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Supermicro At 30: From Designing AI Chips To Selling AI Systems

There is something about late September. Nvidia was founded 30 years ago on Tuesday this week, Google was founded 25 years ago on Wednesday, and Supermicro was founded 30 years ago today.

The post Supermicro At 30: From Designing AI Chips To Selling AI Systems first appeared on The Next Platform.

Supermicro At 30: From Designing AI Chips To Selling AI Systems was written by Timothy Prickett Morgan at The Next Platform.

The Geek is back! Everything you missed at the Intel Innovation Conference

SPONSORED POST: Intel’s flagship technology event – Intel Innovation – took place at the San Jose Convention Center in California earlier this month, with select content available on demand from September 27th for those who were unable to attend in-person.

The post The Geek is back! Everything you missed at the Intel Innovation Conference first appeared on The Next Platform.

The Geek is back! Everything you missed at the Intel Innovation Conference was written by Martin Courtney at The Next Platform.

Meta Platforms Is Determined To Make Ethernet Work For AI

We said it from the beginning: There is no way that Meta Platforms, the originator of the Open Compute Project, wanted to buy a complete supercomputer system from Nvidia in order to advance its AI research and move newer large language models and recommendation engines into production.

The post Meta Platforms Is Determined To Make Ethernet Work For AI first appeared on The Next Platform.

Meta Platforms Is Determined To Make Ethernet Work For AI was written by Timothy Prickett Morgan at The Next Platform.

Julia Still Not Grown Up Enough to Ride Exascale Train

We’ve been watching Julia, an HPC-oriented programming language designed for technical and scientific computing for a number of years to see it can make inroads into supercomputing.

The post Julia Still Not Grown Up Enough to Ride Exascale Train first appeared on The Next Platform.

Julia Still Not Grown Up Enough to Ride Exascale Train was written by Nicole Hemsoth Prickett at The Next Platform.

What Happens When LLMs Design AI Accelerators?

Although our appetite for a vast range of AI accelerators appears to be waning, or at least condensing down to a few options, there might be methods on the horizon to let accelerator designers explore new concepts in an interesting way.

The post What Happens When LLMs Design AI Accelerators? first appeared on The Next Platform.

What Happens When LLMs Design AI Accelerators? was written by Nicole Hemsoth Prickett at The Next Platform.

Intel Gets Its Chiplets In Order With 6th Gen Xeon SPs

Based on what Intel has been saying for the past several weeks in various events, but especially the Hot Chips 2023 a few weeks ago and the more recent Intel Innovation 2023 extravaganza, the company’s foundry process roadmap and its server processor roadmaps are going to align harmoniously to make the Xeon SP family of CPUs more competitive next year.

The post Intel Gets Its Chiplets In Order With 6th Gen Xeon SPs first appeared on The Next Platform.

Intel Gets Its Chiplets In Order With 6th Gen Xeon SPs was written by Timothy Prickett Morgan at The Next Platform.

Beyond the Traveling Salesman: Escape Routes Get a Quantum Overhaul

When it comes to natural disasters, every second counts—and the clock may just be ticking a little slower following a collaboration between Terra Quantum and Honda Research Institute Europe (HRI-EU).

The post Beyond the Traveling Salesman: Escape Routes Get a Quantum Overhaul first appeared on The Next Platform.

Beyond the Traveling Salesman: Escape Routes Get a Quantum Overhaul was written by Nicole Hemsoth Prickett at The Next Platform.

The Race for the First Gordon Bell Climate Supercomputing Prize

At SC23 in November, the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) will give out its first-ever ACM Gordon Bell Prize for Climate Modelling at a ceremony in Denver.

The post The Race for the First Gordon Bell Climate Supercomputing Prize first appeared on The Next Platform.

The Race for the First Gordon Bell Climate Supercomputing Prize was written by Nicole Hemsoth Prickett at The Next Platform.

Hub and Spoke: DoD Splits $238 Million Across Eight Semiconductor Centers

The U.S. Department of Defense has announced a slew of states are set to split $238 million in funding from the “Creating Helpful Incentives to Produce Semiconductors (CHIPS) and Science Act.”

The post Hub and Spoke: DoD Splits $238 Million Across Eight Semiconductor Centers first appeared on The Next Platform.

Hub and Spoke: DoD Splits $238 Million Across Eight Semiconductor Centers was written by Nicole Hemsoth Prickett at The Next Platform.

Seismic Data Processing on Waferscale Has Gordon Bell Prize Potential

Scientists from KAUST and engineers from Cerebras Systems have fine-tuned an existing algorithm, Tile Low-Rank Matrix-Vector Multiplications (TLR-MVM), to improve the speed and accuracy of seismic data processing.

The post Seismic Data Processing on Waferscale Has Gordon Bell Prize Potential first appeared on The Next Platform.

Seismic Data Processing on Waferscale Has Gordon Bell Prize Potential was written by Nicole Hemsoth Prickett at The Next Platform.

SambaNova Tackles Generative AI With New Chip And New Approach

If you have the entire corpus of the Internet scrubbed of nonsense plus whatever else you can scrounge up in whatever language all put into the right format so you can chew on that data one token at a time with trillions of parameters of interconnections between those tokens to build a large language model for generative AI applications, you have an enormous problem.

The post SambaNova Tackles Generative AI With New Chip And New Approach first appeared on The Next Platform.

SambaNova Tackles Generative AI With New Chip And New Approach was written by Timothy Prickett Morgan at The Next Platform.

It’s Been a Noteworthy Week for Practical Quantum Computing

Here at The Next Platform we are still casting a wary eye on how quantum computing will fit into the post-Moore landscape, especially in large-scale research and enterprise contexts.

The post It’s Been a Noteworthy Week for Practical Quantum Computing first appeared on The Next Platform.

It’s Been a Noteworthy Week for Practical Quantum Computing was written by Nicole Hemsoth Prickett at The Next Platform.

The New UXL Foundation’s Has a Bold Blueprint for Open Acceleration

Heterogeneous computing is clearly here to stay but now’s the time to get down to brass tacks and start addressing standards, portability, and other elements common to maturing technologies.

The post The New UXL Foundation’s Has a Bold Blueprint for Open Acceleration first appeared on The Next Platform.

The New UXL Foundation’s Has a Bold Blueprint for Open Acceleration was written by Nicole Hemsoth Prickett at The Next Platform.

AMD Finishes Out The Zen4 Server CPUs With Edgy “Siena”

Different workloads need different mixes of price, performance, thermals, and longevity in the field out there on the edge and in the datacenter, and that is why server CPU makers for years have had a mix of processors that deliver on these vectors that are different from each other.

The post AMD Finishes Out The Zen4 Server CPUs With Edgy “Siena” first appeared on The Next Platform.

AMD Finishes Out The Zen4 Server CPUs With Edgy “Siena” was written by Timothy Prickett Morgan at The Next Platform.

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