- PlayStation 3 cluster - Wikipedia
In November 2010, the Air Force Research Laboratory created a powerful supercomputer, nicknamed the "Condor Cluster", by connecting together 1,760 processors with 168 GPUs and 84 coordinating servers in a parallel array capable of 500 trillion floating-point operations per second (500 TFLOPS) [22]
- US Air Force connects 1,760 PlayStation 3s to build supercomputer
(Phys org)—About the 33rd largest supercomputer in the world right now is the US Air Force Research Laboratory's (AFRL) newest system, which has a core made of 1,760 Sony PlayStation 3
- When The Air Force Needed A Supercomputer, They Built It Out Of PS3 . . .
For the U S Air Force, financial constraints are not an issue, but they too built a PS3 supercomputer, one that used 10 times the number of consoles as Khanna’s system They assembled 1,760 PS3 consoles into a supercomputer called the Condor Cluster
- How The US Military Used Sonys PS3 To Build One Of The . . . - SlashGear
Back in 2010, as the PS3 was cementing its legacy as a video gaming powerhouse, the U S Air Force used the console as the basis for a versatile computing tool
- 1760 PlayStation 3s were joined together to make a supercomputer in . . .
A fun bit of trivia about that particular console is that in 2010, the US Air Force built the 33rd most powerful supercomputer in the world by building a PlayStation 3 cluster out of
- Culture. Mil - Playstation 3 Cluster :: Ft. Gordon :: US Army MWR
Nicknamed the “Condor Cluster,” the US Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL) created a supercomputer with a core made of 1,760 Sony PlayStation 3 (PS3) consoles
- Ever heard of a supercomputer made out of PlayStations?
Ever heard of a supercomputer made out of PlayStations? Discover how the U S Air Force built a supercomputer using 1,760 PlayStation 3 consoles, revolutionizing satellite imagery and
- 1,760 PS3 game consoles once formed the worlds 33rd-strongest . . .
There was an interesting little-known fact about this console: in 2010, the U S Air Force built a cluster of 1,760 PS3s, forming the world's 33rd-strongest supercomputer at the time, which was specifically used to process high-definition satellite images
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