Polaris573
Senior Moderator
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- Feb 26, 2005
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Processor | LGA 775 Intel Q9550 2.8 Ghz |
---|---|
Motherboard | MSI P7N Diamond - 780i Chipset |
Cooling | Arctic Freezer |
Memory | 6GB G.Skill DDRII 800 4-4-3-5 |
Video Card(s) | Sapphire HD 7850 2 GB PCI-E |
Storage | 1 TB Seagate 32MB Cache, 250 GB Seagate 16MB Cache |
Display(s) | Acer X203w |
Case | Coolermaster Centurion 5 |
Audio Device(s) | Creative Sound Blaster X-Fi Xtreme Music |
Power Supply | OCZ StealthXStream 600 Watt |
Software | Windows 7 Ultimate x64 |
The just released TOP 500 Supercomputing ranking list verifies that the wide majority of today's systems are based on Intel multi-core processors and able to evaluate and calculate large volumes of data and complex algorithms very rapidly. 375 or 75 percent of the ranked supercomputers are based on Intel processors -- more than ever before. In the year 2000, only four - yes four - systems were based on Intel architecture, illustrating just how rapidly the leading processor architecture for supercomputers has been embraced. Intel's push into quad-core based systems is also well represented. In just over one and a half years since the first quad core processor, more than half (257 systems) now contain four-brained Intel chips.
View at TechPowerUp Main Site
View at TechPowerUp Main Site