Computer performance by orders of magnitude
This list compares various amounts of computing power in instructions per second organized by order of magnitude in FLOPS.
Hecto-scale computing (102)
- 2.2×102 Upper end of serialized human through put. This is roughly expressed by the lower limit of accurate event placement on small scales of time (The swing of a conductors arm, the reaction time to lights on a drag strip etc.)[1]
 - 2×102 IBM 602 1946 computer.
 
Kilo-scale computing (103)
- 92×103 Intel 4004 First commercially available full function CPU on a chip 1971
 - 500×103 Colossus computer vacuum tube supercomputer 1943
 
Mega-scale computing (106)
- 1×106 Motorola 68000 commercial computing 1979
 - 1.2×106 IBM 7030 "Stretch" transistorized supercomputer 1961
 
Giga-scale computing (109)
- 1×109 ILLIAC IV 1972 supercomputer does first computational fluid dynamics problems
 - 1.354×109 Intel Pentium III commercial computing 1999
 - 147.6×109 Intel Core-i7 980X Extreme Edition commercial computing 2010[2]
 
Tera-scale computing (1012)
- 1.34×1012 Intel ASCI Red 1997 Supercomputer
 - 1.344×1012 GeForce GTX 480 from NVIDIA at its peak performance
 - 4.64×1012 Radeon HD 5970 from ATI at its peak performance
 - 5.152×1012 S2050/S2070 1U GPU Computing System from NVIDIA
 - 80×1012 IBM Watson[3]
 
Petascale computing (1015)
Main article: Petascale computing
- 1.026×1015 IBM Roadrunner 2009 Supercomputer
 - 8.1×1015 Fastest computer system as of 2012 is the Folding@home distributed computing system
 - 17.17×1015 IBM Sequoia's Linpack performance, June 2013[4]
 - 33.86×1015 Tianhe-2's Linpack performance, June 2013[4]
 - 36.8×1015 Estimated computational power required to simulate a human brain in real time.[5]
 
Exascale computing (1018)
Main article: Exascale computing
- 1×1018 It is estimated that the need for exascale computing will become pressing around 2018[6]
 - 1×1018 Bitcoin network Hash Rate is expected to reach 1 Exahash per seconds in 2016[7]
 
Zetta-scale computing (1021)
- 1×1021 Accurate global weather estimation on the scale of approximately 2 weeks.[8] Assuming Moore's law remains constant, such systems may be feasible around 2030.
 
A zettascale computer system could generate more single floating point data in one second than was stored by any digital means on Earth in first quarter 2011.
Yotta-scale computing (1024)
- 257.6×1024 Estimated computational power required to simulate 7 billion brains in real time.
 
See also
- Futures studies – study of possible, probable, and preferable futures, including making projections of future technological advances
 - History of computing hardware (1960s–present)
 -  List of emerging technologies – new fields of technology, typically on the cutting edge. Examples include genetics, robotics, and nanotechnology (GNR).
-  Artificial intelligence – computer mental abilities, especially those that previously belonged only to humans, such as speech recognition, natural language generation, etc.
- History of artificial intelligence (AI)
 - Strong AI – hypothetical AI as smart as a human. Such an entity would likely be recursive, that is, capable of improving its own design, which could lead to the rapid development of a superintelligence.
 
 - Quantum computing
 
 -  Artificial intelligence – computer mental abilities, especially those that previously belonged only to humans, such as speech recognition, natural language generation, etc.
 - Moore's law – observation (not actually a law) that, over the history of computing hardware, the number of transistors on integrated circuits doubles approximately every two years. The law is named after Intel co-founder Gordon E. Moore, who described the trend in his 1965 paper.[9]
 - Supercomputer
 - Superintelligence
 - Timeline of computing
 -  Technological singularity – hypothetical point in the future when computer capacity rivals that of a human brain, enabling the development of strong AI — artificial intelligence at least as smart as a human.
- The Singularity is Near – book by Raymond Kurzweil dealing with the progression and projections of development of computer capabilities, including beyond human levels of performance.
 
 - TOP500 – list of the 500 most powerful (non-distributed) computer systems in the world
 
References
- ↑ http://www.100fps.com/how_many_frames_can_humans_see.htm
 - ↑ Overclock3D - Sandra CPU
 - ↑ Tony Pearson, IBM Watson - How to build your own "Watson Jr." in your basement, Inside System Storage
 - 1 2 http://top500.org/list/2013/06/
 - ↑ http://hplusmagazine.com/2009/04/07/brain-chip/
 - ↑
 - ↑ Bitcoin hash rate chart
 - ↑ DeBenedictis, Erik P. (2005). "Reversible logic for supercomputing". Proceedings of the 2nd conference on Computing frontiers. pp. 391–402. ISBN 1-59593-019-1.
 - ↑ Moore, Gordon E. (1965). "Cramming more components onto integrated circuits" (PDF). Electronics Magazine. p. 4. Retrieved 2006-11-11.
 
External links
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