Computer wizard Seymour Cray, who pioneered the use of transistors in computers and later developed supercomputers to run business and government information networks, died Saturday at 71. Mr. Cray ...
Seymour Cray’s big super computer was crazy. It’s signals between components had to be timed by trimming long cables up to 1/16th of an inch at a time by hand and was basically interwoven with a giant ...
WASHINGTON, D.C. — A company founded in the Chippewa Valley is being honored as Wisconsin’s entry in the American Innovation series of $1 coins. The series, which dates to 2018, honors people and ...
Cray is not likely to garner much attention when it reports first-quarter earnings on April 28. Like its much larger competitors, Cray is in the computer business but at $155 million in sales, it's ...
For PGS, an oil-imaging company in Oslo, Norway, finding pockets of oil and natural gas in the ground essentially starts by taking a large ultrasound picture of Earth. “It involves huge amounts of ...
The Colorado Springs-based supercomputer company founded in 1989 by Seymour Cray after he left Cray Research. Cray developed the Cray-3, an incredibly fast gallium arsenide-based computer that ran at ...
Standing on the corner of Fourth and Madison in downtown Seattle, you’d never guess what people are building in the sedate office tower that looms over the Bartell Drugs store. It happens to be the ...
MANHATTAN (CN) - Supercomputer-maker Cray Research International has filed for bankruptcy, listing more than $500 million in debts. Market-watchers attributed its demise to declining government ...
AMD is helping Cray Computer build a new supercomputer for the Department of Energy that it promises will be faster than the fastest supercomputers of today. The Department of Energy supercomputer, ...
It's interesting that one of the seminal events in the history of Sun Microsystems isn't included in its official corporate history. But without question, Sun would not be the company it is today had ...
In this video from KAUST, Steve Scott from at Cray explains where supercomputing is going and why there is a never-ending demand for faster and faster computers. Responsible for guiding Cray’s long ...
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