Robert Cray is one of the few blues artists who managed to cultivate a mainstream following from the get go. In the course of a long-running career that began in the 1970s, he uniquely blended ...
The launch of the Cray-1 supercomputer was a seminal moment in computing history. The 160 megaflops Cray-1 came out in 1975, and soon was sold to more than 100 customers, making it one of the most ...
Seattle-based supercomputer maker Cray has been tapped to develop a new $600 million system for the U.S. Department of Energy, capable of conducting 3D simulations at unprecedented speeds to better ...
Cray has a new supercomputer called the XC50, the successor to its XC40 model and the first supercomputer from the company that can deliver one petaflop of performance (at peak) in a single cabinet.
The Robert Cray Band has won five Grammy awards and has played alongside some of the giants of blues. But the origin story of the band is in Eugene during the 1970s. The Robert Cray Band makes its ...
Cray plans to announce Tuesday that the Department of Energy’s National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center has signed a $146 million contract for its brand-new Shasta supercomputer ...
Here’s some cloud computing news you probably didn’t see coming: Microsoft has partnered with Cray to bring that company’s supercomputers and its storage system to the Azure platform. Unsurprisingly, ...
Cray, the US supercomputer company recently acquired by HPE, will partner with Japan's Fujitsu to offer Arm A64FX processors in its systems. Fujitsu's chips will be available in Cray CS500 ...
Cray, the name of the Minnesotan who pioneered the supercomputer, will live on in high-tech. After the news last week that Cray Inc. would be purchased by Hewlett Packard Enterprise, executives ...
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (AP) — The University of Illinois says Seattle-based Cray Inc. will take over construction of the stalled $300 million Blue Waters supercomputer project, three months after IBM pulled ...
In our hubris, we pat ourselves on the back when we’re able to pull data off our old SCSI drives. [Chris Fenton]’s attempt to get an OS for a homebrew Cray-1 puts us rightfully to shame. Last year we ...