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HP

Hewlett Packard Enterprise Will Build a $160 Million Supercomputer in Finland (venturebeat.com) 9

Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) today announced it has been awarded over $160 million to build a supercomputer called LUMI in Finland. LUMI will be funded by the European Joint Undertaking EuroHPC, a joint supercomputing collaboration between national governments and the European Union. From a report: The supercomputer will have a theoretical peak performance of more than 550 petaflops and is expected to best the RIKEN Center for Computational Science's top-performing Fugaku petascale computer, which reached 415.5 petaflops in June 2020.
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Hewlett Packard Enterprise Will Build a $160 Million Supercomputer in Finland

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  • Are they going to use the SSDs that stop working when they hit 32768 hours?

  • ... means âoeSNOWâ in Finnish. We get enough of that anywhere in Finland, and even more so up in Kajaani. ___ 1: Yeah, Idunno why either, I'm capitalising just because they did.
  • by jellomizer ( 103300 ) on Wednesday October 21, 2020 @11:37AM (#60631964)

    Those were Real Super Computers, not today racks of PC's with fancy networks cards.

    Today building a super computer isn't that big of a deal, any company can do it, it just cost money. The more money the more PC based blades you can put in. With some clever OS Trickery and custom software to have them all talk to each other you get a faster computer.

    Not like the days where the CPU was designed to process the tasks at hand. Every Wire was measured and placed carefully. You had data that was out of sync, you needed to trim a cable an inch.
    Where the design of such an equipment meant you needed to know physics, electronics and computer science in one grand unified invention.

    • We're starting to see some variations again. The previous top two were POWER9 based with custom Nvidia chips. Fujitsu is using their own processor.

    • Don't be fooled by the original announcement which, like many recent HPE
      "supercomputing" annoucements, doesn't mention Cray

      From the body of the article:

      > HPE says that LUMI, which will be hosted at the Finnish IT Center for Science in
      > Kajaani, Finland, will feature HPE Cray EX servers ...

      so this is still the Shasta technology being developed by Cray, with the fully integrated
      water-cooling, albiet without the seats, that just happend to be acquired and rebranded
      by HPE, when they brought Cray.

      It's not

  • by northerner ( 651751 ) on Wednesday October 21, 2020 @12:38PM (#60632232)

    And the entire super computer will stop working if any of the printer cartridges go empty (even just the color ones).

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