Cray X-MP - Definition. Was ist Cray X-MP
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Was (wer) ist Cray X-MP - definition

TYPE OF SUPERCOMPUTER DESIGNED, MANUFACTURED AND MARKETED BY CRAY RESEARCH
Cray xmp; CRAY XMP; Cray XMP; CRAY X-MP
  • Cray DD-49

Cray Research, Inc.         
  • Cray-2 supercomputer
  • Cray at the SC18 conference
  • Cray-designed HLRN-III ''Konrad'' (XC30/XC40) at [[Zuse Institute Berlin]], 2014
  • Cray T3E processor board
AMERICAN SUPERCOMPUTER MANUFACTURER
Cray Research; Cray Inc; Cray supercomputer; Cray Computer Corp.; Cray Computer; Cray, Inc; Cray, Inc.; Cray Incorporated; Cray, Incorporated; Cray Computer Corp; Cray Computers; Cray Inc.; Cray Supercomputer; CRAY; Cray (computers); Cray Research, Inc.; Cray Laboratories; Cray CS500; HPE Cray; HPE Cray EX235a; HPE Cray EX235n
<company> US manufacturer of large powerful mainframe supercomputers, co-founded by noted computer architect, Seymour Cray. Quarterly sales $216M, profits $8M (Aug 1994). Cray were bought by Silicon Graphics, Inc.. [More details?] (1999-10-19)
Cray         
  • Cray-2 supercomputer
  • Cray at the SC18 conference
  • Cray-designed HLRN-III ''Konrad'' (XC30/XC40) at [[Zuse Institute Berlin]], 2014
  • Cray T3E processor board
AMERICAN SUPERCOMPUTER MANUFACTURER
Cray Research; Cray Inc; Cray supercomputer; Cray Computer Corp.; Cray Computer; Cray, Inc; Cray, Inc.; Cray Incorporated; Cray, Incorporated; Cray Computer Corp; Cray Computers; Cray Inc.; Cray Supercomputer; CRAY; Cray (computers); Cray Research, Inc.; Cray Laboratories; Cray CS500; HPE Cray; HPE Cray EX235a; HPE Cray EX235n
·noun ·Alt. of Crayer.
Cray Y-MP         
  • left
  • Y-MP M90 board at the [[National Cryptologic Museum]]
SUPERCOMPUTER
Cray Y-MP EL; Cray M90; Cray YMP
The Cray Y-MP was a supercomputer sold by Cray Research from 1988, and the successor to the company's X-MP. The Y-MP retained software compatibility with the X-MP, but extended the address registers from 24 to 32 bits.

Wikipedia

Cray X-MP

The Cray X-MP was a supercomputer designed, built and sold by Cray Research. It was announced in 1982 as the "cleaned up" successor to the 1975 Cray-1, and was the world's fastest computer from 1983 to 1985 with a quad-processor system performance of 800 MFLOPS. The principal designer was Steve Chen.