AI-Enabled Samsung Galaxy Z Series with Innovative Foldable Form Factor & Significantly Improved Screen Delivers New User Experiences Across Productivity, Communication & Creativity The…
Japan plans for a new crazy fast supercomputer to predict tsunamis
In news that is totally awesome, Japan’s science ministry has announced its plans to build a supercomputer by 2020 that is 100-times faster than Japan’s current most-powerful supercomputer, according to The Japan Times. The current title is held by a supercomputer called K, which is the third-fastest computer in the world, which gives you some idea of how ridiculously fast this new supercomputer will be. That is, assuming that the ministry can wrangle the money it needs for the project out of next-year’s budget.
To give you some idea of the speed of these things, K is capable of ten quadrillion computations per second. So the new computer would be capable of performing one quintillion computations per second. If you want to see what that number looks like, it’s this: 1,000,000,000,000,000,000.
It’s not clear yet exactly what the speedy new machine will cost or where it will be built, but developing K cost about US$1-billion, and researchers are hoping this new computer will be a bit cheaper.
Supercomputers are sometimes seen as symbols of a global game of one-upsmanship, with countries competing to create the fastest computer and thus prove to the world that they are totally the best at science. But Japan doesn’t plan to use its new supercomputer just to wave it in its competitors’ faces. The computer will be used to do all kinds of awesome things, such as:
- Develop new medicines and medical formulas
- Run simulations and statistical analyses that predict natural disasters like quakes and tsunamis
- Become self-aware, conquer the world
OK, so I made up that last one, but the computer really is going to be used in disaster prevention and medical research, which is awesome. I’m no computer scientist, but I’m guessing that at one quadrillion calculations per second you can run some pretty complex simulations, which should be a huge aid in disaster prevention and medical developments.
This article by C. Custer originally appeared on Tech in Asia, a Burn Media publishing partner.