19 Şubat 2009 Perşembe

AJMAN

AJMAN SEA VİEW APARTMENTS


Ajman is one of the seven Emirates that makes up the United Arab Emirates. Abu Dhabi is the federal capital whilst Dubai is regarded as the commercial capital of The UAE. Ajman is one of the Triangle Emirates close to Dubai and Sharjah. It is located strategically for business and living in the Center of U.A.E. With its continous progress and growing economy, Ajman would no doubt be a city to look forward to.This Project consist of seven 20-floor residential towers centered by a 23-floor administrative tower erected on a ring basis of 4 parking levels are designed by top experts for suitable housing.
Situaded in Ajman quite center on, the project is uniquely designed to afford privacy and splended view for all the rooms of the residential units comprising seven apartments maximum for each tower floor and equipped with three speedy elevators.
The 5th floor has a health club with a swimming pool, Each tower has also a seperate health club, a specious entrance and outside parks..

supercomputers

IBM to send blazing fast supercomputer to Energy Dept.

IBM
to send blazing fast supercomputer to Energy Dept.

This story has been
edited since it was published. See below for details.
IBM plans to announce
on Tuesday that it will supply the world's fastest supercomputer to the U.S.
Department of Energy in the next few years, according to numerous reports.
Not only will the machine, called Sequoia, be the fastest supercomputer to
date, it will blow the current record-holder out of the water.
IBM's Roadrunner,
located at the U.S. Department of Energy's Los Alamos National Laboratory, was
the first system to reach 1.026 petaflops (a petaflop is equal to a quadrillion
calculations per second; the "flops" stands for floating point operations per
second). But only seven months after the Roadrunner took top honors on a
twice-yearly list of the world's fastest
supercomputers, IBM is announcing that its successor will outdo it by an order
of magnitude. Sequoia will be able to work at a staggering 20 petaflops, the
equivalent of the computing power of 2 million laptops
according
to Reuters
.
IBM says it plans to deliver the Sequoia to the Energy
Department for use at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. The
supercomputer will run simulations to test the soundness of the nation's
stockpile of nuclear weaponry,
according to the IDG News
Service
.

Editor's note: When it was initially published, this story
cited data from another publication about Sequoia's energy usage. Several
readers doubted the validity of the data, and I have not been able to confirm
the figures. For now, that information has been removed.
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