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17/07/2025. Bristol, United Kingdom. Secretary of State Peter Kyle switched on Isambard-AI, the UK's most powerful supercomputer housed at the University of Bristol. Picture by Alecsandra Dragoi / DSIT

EpicJonTuazon Super Computer Build - Jonathan Tuazon Photography

 

EpicJonTuazon Super Computer Build - Jonathan Tuazon Photography

 

ISC 2017 in Frankfurt Main

Cray Y-MP.

 

Museo de equipos antiguos del CESCA.

 

Centre de Serveis Científics i Acadèmics de Catalunya

Centro de Servicios Científicos y Académicos de Cataluña.

www.cesca.cat

ISC 2017 in Frankfurt Main

Watch CES 2016 NVIDIA DRIVE PX 2 - World's First In-Car AI Supercomputer (P1).

Setting the stage for a future of self-driving cars, NVIDIA CEO Jen-Hsun Huang introduces the NVIDIA DRIVE PX 2, at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) 2016 in Las Vegas. It's the world's first in-car artificial intelligence supercomputer, with the processing power equivalent to that of 150 MacBook Pros, but merely taking the space of a school lunchbox.

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Link: www.youtube.com/watch?v=XxTgoSa3fFY

17/07/2025. Bristol, United Kingdom. Secretary of State Peter Kyle switched on Isambard-AI, the UK's most powerful supercomputer housed at the University of Bristol. Picture by Alecsandra Dragoi / DSIT

EpicJonTuazon Super Computer Build - Jonathan Tuazon Photography

 

Magnetic fields emerging from below the surface of the sun influence the solar wind—a stream of particles that blows continuously from the sun’s atmosphere through the solar system. Researchers at NASA and its university partners are using high-fidelity computer simulations to learn how these magnetic fields emerge, heat the sun’s outer atmosphere and produce sunspots and flares. This visualization shows magnetic field loops in a portion of the sun, with colors representing magnetic field strength from weak (blue) to strong (red). The simulation was run on the Pleiades supercomputer at the NASA Advanced Supercomputing facility at NASA's Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, California. The knowledge gained through simulation results like this one help researchers better understand the sun, its variations, and its interactions with Earth and the solar system. Image Credit: Robert Stein, Michigan State University; Timothy Sandstrom, NASA/Ames > Related: NASA showcased more than 35 of the agency’s exciting computational achievements at SC14, the international supercomputing conference, Nov. 16-21, 2014, in New Orleans. via NASA ift.tt/15nMzkC

This is part of one of the supercomputers at the University of Utah Center for High-Performance Computing in Salt Lake City (where I work.) This machine consists of some hundreds of relatively ordinary but high-powered PCs networked together into a unit called a cluster. This particular cluster is a bit long in the tooth but can still pull off the odd floating-point op and it looks very impressive!

 

The terminal is for the techs to troubleshoot the machines; actual programming and running access is done remotely. I've been working on this system and the other CHPC machines for over a year and a half and had never seen them before.

San Diego Supercomputer Center

SDSC 305

9500 Gilman Drive, MC 0505

La Jolla, CA 92093-0505

sriram@sdsc.edu

858-822-5425(voice)

858-822-0861 (fax)

ISC 2017 in Frankfurt Main

Blue Gene/P

 

IDRIS/CNRS at Orsay Le Moulon.

 

Visit during the ECRI 2008 Conference

 

The Fifth European Conference on Research Infrastructures December 11st, 2008.

That's one mean supercomputer! (Huge black thing on the left)

Mare Nostrum un supercomputador en una capilla.

 

Barcelona Supercomputing Center

www.bsc.es/

The Mare Nostrum

Barcelona Supercomputer Centre, Spain

Myrinet switch

ISC 2017 in Frankfurt Main

My jacket perfectly matched the Cray supercomputer, it turned out.

ISC 2017 in Frankfurt Main

Lego Cray-1 Supercomputer - See Lego Ideas

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FORTUNE Brainstorm Tech

December 1st, 2021

Half Moon Bay, CA

 

2:50 PM

BEYOND THE SUPERCOMPUTER

Classical computing has changed the world with multiple revolutions in cloud, AI and Machine learning. But believe it or not, it’s reaching its peak. And so, the promise of Quantum technology is that it has the potential to truly help solve some of our greatest challenges - climate, supply chain shortages and inefficiencies, food insecurity, cyber vulnerabilities, and destabilization of economies. What will it take to really get there and how far are we anyway?

Speaker:

Pete Shadbolt, Co-founder and Chief Scientific Officer, PsiQuantum

Tony Uttley, President, Quantum Solutions, Honeywell

Moderator: Verne Kopytoff, FORTUNE

 

Photograph by Nick Otto for FORTUNE BRAINSTORM TECH

ISC 2017 in Frankfurt Main

The curved shape was to reduce wire lengths between compnents. $7M price tag and another $1M for the disc pack. The cooling system weighed twice as much as the computing components.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cray-1

ISC 2017 in Frankfurt Main

Supercomputer by Cray Research. The machine in background is the computers fluorinert-cooling tower.

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