Supercomputers are one of the many types of modern computing machines which are capable of giving very speedy calculations.
It is because of their high speed processing ability that Supercomputer  systems are used in such works as animation graphics, weather  forecasting, nuclear research work, petroleum research works, crypt  analysis, molecular modeling and the likes. You must be wondering then  what is the difference between a supercomputer and a mainframe computer  system? While Mainframe machines are primarily used for a number of  purposes, supercomputers are so designed to serve a singular purpose.  A brief time line of  the development of supercomputers has been given as follows:  
- 1960s: Seymour Cray of Control Data Corporation (CDC) launches the Supercomputer systems.
- 1970s: Cray Research is founded by Seymour Cray after he leaves Control Data Corporation (CDC). Most supercomputers were meant for running vector processor.
- 1985-1990: Cray's model of supercomputer takes over the market.
- Today, supercomputers are designed by such companies as HP, IBM and of course, Cray Inc. Supercomputer systems are now becoming almost the same as laptop computers and desktop systems.
Before the 1970s, supercomputers were mostly run on scalar process  principle. But in order to improve its efficiency a number of new  technologies were developed such as:
1. Liquid Cooling
2. Striped Disks (RAID)
3. Parallel File systems
4. Non-uniform memory access (NUMA)
5. Vector Processing
1. Liquid Cooling
2. Striped Disks (RAID)
3. Parallel File systems
4. Non-uniform memory access (NUMA)
5. Vector Processing

 
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