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acoustic lining material to dampen noise and vibration from the good folks at FrozenPC. also visible are the SATA III cables (only 2 of the hard drives are SATA III but the cables are backwards compatible and besides the blue colour is kind of cool!).

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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

Closeup of the Unicomp label. It is also easier to see the slightly 'sparkly' finish they have used on the keys.

The Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) — a planet-scale array of eight ground-based radio telescopes forged through international collaboration — was designed to capture images of a black hole. In coordinated press conferences across the globe, EHT researchers revealed that they succeeded, unveiling the first direct visual evidence of the supermassive black hole in the centre of Messier 87 and its shadow. The shadow of a black hole seen here is the closest we can come to an image of the black hole itself, a completely dark object from which light cannot escape. The black hole’s boundary — the event horizon from which the EHT takes its name — is around 2.5 times smaller than the shadow it casts and measures just under 40 billion km across. While this may sound large, this ring is only about 40 microarcseconds across — equivalent to measuring the length of a credit card on the surface of the Moon. Although the telescopes making up the EHT are not physically connected, they are able to synchronize their recorded data with atomic clocks — hydrogen masers — which precisely time their observations. These observations were collected at a wavelength of 1.3 mm during a 2017 global campaign. Each telescope of the EHT produced enormous amounts of data – roughly 350 terabytes per day – which was stored on high-performance helium-filled hard drives. These data were flown to highly specialised supercomputers — known as correlators — at the Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy and MIT Haystack Observatory to be combined. They were then painstakingly converted into an image using novel computational tools developed by the collaboration.

Kenneth Ruud, Professor of Chemistry, The Arctic University of Tromsø (UiT); Chair, PRACE Scientific Steering Committee

 

9 September 2013, Brussels

 

Through years of steady investment and research, high performance computing in Europe has started paying returns to many parts of the economy - aerospace, pharmaceuticals, energy, automotive, the environment and climate research. But the best could be yet to come, as computing powers worldwide jump upwards and HPC becomes an essential tool for competitiveness across the European economy. In short, supercomputers will be for all, no longer a few.

 

www.sciencebusiness.net

Now that's what a supercomputer should look like.

Mac Pro is a Cray Supercomputer in a can... Whoop Ass! 7 teraflops ea.

@ GSI

Home of the L-CSC supercomputer (ranked #3 in the Green500 list of june 2016)

045

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

Cray supercomputer

ISC 2017 in Frankfurt Main

045

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

Mare Nostrum un supercomputador en una capilla.

 

Barcelona Supercomputing Center

www.bsc.es/

045

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

Bruce Damer showing off the Cray 1A supercomputer, inspired by Star Trek

EpicJonTuazon Super Computer Build - Jonathan Tuazon Photography

 

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

On June 22, 2023, Argonne National Laboratory, Intel and HPE announced that the installation progress of the Aurora Supercomputer is complete. In this photo, a member of the installation team brings in the last blade on a specialized trolley. (Credit: Argonne National Laboratory)

October 23

 

I helped Gary and Jonathan shoot Talon, UNT's supercomputer, which also happens to be the 2nd fasted supercomputer in Texas! We shot on a 10.5mm lens, which was really fun. It's weird looking through the viewfinder and seeing your own body.

 

Other than that it was a relatively uneventful day. Yawn.

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

supercomputer costs $133 million and will be used to study nuclear weapons

Albinos vs. the Laptop. Who wins? Not Albino.

Since grid.org is now finished, I'm now donating spare CPU cycles to a new project called Folding@Home.

It's neato.

045

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

EpicJonTuazon Super Computer Build - Jonathan Tuazon Photography

 

Floodplain Maps RENCI helped generate using our IBM Blue Gene/L supercomputer.

A segment of DNA. With the glasses on, in 3D, it looked pretty damn good.

Albin har skaffat en elektronisk grej som heter Ipod Touch. Man kan bland annat surfa på internet med den, det är som ett jättestort uppslagsverk.

EpicJonTuazon Super Computer Build - Jonathan Tuazon Photography

 

045

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

Silicon City: Computer History Made in New York

Kraken, the NICS XT5 (#8 in the Top500)

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