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Bio-IT World July 2005 Salvatore Salamone |
New Blue Gene Project to Model the Brain IBM and a Swiss research institute have announced a joint research initiative dubbed the Blue Brain Project to create a 3-D model of the brain. To perform the simulations, the project will use a four-rack Blue Gene/L system that will deliver a peak processing of about 22.8 teraFLOPS (22.8 trillion operations per second). |
InternetNews June 13, 2005 Clint Boulton |
IBM Delivers Baby Brother For Blue Gene IBM released a companion to its fastest supercomputer that boasts a top speed of 91.29 teraflops |
PC Magazine July 13, 2005 Sebastian Rupley |
Mind Meld: The First Computer-Based Human Brain Model IBM and researchers will collaborate to create the first complete computer-based model of a human brain. |
InternetNews November 8, 2004 Clint Boulton |
IBM's Blue Gene Supercomputer is For Sale Fresh off the revelation that its top supercomputer has shattered LinPack performance records, IBM is offering its Blue Gene system for commercial businesses. |
IEEE Spectrum January 2010 Sally Adee |
Cat-Brain Fever Two simulations and an angry e-mail reveal the conflicting goals of supercomputer brain modeling |
InternetNews March 24, 2005 Clint Boulton |
IBM Supercomputer Shatters Own Speed Record Blue Gene/L now simulates the nuclear arms stockpile at more than 135 teraflops - nearly twice its previous record. |
Bio-IT World October 14, 2004 William Pulleyblank |
Rewriting the Rulebook for Supercomputing and Research IBM's Blue Gene supercomputer project leader highlights progress and future applications. |
Bio-IT World August 13, 2002 Salvatore Salamone |
Think Blue ... Again: It's in the Genes IBM has big plans for a new petaflop supercomputer -- Blue Gene -- designed primarily for the life sciences. |
InternetNews September 7, 2004 Clint Boulton |
IBM's Blue Gene Breaks New Research Ground The four-rack supercomputer system will map protein structures in the hope of manufacturing more effective drugs for humans. |
The Motley Fool November 22, 2010 Gabriel Perna |
IBM's Supercomputers Pass the Green Test IBM is No. 1 in efficiency. |
InternetNews November 12, 2007 Andy Patrizio |
IBM Still Dominates Supercomputer List The TOP500 Supercomputer list is out and once again, IBM has bragging rights. Big Blue not only tops the list, it pretty much owns it. |
PC Magazine April 20, 2005 Sebastian Rupley |
Speed Demon for Rent IBM is offering access to Blue Gene--the speediest of all supercomputers. |
InternetNews October 28, 2005 Clint Boulton |
BlueGene/L Reaches Another Teraflop High The IBM-built BlueGene/L supercomputer performed at 280.6 trillion operations per second (teraflop) on the Linpack benchmark, shattering the previous high mark of performing at 135.3 teraflops. |
PC Magazine December 21, 2005 Sebastian Rupley |
Super-Duper Computing The fastest computer on Earth, IBM's Blue Gene/L supercomputer, just got a whole lot faster. |
InternetNews September 29, 2004 Clint Boulton |
IBM's Blue Gene Claims Fastest Supercomputer Big Blue boasts the world's fastest supercomputer, soundly topping NEC's Earth Simulator in a Linpack test. |
InternetNews March 11, 2005 Clint Boulton |
Now Open: Blue Gene On Demand IBM will now offer supercomputing power on demand through a new center in Minnesota. |
InternetNews February 3, 2009 Andy Patrizio |
IBM Plans 20-Fold Leap in Supercomputing Sequoia will be the same size as IBM's Blue Gene/L but 40 times as powerful. |
InternetNews November 4, 2004 |
DoE, IBM Supercomputer Shatters LINPACK Test The U.S. Department of Energy (DoE) Thursday said that a BlueGene/L supercomputer built by IBM for nuclear arms research runs at a record 70.72 teraflops, making it the fastest computer on the LINPACK benchmark test. |
Popular Mechanics November 18, 2009 Douglas Fox |
IBM Reveals the Biggest Artificial Brain of All Time This computer simulation, as large as a cat's brain, blows away the previous record -- a simulated rat's brain with 55 million neurons -- built by the same team two years ago. |
Bio-IT World Dec 2006/Jan 2007 Salvatore Salamone |
IBM Tops Supercomputing Top 500 List The IBM Blue Gene/L system retained the premier spot in the latest edition of the Top 500 list of the world's most powerful supercomputers. But perhaps the trend that labs should be seizing upon is the rapid adoption of multi-core processors for high performance computing. |
InternetNews August 17, 2005 David Needle |
IBM Donates Supercomputer Resources IBM and the U.S. Department of Energy's Argonne National Laboratory said they will provide significant enhancements to the computer capabilities available to scientific researchers around the world. |
Bio-IT World January 21, 2005 Kevin Davies |
Allen Brain Institute Debuts 'Google for Gene Activity' The Allen Institute for Brain Science has released its first set of gene-expression data in the brain for nearly 2,000 mouse genes. The data will have important relevance for the study of brain function, disease, and the role of genes in governing human behavior. |
InternetNews April 6, 2005 Clint Boulton |
IBM Supercomputer to Help Volvo Avert Crashes The systems vendor will provide Volvo with 150 servers to perform crash simulations. The system is expected to become one of the automotive industry's fastest Linux clusters, based on systems listed on the Top500 Supercomputer list. |
InternetNews June 22, 2005 Clint Boulton |
IBM's Blue Gene Tops Supercomputer List Six of the top 10 world's fastest supercomputers are made by IBM. Intel chips and clusters are the top architectures. |
InternetNews June 27, 2007 Stuart J. Johnston |
IBM Dominates Supercomputer List - Again Today, at the International Supercomputing Conference 2007 in Dresden, Germany, the Top500 group announced its latest list of the top 500 most powerful supercomputers in the world. |
InternetNews June 22, 2006 David Needle |
Supercomputer Breaks Speed Record IBM's BlueGene/L gets bragging rights to another speed record. |
Wired March 23, 2009 Jonah Lehrer |
Scientists Map the Brain, Gene by Gene I'm in the dissection room of the Allen Institute for Brain Science in Seattle, and the scientist next to me is in a hurry. |
The Motley Fool June 17, 2005 Jack Uldrich |
IBM: Outcomputing Its Competitors IBM's new 91-teraflop supercomputer, Watson Blue Gene, could give Big Blue an edge over the competition in the life science, IT, and materials science sectors. |
Wired July 2001 Oliver Morton |
Gene Machine IBM took a dare: Build a supercomputer that predicts the invisible process of protein folding. Spend $100 million, increase processing speed 100-fold, and revolutionize the field. Then convince the biologists it matters... |
Chemistry World February 24, 2011 Carl Saxton |
Mapping brain networks US scientists have created a model of the ring-shaped networks of neurons in the brain, which could help researchers to understand small changes within diseased brain cells. |
CIO August 18, 2011 Agam Shah |
IBM Brings Brain Power to Experimental Chips IBM makes chips based on the structure and operation of the human brain. |
BusinessWeek January 17, 2005 Otis Port |
Holy Screaming Teraflops After more than two years of playing second fiddle to Japan in supercomputers, the U.S. has clawed its way back to the head of the pack. IBM's Blue Gene is the world's fastest supercomputer, for now. |
InternetNews July 7, 2010 |
IBM Testing Hot Water to Cool Servers IBM researchers in Switzerland are standing server cooling on its head, using water as warm as 140 degrees to cool processors that have an unusually high safe operating temperature. |
IEEE Spectrum August 2012 Steve Furber |
Low-Power Chips to Model a Billion Neurons A miniature, massively parallel computer, powered by a million ARM processors, could produce the best brain simulations yet |
National Defense October 2011 Eric Beidel |
Brain Implants Could Help 'REMIND' Injured Soldiers Scientists may have taken an important step in their work to restore memory to the injured brains of disabled soldiers. |
PC Magazine August 2, 2006 |
Bits & Bites v25n14 IBM's brawny Blue Gene/L supercomputer is once again the world's fastest computer on the independently produced TOP500 list. |
InternetNews June 26, 2007 Andy Patrizio |
Cranking Up Supercomputing The annual supercomputing show will highlight performance improvements on every level, right down to the wires. |
IEEE Spectrum February 2005 Erico Guizzo |
IBM Reclaims Supercomputer Lead The new breed of supercomputers brings technology advances that may ultimately trickle down to a variety of high-performance computers, thus benefiting not only big-bucks buyers like the Energy Department and NASA but many other organizations in need of serious computing horsepower. |
InternetNews May 12, 2004 Susan Kuchinskas |
U.S. To Build World's Fastest Computer Tennessee's Oak Ridge National Laboratory wins bid for $50 million grant. |
IEEE Spectrum May 2012 Mark Anderson |
This Is Your Brain on fMRI The science of mind reading is further along than you might think |
Bio-IT World October 2006 John Russell |
Sweetening the Swiss Bio Mix Switzerland is now attempting to become a power throughout the entire life science food chain - from basic research to small and big business. |
InternetNews November 14, 2006 Clint Boulton |
Spot-Swap Among The World's Fastest Supercomputers IBM's BlueGene/L system is still king of the supercomputing heap, according to the 28th list of the world's 500 most powerful supercomputers. |
InternetNews June 23, 2004 Susan Kuchinskas |
Microsoft High on Performance Microsoft will be joining the supercomputer game when it serves up Windows Server 2003, high-performance edition. |
Fast Company Neal Ungerleider |
IBM's $3 Billion Investment In Synthetic Brains And Quantum Computing Over the next five years, IBM will invest a significant amount of their total revenue in technologies like non-silicon computer chips, quantum computing research, and computers that mimic the human brain. |
National Defense March 2011 Eric Beidel |
In Global Supercomputing Race, China Moves to Front Of the Pack Supercomputers are critical for engineering simulations that lead to the creation of state-of-the-art weapon systems like the stealth aircraft that is now being developed by the Chinese. They help the military develop complex battle simulations. |
IEEE Spectrum December 2010 Versace & Chandler |
MoNETA: A Mind Made from Memristors DARPA's new memristor-based approach to Artificial Intelligence consists of a chip that mimics how neurons process information |
Bio-IT World October 2006 Catherine Varmazis |
Completion of Allen Brain Atlas Hailed as 'Epoch-Making' The Allen Brain Atlas is a Web-based, graphic 3-D database of the mouse brain that shows the location of expression sites of more than 21,000 genes at the cellular level. The completion of this database has important implications for research into neurological disorders that affect humans. |
Wired December 2000 David Pescovitz |
Monsters in a Box Think you know what a supercomputer is? Think again: the real thing will blow your mind... |
Chemistry World February 2012 |
Column: The crucible To understand the chemical choreography of the cell, we must acknowledge the bustling biomolecular ballroom in which it takes place, says Philip Ball |
Bio-IT World February 11, 2005 Kevin Davies |
Bioinformatics on the Brain Adaptive selection: accelerated mutation rate produced humans' large brain. |