News
GigaIO introduces single-node AI supercomputer. by Andy Patrizio. GigaIO introduces single-node AI supercomputer. News Analysis. Jul 26, 2023 3 mins. Generative AI Servers.
Carlsbad, California, July 13, 2023 – GigaIO, provider of workload-defined infrastructure for AI and technical computing, recently announced that it successfully configured 32 AMD Instinct MI210 ...
GigaIO announces the first 32 GPU single node supercomputer with compelling TCO for Generative AI, HPC and Technical Computing infrastructure. #Hashtags #OpenInfrastructure ...
3mon
ExtremeTech on MSNWhat Is a Supercomputer? - MSNA single system might be split into multiple nodes, but supercomputers are mostly installed in a single physical location.
A single system might be split into multiple nodes, but supercomputers are mostly installed in a single physical location. Distributed computing systems, in contrast, can operate across vast ...
4mon
Interesting Engineering on MSNChina’s supercomputer chips get 10 times more powerful than Nvidia, claims studyIn 2021, Oak Ridge National Laboratory researchers introduced a “multi-node, multi-GPU” flood forecasting model known as TRITON using the Summit supercomputer. Despite deploying 64 nodes ...
Computation firm Nexus’ in-development decentralized supercomputer attracted more than 1.5 million nodes from 187 countries during a recent five-day testnet period. Nexus has been working on ...
Argonne's new supercomputer doesn't just have one node, 10 or 100, instead it has 10,000 of them. Each single rack of nodes weighs eight tons and are cooled by thousands of gallons of water.
The water-cooled supercomputer features SGI ICE XA modules, 28 racks, and 8,064 Intel E5-2697v4 CPUs (for a total of 145,152 cores). It has DDR4-2400 ECC single-rank, 64 GB per node, with 3 High ...
ABERDEEN PROVING GROUND, Md. - The Army announced a new supercomputer for its scientists and engineers to conduct a wide range of focused research and development, test and evaluation, and ...
A node hour measures how much time a team uses Frontier for each of its 9,400 nodes. If a team needed 100 hours using 8,000 nodes, for instance, they would need 800,000 node hours.
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results