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Your computer still too slow? Try this one…

Ernst-Jan Written on June 10, 2008 – 11:51 am
Ernst-Jan Pfauth, editor in chief

Nuclear weapons didn’t bring the world any joy so far, I think we can agree on that. But now there actually has emerged a positive side effect: world’s fasted computer. This beast is designed to run virtual tests of U.S. nukes and makes 1,000 trillion calculations per second while doing so.

nuclear weaponsReuters reports that the U.S. Department of Energy announced that the IBM Roadrunner supercomputer is the first one to achieve a petaflop of sustained performance. What a petaflop is? Good question! “Flop” is an acronym meaning floating-point operations per second. One petaflop is - hold on to yourself - 1,000 trillion computer calculations per second.

The department thinks of the supercomputer as a break-through - which is not so hard to imagine - and foresees a bright future, as they expect the Roadrunner to fight global warming and to open “new windows in the basic scientific research fields”.

This sounds all impressive, but I’d like to conclude with a terrific quote from the press release that really shows how incredible this new computer is. Here it comes:

To put this into perspective, if each of the 6 billion people on earth had a hand calculator and worked together on a calculation 24 hours per day, 365 days a year, it would take 46 years to do what Roadrunner would do in one day.

I hope you like that post!

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Internet greatest’s join up with OpenID

mistac Written on February 7, 2008 – 8:05 pm
Chris Obdam, Internet entrepreneur

OpenIDToday Microsoft, Yahoo, IBM, VeriSign, and Google have joined the OpenID Foundation as board members. The OpenID Foundation board is there to “to help promote, protect and enable the OpenID technologies and community”. OpenID is really exploding in the last couple of months. With Google and Yahoo! becoming official OpenID providers, the OpenID movement has grown to billions of users. Now the Big Five have announced to not only support OpenID as a provider but also actively help to develop the standard furthermore.

Earlier this year OpenID 2.0 has been released. This is a serious landmark in removing the burdon for web users to store loads of password and username combinations. Today there are over a quarter of a billion OpenIDs and well over 10,000 websites to accept them.

In Europe the OpenID Europe Foundation is gathering more and more local OpenID providers to team up. Snorri Giorgetti, founder of the OpenID Europe Foundation, says Europe now contains 17 OpenID providers, varying from France to Estonia. The European Foundation is not directly connected to the OpenID foundation but is there to promote OpenID in the member countries and to support the OpenID consumer websites on a technical level.

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