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In 1962, Westinghouse cancelled the project, but the effort was re-started at the University of Illinois as the ILLIAC IV.
Their version of the design originally called for a 1 GFLOPS machine with 256 ALUs, but, when it was finally delivered in 1972, it had only 64 ALUs and could reach only 100 to 150 MFLOPS.
Nevertheless it showed that the basic concept was sound, and, when used on data-intensive applications, such as computational fluid dynamics, the " failed " ILLIAC was the fastest machine in the world.
The ILLIAC approach of using separate ALUs for each data element is not common to later designs, and is often referred to under a separate category, massively parallel computing.

1.908 seconds.