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Parallel Computing in Supercomputers and HPC
Fast forward to the 2000s, which saw a huge boom in the number of processors working in parallel, with numbers upward in the tens of thousands. Such examples in the evolution in parallel computing, High Performance Computing, and multi-core systems include the fastest supercomputer today, being Japan's Fugaku which was jointly developed by RIKEN and Fujitsu. It boasts an impressive 7.3 million cores, all of which are, for the first time in a supercomputer, ARM-based. It uses a hybrid-memory model and a new network architecture that provides higher cohesion among all the nodes. The success of the new system is a radical paradigm-shift from the departure of traditional supercomputing towards that of ARM-powered systems. It is also proof the designers wanted to highlight that HPC still has much room for improvement and innovation.
[[File:Fugaku.jpg|thumb|left|Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fugaku_(supercomputer)]]
[[File:ARM-architecture.jpg|thumb|right|450px|Source: https://enwww.wikipediawatelectronics.orgcom/wikiwp-content/Fugaku_(supercomputer)uploads/ARM-Architecture.jpg]]
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