
and advise that if you have a programme that can blow up the world, have a better user interface than 'y/n'.
Would. you. like. to. play. a. game?
( , Thu 4 Jun 2009, 15:22, Reply)

but they're not very bright ones.
Isn't a flop a floating point operation.
Hence a terraflop would be 10^12 flops.
edit: yes, it is - www.thefreedictionary.com/gigaflop
( , Thu 4 Jun 2009, 15:35, Reply)

teraflop = 10^12
You got your gigs and your teras all confuddled!
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FLOPS stupid b3ta...
www.youtube.com/watch?v=kE-O1NULjNQ
LOL!
( , Thu 4 Jun 2009, 15:43, Reply)

Look at the scale in your link, now YOU're getting tera and giga confused...
( , Thu 4 Jun 2009, 15:57, Reply)

but thought better of it after my last slip up.
Also, the video is 3 years old, but Wikipedia says something like 300GFLOPS (last column)
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GeForce_8_Series#Technical_summary_2
( , Thu 4 Jun 2009, 16:05, Reply)

Wasnt the PS3 touted as being capable of 1 teraFLOPS (FLOPS being FLoating Operations Per Second, though FLOPs per second is still correct)? So this thing is as powerful as 60 PS3s? Not really that impressive.
As a comparison, GIMPS (the internet mersenne prime search) sustains 27 teraFLOPS, SETI@home gets 528 TFLOPS, Folding@home gets 8 petaFLOPS (8000 TFLOPS). As far as we know none of these are self aware, though since one is responsible for looking at aliens, and one is steadily learning most of out biology, they may just be biding their time.
Even in terms of single computers, not that impressive, the latest ATI graphics cards are capable of 2.4 teraFLOPS, and supercomputers have supassed 1 petaFLOP.
In fact, were skynet a single computer, 60 TFLOPS would put it about 42nd in the world, behind many of the other computers owned by the military
( , Thu 4 Jun 2009, 15:55, Reply)

I wonder what it's doing to require 8 petaflops!?
Probably trying to work out if Michael Jackson is white or black.
( , Thu 4 Jun 2009, 16:24, Reply)

You hear the operator say 'Teraflops per second.'
In other words he's saying 'Trillion floating point operations per second per second'.
A bit like asking someone to input their 'PIN number'.
( , Thu 4 Jun 2009, 20:27, Reply)