fastest supercomputer. And ...
AMD powers the El Capitan supercomputer at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) with Instinct MI300A APUs, the ...
El Capitan’s data processing abilities represent a major advancement in scientific research, particularly for managing the ...
The newly unveiled El Capitan system can perform more than 1.7 quintillion floating point operations per second.
LLNL launched El Capitan, the world's fastest supercomputer, to support the U.S. nuclear stockpile without testing.
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL), in collaboration with the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA), ...