Submitted by nick7566 t3_zpj0c9 in singularity
Comments
AndreiD2017 t1_j0th910 wrote
I know exactly what hardware it will have (ok, best guess…): Epyc Genoa paired with H100s with Mellanox interconnect.
awesomeideas t1_j0uw2i1 wrote
Why do the supercomputing resources at the Forschungszentrum Jülich look so sci-fi? Like, why are they lit like that?
modestLife1 t1_j0v0nxu wrote
the bad guy is gonna teleport through there. :sshhhh:
CloudDrinker t1_j0v8tow wrote
can somebody explain what this computer exactly does like I'm 2nd grade
CloudDrinker t1_j0v8ufw wrote
can somebody explain what this computer exactly does like I'm 2nd grade
[deleted] t1_j0vnrzi wrote
[deleted]
HyperImmune t1_j0xq6mj wrote
Exaflop refers to how many operations it can perform per second (a flop is a floating point operation). More operations means more power and the ability to perform larger operations in a shorter time. Or in other words, science go brrrrr 😁
nick7566 OP t1_j0t62bk wrote
From the article:
>Frontier, the world’s first exascale supercomputer—or at least the first one that’s been made public—is coming online soon for general scientific use at Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee. Another such machine, Aurora, is seemingly on track to be completed any day at Argonne National Laboratory in Illinois. Now Europe’s getting up to speed. Through a €500 million pan-European effort, an exascale supercomputer called JUPITER (Joint Undertaking Pioneer for Innovative and Transformative Exascale Research) will be installed sometime in 2023 at the Forschungszentrum Jülich, in Germany.