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Cray Inc (NASDAQ: CRAY) reported downbeat results for its second quarter on Friday.
LONDON (Alliance News) - Hewlett Packard Enterprise Co is in advanced talks to acquire US supercomputer maker
Cray Inc, Bloomberg News reported Friday, citing people familiar with the matter.
California, US-based technology company Hewlett Packard Enterprise (NYSE: HPE) and Seattle, US-based supercomputer specialist
Cray Inc. (NASDAQ: CRAY) have entered into a definitive agreement under which HPE will acquire Cray for USD 35.00 per share in cash, in a transaction valued at approximately USD 1.3bn, net of cash, the companies said.
Cray Inc. (CRAY) announced updates to its product line to support Intel (INTC) Xeon Gold 6200 processors and Intel Xeon Platinum 8200 processors in both the Cray CS500 and XC50 supercomputers.
Global supercomputer company
Cray Inc (Nasdaq:CRAY) announced on Wednesday that it has appointed Brian V.
Supercomputer company
Cray Inc (Nasdaq:CRAY) announced on Tuesday the signing of a contract to upgrade and expand the Cray XC supercomputers and Cray Sonexion storage systems at Germany's National Meteorological Service, the Deutscher Wetterdienst (DWD).
Cray Inc. (NASDAQ: CRAY) said it has been awarded a contract to provide King Abdullah University of Science and Technology in Saudi Arabia with multiple Cray systems that span the company's line of compute, storage and analytics products.
Global supercomputer company
Cray Inc (Nasdaq: CRAY) on Tuesday announced that the Centre for Computational Sciences (CCS) at the University of Tsukuba in Japan has put another Cray CS300 cluster supercomputer into production.
Padova Technologies, a leading manufacturer of specialized servers, storage solutions and custom systems, has established a strategic alliance with global supercomputer leader,
Cray Inc., to offer the Cray CX1 supercomputer to its customers.
Global supercomputer leader
Cray Inc. has announced that Network Computing Services, Inc.
The Earth Simulator was conceived when the former Science and Tech-nology Agency's Hajime Miyoshi, sometimes referred to as the Seymour Cray of Japan (after the founder of
Cray Inc.), imagined a huge vector-type computer 10 years ago.