Raevenlord
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This here is an interesting piece of tech news for sure, in that Intel has already scored a pretty massive design win for not one, but two upcoming products. Intel's "Future Xeon Scalable Processors" and the company's "Xe Compute Architecture" have been tapped by the U.S. Department of Energy for incorporation into the new AURORA Supercomputer - one that will deliver exascale performance. AURORA is to be developed in a partnership between Intel and Cray, using the later's Shasta systems and its "Slingshot" networking fabric. But these are not the only Intel elements in the supercomputer design: Intel's DC Optane persistent memory will also be employed (in an as-of-yet-unavailable version of it as well), making this a full win across the prow for Intel.
The AURORA supercomputer is to be delivered to the Argonne National Laboratory by 2021, under a $500 million contract (with $146 million of these going to Cray). This is quite a big move for Intel, that ensures an incredible PR move for its CPUs and GPUs (even if for upcoming parts of those, whose performance figures aren't finalized by any means). This victory is particularly interesting in that both AMD and NVIDIA (especially NVIDIA) have been behind virtually all of the GPU compute AI acceleration supercomputer victories, so for Intel to snag this design win so early will definitely bring a good amount of attention to its Xe graphics architecture among institutions. AURORA has been designed to chew through data analytics, HPC and AI workloads at an exaFLOP pace, and will incorporate Intel's OneAPI for system integration.
View at TechPowerUp Main Site
The AURORA supercomputer is to be delivered to the Argonne National Laboratory by 2021, under a $500 million contract (with $146 million of these going to Cray). This is quite a big move for Intel, that ensures an incredible PR move for its CPUs and GPUs (even if for upcoming parts of those, whose performance figures aren't finalized by any means). This victory is particularly interesting in that both AMD and NVIDIA (especially NVIDIA) have been behind virtually all of the GPU compute AI acceleration supercomputer victories, so for Intel to snag this design win so early will definitely bring a good amount of attention to its Xe graphics architecture among institutions. AURORA has been designed to chew through data analytics, HPC and AI workloads at an exaFLOP pace, and will incorporate Intel's OneAPI for system integration.
View at TechPowerUp Main Site