March 3, 2014
Many who have been in HPC for a number of years will remember GridGain, the in-memory computing company that has found success at a number of commercial and aca Read more…
September 4, 2013
The term "in memory" has been bandied about quite often in enterprise analytics or "big data" circles, but when it comes to scientific computing, it's not just about solving storage problems--at least according to GridGain. In a recent computational chemistry infrastructure project, the company was able to highlight the wider advantage of... Read more…
March 4, 2011
Cloud computing is still in a long maturation phase and some, including GridGain's CEO see this process as akin to similar movements in grid computing. Read more…
Making the Most of Today’s Cloud-First Approach to Running HPC and AI Workloads With Penguin Scyld Cloud Central™
Bursting to cloud has long been used to complement on-premises HPC capacity to meet variable compute demands. But in today’s age of cloud, many workloads start on the cloud with little IT or corporate oversight. What is needed is a way to operationalize the use of these cloud resources so that users get the compute power they need when they need it, but with constraints that take costs and the efficient use of existing compute power into account. Download this special report to learn more about this topic.
Data center infrastructure running AI and HPC workloads requires powerful microprocessor chips and the use of CPUs, GPUs, and acceleration chips to carry out compute intensive tasks. AI and HPC processing generate excessive heat which results in higher data center power consumption and additional data center costs.
Data centers traditionally use air cooling solutions including heatsinks and fans that may not be able to reduce energy consumption while maintaining infrastructure performance for AI and HPC workloads. Liquid cooled systems will be increasingly replacing air cooled solutions for data centers running HPC and AI workloads to meet heat and performance needs.
QCT worked with Intel to develop the QCT QoolRack, a rack-level direct-to-chip cooling solution which meets data center needs with impressive cooling power savings per rack over air cooled solutions, and reduces data centers’ carbon footprint with QCT QoolRack smart management.
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