The Next Platform
  • Home
  • Compute
  • Store
  • Connect
  • Control
  • Code
  • AI
  • HPC
  • Enterprise
  • Hyperscale
  • Cloud
  • Edge
Latest
  • [ July 1, 2022 ] Hard Drives Are The Mark Twain Of Technology Store
  • [ June 30, 2022 ] So, You Think You Can Design A 20 Exaflops Supercomputer? HPC
  • [ June 29, 2022 ] GreenLake: Finally, A Platform That HPE Utterly Controls Cloud
  • [ June 29, 2022 ] HPE Is The First Big OEM To Adopt Ampere Computing Arm Chips Compute
  • [ June 28, 2022 ] NOAA Gets 3X More Oomph For Weather Forecasting; It Needs 3,300X HPC
  • [ June 28, 2022 ] Project Arctic Means VMware Doesn’t Get Left Out In the Hybrid Cold Control
  • [ June 27, 2022 ] The Faster The Switch, The Cheaper Bit Flits Connect
  • [ June 24, 2022 ] AMD Needs To Complete The Datacenter Set With Switching Connect
HomeDoug Kothe

Doug Kothe

HPC

The Softer Side Of Exascale

February 14, 2020 Jeffrey Burt 0

When talking about high-end HPC systems in the world, much of the attention often is paid to the massive supercomputers that are being developed by the likes of system makers Cray (now part of Hewlett Packard Enterprise and the main contractor on two exascale systems), Fujitsu, Atos, IBM, and others along with component makers Intel (which is a primary contractor on one exascale system), AMD, and Nvidia. …

About

The Next Platform is published by Stackhouse Publishing Inc in partnership with the UK’s top technology publication, The Register.

It offers in-depth coverage of high-end computing at large enterprises, supercomputing centers, hyperscale data centers, and public clouds. Read more…

Newsletter

Featuring highlights, analysis, and stories from the week directly from us to your inbox with nothing in between.
Subscribe now

  • RSS
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • Email the editor
  • About
  • Contributors
  • Contact
  • Sales
  • Newsletter
  • Books
  • Events
  • Privacy
  • Ts&Cs
  • Cookies
  • Do not sell my personal information

All Content Copyright The Next Platform