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Found in the museum of technological innovations.

CVS Health and IBM have come together to use IBM Watson’s predictive analytics and cognitive computing to stop patients suffering from a chronic illness from having a medical emergency in the future. The supercomputer will use powerful algorithms and analyze data from medical health records, fi...

 

www.technowize.com/ibm-watson-adds-patient-care-to-impres...

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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

Intel Paragon XP/S supercomputer GP16 node board

Front panel of the CRAY Y-MP EL.

Corsair Dominator GT x3 2GB DDR3 2000 ram with cooler.

There are 2 of these for a total of 12GB of ram.

Sanguthevar Rajasekaran, left, and Ian Greenshields with the BECAT supercomputer.

Labs in Life exhibit at COSI

Look at it. Is it not uber super?! OMGizzle it totally is!

One of two "tape silos". Inside these cylinders are data tapes. Thousands of data tapes. Plus one robot that spends its time slotting tapes into drives to be read and written.

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 1.usa.gov/1pjiQBS

A radical design for a supercomputer. Note the power supply hidden under the 'seat'.

Closeup of the RAM cooler, fortunately there is good clearance wtih the Intel CPU cooler so i won,t have any problems installing all 6 RAM sticks.

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

For now this is the final configuration of the 'puter, and i don't expect to do any changes or upgrades, other than software, for a while!

At the computer history museum

This was nifty. The insides of a cray.

Erik Scott talks to students at UNC about the re-location and installation of the Topsail supercomputer in the Genome Sciences building in Chapel Hill.

Who'd have thought it, but the scientists are beginning to use ARM CPUs in the big boys. Some joke that the bigger sciene is making the cab, mounting using a 3D printer.

EpicJonTuazon Super Computer Build - Jonathan Tuazon Photography

 

Day Ninety Six - "The Little City"

 

With fancy streetlights.

 

This show really shows the different kelvin temperatures of light that the supercomputer between our ears easily chews through.

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