The powerful computers we see today have come from a long journey, and the man behind them is Seymour Cray, who devoted his life to creating the world's largest, quickest, and most powerful computers.
With an eye on expanding its high-performance computer offerings, Cray Inc. said yesterday that it’s acquiring Burnaby, British Columbia-based OctigaBay Systems Corp. In an announcement, Seattle-based ...
Michael Kanellos is editor at large at CNET News.com, where he covers hardware, research and development, start-ups and the tech industry overseas. A man is currently selling a partially complete EL98 ...
The competition between the U.S. and China for supercomputer supremacy is entering a new phase, with the U.S. poised to protect its lead on the backs of two new machines from Seattle-based Cray. The ...
Intel Corp. and Cray Inc. today said they have launched a joint effort to develop new multicore technologies as part of an effort to build multi-petascale systems. The chip manufacturer signed a ...
MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. — Sun Microsystems is inviting competitors IBM Corp. and Cray Inc. to collaborate on defining a new computer language it claims could bolster performance and productivity for ...
Cray plans to create a new supercomputing platform combining four types of processing capability in a blade server architecture. Cray Inc. plans to create a new supercomputing platform combining four ...
Nominations for the 2010 Seymour Cray Computer Engineering Award, the Sidney Fernbach Memorial Award, and the Ken Kennedy Award are now being accepted, with a final submission deadline of Thursday, ...
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