To be the most powerful computer on the planet. To get you started here are the specs.
[noparse]http://www.phonearena.com/htmls/RIM-BlackBerry-Tour-9630-phone-p_2894.html[/noparse]
To be the most powerful computer on the planet. To get you started here are the specs.
[noparse]http://www.phonearena.com/htmls/RIM-BlackBerry-Tour-9630-phone-p_2894.html[/noparse]
Your link is reported as an attack site.
It’s very, very difficult to determine which computer is “the most powerful.” If you were to pick a specific benchmark, then it might be possible to make a decent comparison. The Tour has a 528 MHz processor, so if we generously say that it’s a 500 MFLOP machine (it’s probably much, much less than that), than you would have to to go back to the 80’s for it to be the fastest computer on the planet: http://www-users.york.ac.uk/~mijp1/teaching/4th_year_HPC/lecture_notes/History%20of%20Supercomputers.pdf
Well, interestingly, neither that spec nor any I could find online actually say what processor it has in it.
An attack site? Hmm I use it all the time. Google Chrome said that did it? Well could a mod please remove the link than
That’s weird - the second time I clicked on your link, I didn’t get a warning.
The iPhone 3GS benchmarks at something like 6 MFLOPs. So, if we assume that the Tour is roughly the same speed, you would need to go back to the late 60’s to beat the supercomputers of that time. I wouldn’t be surprised if the phone had more storage than your average 1960’s supercomputer, though, which is maybe more amazing.
[moderating]
I broke the link, but left the URL there so people can make their own decisions about whether to follow it.
[/moderating]
What’s an “Attack Site?” New to me. I didn’t feel attacked.
It’s a site reported to have downloadable malware, malicious scripts or something of that sort. Google (and maybe others) have the browser warn you about those kinds of sites so that people can be careful.
I had a website that was “hacked” (I use that term loosely - someone changed the data on my scripts and I’m not sure how they were able to do that) to add a little snippet of JavaScript to every page. People started getting the attack site warning there. From what I could tell, all it did was track their movement through the site. On my site, that wasn’t a big deal, but many web sites use URLs to pass data between the user and the site.