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The Influence of HPC-ers: Setting the Standard for What’s “Cool”
Jan. 16, 2025

A look back to supercomputing at the turn of the century

When I first attended the Supercomputing (SC) conferences back in the early 2000s as an IBMer working in High Performance Computing (HPC), it was obvious this conference was intended for serious computer science researchers and industries singularly focused on pushing the boundaries of computing. Linux was still in its infancy. I vividly remember having to re-compile kernels with newly released drivers every time there was a new server that came to market just so I could get the system to PXE boot over the network. But there was one …


The Evolution, Convergence and Cooling of AI & HPC Gear
Nov. 7, 2024

Years ago, when Artificial Intelligence (AI) began to emerge as a potential technology to be harnessed as a powerful tool to change the way the world works, organizations began to kick the AI tires by exploring it’s potential to enhance their research or business. However, to get started with AI, neural networks needed to be created, data sets trained, and microprocessors were needed that could perform matrix-multiplication calculations ideally suited to perform these computationally demanding tasks. Enter the accelerator.


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Berkeley Lab Demonstrates AI-Guided Digital Twin for Chemical Science Experiments

Feb. 17, 2026 — Understanding what complex chemical measurements reveal about materials and reactions can take weeks or months of analysis. But now, an AI-powered platform developed by researchers at the Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) could reduce this interpretation cycle to minutes, enabling much faster insight into chemical processes relevant to […]

The post Berkeley Lab Demonstrates AI-Guided Digital Twin for Chemical Science Experiments appeared first on HPCwire.

TACC: HPC Simulations Shed Light on Atomic Structure of Phosphate Glasses

Feb. 17, 2026 — What happens inside a material that powers lasers, heals bodies, and locks away waste — when no one is looking? Phosphate-based glass materials find wide applications in high tech areas from biomedical devices and high power lasers to waste storage and specialty coatings, but what exactly happens inside them at the atomic […]

The post TACC: HPC Simulations Shed Light on Atomic Structure of Phosphate Glasses appeared first on HPCwire.

Tower Semiconductor and Scintil Photonics Announce Availability of DWDM Lasers for AI Infrastructure

MIGDAL HAEMEK, Israel, and GRENOBLE, France, February 17, 2026 – Tower Semiconductor (NASDAQ/TASE: TSEM), a foundry for analog semiconductor solutions, and Scintil Photonics, heterogeneous integrated photonics company for AI infrastructure, today announced availability of the world’s first heterogeneously integrated Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexing (DWDM) laser sources for AI infrastructure using Scintil’s SHIP (Scintil Heterogeneous Integrated […]

The post Tower Semiconductor and Scintil Photonics Announce Availability of DWDM Lasers for AI Infrastructure appeared first on Inside HPC & AI News | High-Performance Computing & Artificial Intelligence.

Commercial Fusion Energy Company Inertia Raises $450M

LIVERMORE, Calif. — Inertia Enterprises, a commercial fusion energy company, announced a $450 million investment “to bring limitless clean energy to the world,” the company said. The Series A round was led by Bessemer Venture Partners, with participation from additional firms including GV (Google Ventures), Modern Capital, Threshold Ventures, and more. Founded in 2024, Inertia […]

The post Commercial Fusion Energy Company Inertia Raises $450M appeared first on Inside HPC & AI News | High-Performance Computing & Artificial Intelligence.

AI Eats The World, And Most Of Its Flash Storage

If you want to be in the DRAM and flash memory markets, you had better enjoy rollercoasters.

AI Eats The World, And Most Of Its Flash Storage was written by Timothy Prickett Morgan at The Next Platform.

The Current AI Networking Wave Will Be A Tsunami Of Money By 2027

$230.70. That’s it.

If you take the $34.6 billion that Arista Networks has made in product revenue since it was founded way back in 2004 by Andy Bechtolsheim, David Cheriton, and Kenneth Duda and divide it by the 150 million cumulative ports that it has shipped (with the product ramp really starting in 2010 after the company dropped out of stealth mode in 2009) This is a remarkable number give the fact that Arista has tended to ship very expensive ports that often cost $1,000 or more without services on top of them.

The Current AI Networking Wave Will Be A Tsunami Of Money By 2027 was written by Timothy Prickett Morgan at The Next Platform.

TOP500 News



The Influence of HPC-ers: Setting the Standard for What’s “Cool”
Jan. 16, 2025

A look back to supercomputing at the turn of the century

When I first attended the Supercomputing (SC) conferences back in the early 2000s as an IBMer working in High Performance Computing (HPC), it was obvious this conference was intended for serious computer science researchers and industries singularly focused on pushing the boundaries of computing. Linux was still in its infancy. I vividly remember having to re-compile kernels with newly released drivers every time there was a new server that came to market just so I could get the system to PXE boot over the network. But there was one …


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11/2025 Highlights

On the 66th edition of the TOP500 El Capitan remains No. 1 and JUPITER Booster becomes the fourth Exascale system.

The JUPITER Booster system at the EuroHPC / Jülich Supercomputing Centre in Germany at No. 4 submitted a new measurement of 1.000 Exflop/s on the HPL benchmark. It is the fourth Exascale system on the TOP500 and the first one outside of the USA.

El Capitan, Frontier, and Aurora are still leading the TOP500. All three are installed at DOE laboratories in the USA.

The El Capitan system at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, California, USA remains the No. 1 system on the TOP500. The HPE Cray EX255a system was remeasured with 1.809 Exaflop/s on the HPL benchmark. LLNL also achieved 17.41 Petaflop/s on the HPCG benchmark which makes the system the No. 1 on this ranking as well.

El Capitan has 11,340,000 cores and is based on AMD 4th generation EPYC processors with 24 cores at 1.8 GHz and AMD Instinct MI300A accelerators. It uses the Cray Slingshot 11 network for data transfer and achieves an energy efficiency of 60.9 Gigaflops/watt.

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