November 14, 2022 – On the occasion of this years Supercomputing Conference SC22 in Dallas, SUSE dedicates a Guest Blog to the collaboration with cloud services provider and SUSE Gold Partner UberCloud and its cloud-native approach to high-performance computing (HPC) with SUSE Linux Enterprise and SUSE Rancher. With UberCloud and SUSE, enterprises can empower their engineers and scientists to accelerate innovation, enable IT with streamlined tooling and enhanced service delivery, and provide leadership with unprecedented visibility to create efficiencies through a unified IT strategy,” writes SUSE’s Terry Smith.
HPC is an essential capability to enterprises across a broad spectrum of industries, including manufacturing, automotive, aerospace, energy, life sciences, finance, and more. HPC gives enterprises the ability to discover scientific and business insights, develop new products, and open new avenues for progress by enabling multi-physics simulations, digital twin models, big data analytics, machine learning, and other complex engineering and scientific workloads. But even the largest enterprises can struggle to deploy, manage, and scale the robust HPC resources they need for success in the modern world.
Read more about how UberCloud and SUSE – with its SUSE Linux Enterprise and SUSE Rancher – deliver the next generation of enterprise HPC, in SUSE’s guest blog here: https://www.suse.com/c/ubercloud-and-suse-next-generation-hpc-accelerates-innovation/
Accelerate with us at SC22
Join us at the SUSE booth (#2222) to feed your need for speed on the SUSE Performance Slot Car Racetrack. It’s full trigger, old school cool, and a lot of fun! UberCloud is sponsoring the races on Tuesday, November 15. Compete for prizes throughout the day, turn in the fastest race time on Tuesday and you’ll win, courtesy of UberCloud, a remote control ARRMA Granite 4X4 monster truck – which is new school cool!
Also on Tuesday, at 2:15 p.m. CST, catch the UberCloud session featured in the Microsoft Azure booth (#2433): A toolbox for moving engineering simulation workloads to the Azure cloud.
Source: UberCloud; SUSE