It clocks in at 1.742 exaFLOPS.
It has 11,000 compute nodes and 5.4375 petabytes of memory.
Its now the most powerful computer in the world, and its here to help build nukes.
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory technicians Gage Holcomb (left) and Raymond Lagoc service an El Capitan compute blade.© Garry McLeod/Lawrence Livermore National Lab
El Capitans extraordinary computing capabilities will allow us to tackle complex challenges that were previously out of reach.
Its potential peak performance could rise as high as 2.79 exaFLOPS.
Both were also built by Hewlett-Packard Enterprise.
However, its more efficient than Auroras 26.15 gigaFLOPS per watt.
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Where Will All of Big Techs Nuclear Waste Go?
Nuclear waste is spread across 94 different nuclear sites in the U.S. and has no permanent home.
Big Tech is going to add more to the pile.