China proudly introduced its latest achievement in supercomputing, unveiling the “Tianhe Xingyi Supercomputer” at a prestigious industry event in Guangdong Province. The National Supercomputing Center in Guangzhou made the announcement, as reported by the state news agency Xinhua.

Distinguished by its cutting-edge domestically designed architecture, the Tianhe Xingyi marks a significant advancement from its predecessor. Although specific details about its computing power remain undisclosed, Lu Yutong, the director of the National Supercomputing Center, shared that Tianhe Xingyi surpasses the renowned Tianhe-2 in critical dimensions such as CPU computing power, networking efficiency, storage capacity, and application performance.
The Tianhe-2, developed by the National University of Defense Technology, held the title of the world’s fastest supercomputer for three consecutive years from 2013. However, its dominance was disrupted in 2016 when the U.S. government imposed restrictions on the university, limiting access to crucial Intel processors essential for supercomputing capabilities.
The unveiling of Tianhe Xingyi is part of a larger trend in China’s supercomputing landscape. The Sunway TaihuLight, another creation by the National Supercomputing Center in Wuxi, secured the seventh position in the global rankings of June 2023, while Tianhe-2 held the tenth spot.
The absence of specific details about Tianhe Xingyi’s computing power has generated anticipation within the computing community. Lu Yutong, shedding light on the supercomputer’s operational expectations, emphasized its crucial role in meeting the escalating computing demands across diverse fields, including high-performance computing, artificial intelligence (AI) big model training, and big data analysis.
The intentional design of Tianhe Xingyi reflects China’s commitment to addressing evolving challenges in computing, particularly in the realms of AI and big data applications.