It could give soldiers a tactical edge in combat, especially in remote locations.

Portable Supercomputer

The U.S. Army has built a six petaflop — $12 million supercomputer, complete with a liquid cooling system and fire suppression system — that's small enough to fit inside a shipping container. According to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, it could give soldiers a tactical edge in combat in remote locations.

"Because of the sensitive nature of the work involved, we here at Huntsville Center will never know exactly the solutions this unique tool will provide in the field, but I am quite confident that our work will result in both lives saved and problems avoided," said Sally Parsons, Huntsville Center Information Technology Systems Division chief in a statement.

Military Number Cruncher

The six petaflop computer can only dish out a fraction of what modern supercomputers are capable of, but it's tens of thousands of times more powerful than your average desktop.

While it could bridge the gap and bring powerful data crunching capabilities to remote locations, it's unlikely to be delivered right into the middle of active combat, because it requires a substantial amount of power to run.

READ MORE: US Army buys $12m IBM supercomputer in a shipping container, will test for tactical edge deployments


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