Roadrunner supercomputer puts research at a new scale
On Saturday, Los Alamos researchers used PetaVision to model more than a billion visual neurons surpassing the scale of 1 quadrillion computations a second (a petaflop/s). On Monday scientists used PetaVision to reach a new computing performance record of 1.144 petaflop/s. The achievement throws open the door to eventually achieving human-like cognitive performance in electronic computers. PetaVision only requires single precision arithmetic, whereas the official LINPACK code used to officially verify Roadrunner’s speed uses double precision arithmetic.
“Roadrunner ushers in a new era for science at Los Alamos National Laboratory,†said Terry Wallace, associate director for Science, Technology and Engineering at Los Alamos. “Just a week after formal introduction of the machine to the world, we are already doing computational tasks that existed only in the realm of imagination a year ago.â€
PetaVision models the human visual system—mimicking more than 1 billion visual neurons and trillions of synapses.
Both my phil mind and phil tech class are ridiculously out of date.
Just because we do it faster doesn’t mean we’re doing it better.