Despite its rather controversial nature, artificial intelligence is surely quite useful in a lot of scientific research applications, like the one NERSC is about to do.
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KOBE, Japan Sumitomo Rubber Industries Ltd. (SRI) has been given access to what has been described as the world s most powerful computer in order to develop tire materials for future mobility.
SRI said it will be using the new exascale Fugaku supercomputer at the Riken Center for Computational Science in Kobe to expand its materials-simulation capabilities at the smallest particle level, to support the development of long-lasting tires.
The Riken Center started development on the Fugaku named after an alternative name for Mount Fuji in 2014 as the successor to the K computer.
Sumitomo Rubber previously used the Riken Center s K-supercomputer to launch its 4D nano design process, which it claims helped improve the performance of the tire maker s Falken-brand tire range.
12 May 2021, 08:05 am
To say that AMD is experiencing so much success these days is a massive understatement. They are closing in onto Intel s market share inch by inch, which has Team Blue on the run. And now, they just got tapped to power something seriously amazing.
Overclock3D reports that AMD has been contracted to provide their EPYC 7763 and 75F3 server chips to a supercomputer, which would be deployed at the National Supercomputing Center in Singapore. The gargantuan machine is going to serve as an upgrade to the center s current ASPIRE1, which apparently isn t fast enough anymore.
(Photo : (Photo by Kyodo News via Getty Images))
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