
You might think an overclocked Intel Core i7-980X is fast, but just wait until you see IBMs new “world’s fastest” processor. The self-crowned title is currently being claimed by IBMs z196 processor – a 5.2 GHz four-core monster that can handle more than 50 billion instructions per second.
The chip has been made using IBM’s 45nm process and contains a tidy 1.4 billion transistors on the inside. The z196 is also capable of running at its nice and fast clock speed of 5.2 GHz without liquid-nitrogen or liquid-helium cooling but something a lot more modest.
While the chip won’t be making its way into your home PC any time soon, it will be finding its way into business mainframes that need to handle large workloads on September 10th. Unsurprisingly this chip hasn’t got a specified price, but we expect that price to be steep.
Interestingly, as Engadget points out, Fujitsu’s Venus CPU can handle a supposed 128 billion calculations per second – several times that of IBM’s z196 processor. Whether or not this new IBM processor outperforms it will have to be seen.











