Podcasts about exascale

Computer systems capable of one exaFLOPS

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Best podcasts about exascale

Latest podcast episodes about exascale

HPE Tech Talk
What's happening at HPE Discover Las Vegas 2026?

HPE Tech Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 18, 2026 18:58


What is happening at HPE Discover?This week Technology Now is bobbing along at HPE Discover Las Vegas 2026 at the Venetian Resort Las Vegas, HPE's annual customer and partner event. We ask what's changed since last year in the tech industry, how is HPE responding to the ever increasing rate of evolution in the sector, and what should our businesses and organizations be on the look out for in the next 12 months. Antonio Neri, President and CEO of HPE joins the show to tell us more.This is Technology Now, a weekly show from Hewlett Packard Enterprise. Every week, hosts Michael Bird and Sam Jarrell look at a story that's been making headlines, take a look at the technology behind it, and explain why it matters to organizations. This episode is available in both audio and video formats.About Antonio Neri: https://www.hpe.com/uk/en/leadership-bios/antonio-neri.html

ChannelBuzz.ca
It all comes back to storage: ESTI’s Earl Gosick on AI infrastructure, cyber resilience, and the Prairie data center opportunity

ChannelBuzz.ca

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 10, 2026 30:18


Earl Gosick, CTO at ESTI Consulting Services Earl Gosick has been attending Dell’s annual event since the EMC World days, and the ESTI Consulting Services co-founder brought to this year’s Dell Technologies World a perspective grounded in 35 years of building deep technical expertise on the Prairies. ESTI, the Saskatoon-based solution provider that won Dell’s Data Centre Solutions Excellence Award for Canada last year, runs a pure-play Dell infrastructure practice with particular depth in storage and data center design. Earl also sits in Dell’s CTO Connect program – a small, invitation-only group of partner technologists with early visibility into Dell’s product roadmap and a real voice in shaping it. His framing for the week: AI is fundamentally a data story, and data stories are storage stories. The push toward on-premises AI infrastructure – from deskside devices up through the newly announced Exascale and Rackscale solutions – is being driven as much by data governance requirements and token economics as by raw performance. Organizations that don’t control their data, Earl argues, can’t truly control their AI outcomes. On cyber resilience, he made a point worth underlining for anyone running managed services: ransomware insurance changes the recovery equation in ways clients don’t always anticipate. When a claim is filed, infrastructure gets frozen for forensic analysis. Recovery speed from a clean, air-gapped golden image – built with technology partners like Index Engines – isn’t a nice-to-have. It’s the whole game. And to close: Saskatchewan and Alberta may be poised to become Canada’s next significant data center hubs. With regulated power, guaranteed energy supply, and a provincial government that has now seen a CoreWeave-scale facility successfully built in the province and is actively pursuing more, Earl sees a real and growing opportunity – and ESTI is already working to support it. Read Full Transcript Robert Dutt: Hello and welcome to In the Channel from ChannelBuzz.ca, bringing news and information to the Canadian IT channel for the last 16 years. I’m Robert Dutt, editor at ChannelBuzz.ca, and your host for the show. We’re continuing our series of conversations from Dell Technologies World in Las Vegas. This week, we’re shifting from the Dell executive perspective to the partner perspective, and today’s guest has been making the trip to this event since the EMC World days. Earl Gosick is co-founder and senior consultant at ESTI Consulting Services, a Saskatoon-based solution provider that just celebrated 35 years in business and took home Dell’s Data Centre Solutions Excellence Award for Canada last year. Earl also sits inside Dell’s CTO Connect program, a small, invitation-only group of partner technologists who get an early look at where Dell’s roadmap is actually heading – and, importantly, a real opportunity to push back on it. Earl’s a storage specialist at his core, and that turned out to be a useful lens at a conference that was fundamentally about AI infrastructure. Because if you pull on that AI thread long enough, it leads you back to data, and data always leads you back to storage. We talked about what the Exascale and Rackscale announcements mean for real customer deployments, why the cyber resilience conversation is as much about recovery speed as backup integrity, and a genuinely interesting thread about why Saskatchewan and the broader Canadian Prairies may be sitting on one of the most underappreciated data centre opportunities in North America right now. Let’s get right into it. My chat with Earl Gosick. Earl, thanks for taking the time. I appreciate it. Earl Gosick: I appreciate you having me here. It’s always nice to talk about what we’re doing with Dell. Robert Dutt: No doubt, and you guys are doing a lot. I understand this is by no means your first DTW rodeo. Earl Gosick: No, I’ve been coming since the EMC World days, and I’ve never – I missed a year through COVID, that was about it. Robert Dutt: Well, I guess we’ll allow you that. So you’ve got this background here, you do the CTO Connect with Dell. What’s different about this year, if anything? What’s the tone or the energy that tells you something about where the industry is at right now, and not necessarily just where Dell would like it to be going? Earl Gosick: I think the driving factor of today is really the supply constraints. You can see what AI is doing and the effect that’s having across the board on every product that has memory or CPU or flash drives in it – which is everything in technology. So that’s really setting the tone. But it also shows how effective AI is as a market driver, and what people think is going to come out of that technology – which is, I think, very important for people to understand. It’s ubiquitous technology that’s going to drive a lot of change in our industry. And we’re seeing a leading edge of that. And if this is the leading edge, there’s some pretty exciting things coming, I suspect, and it’s going to do some pretty important and probably quite wonderful things for our clients. Robert Dutt: We heard from the main stage the idea of encouraging customers to get their hand up early – to get those orders, or even an inkling of where things are going for orders, in as early as possible – and that that will, in effect, Jeff Clarke was suggesting, get folks the best possible results. What’s the guidance you guys are providing your customers around that whole issue, and thinking about availability and pricing of hardware in this current super-fun environment? Earl Gosick: Our position does align with what we’re hearing from Dell when we’re dealing with Dell Technologies, so we try and pass on the messages as transparently as we can, understanding there are supply constraints coming. And we have to deal with those in the only way we have, and that is to figure out what we need. Let’s plan early. Let’s plan the budgets we have for the year, and we can make some estimates about what’s going to be happening six months from now – but they’re estimates, and they’re going to be higher. So it’s probably going to be cheaper for you to have technology that’s sitting on the floor unused for a few months and waste through some support potentially, as opposed to delaying the purchase for three months. So if we know what we’re going to buy, we should operate in a manner that allows us to order those technologies as soon as possible and make sure you’re not waiting for something that delays your business initiatives. Robert Dutt: You guys won the Data Centre Solutions Excellence Award last year for Canada. Take your victory lap. Tell me – what is it you guys are doing in the data centre space that earned that, and what does winning the award tell you about where your practice is focused? Earl Gosick: I hope it helps demonstrate our success. So what ESTI likes to do as a business – our business model is really to build highly competent experts all the way from solution architecture to implementation of those technologies at the customer site. That takes a lot of effort on our behalf, and so it’s nice to get a reward that says we’re doing the right things. Because if you can build a strong rapport with a client who trusts your experts in their field, that creates long-term relationships – which is what both ESTI and Dell are after, and what our clients want. Robert Dutt: You’re a storage specialist at a conference that has been at its core all about AI infrastructure. But at the same time, you go back to when it was – you said – EMC World, all about storage. The more I heard this week, the more it feels like the AI story is really a data story, and data stories are storage stories to at least some degree. How are you seeing that translate in terms of what your customers are actually asking about, or what they’re going to be asking you about? Earl Gosick: It’s significant. You’re right. In order for any type of artificial intelligence to derive a useful data product out the end, it’s built on the data that you have. So customers are coming to the realization that they have to store everything. So it is driving a lot of demand for storage. It’s driving storage in different ways and they just keep everything. Then there’s another product that comes after that, which is cleaning that data – building the data pipelines. When I talk about storage, it’s really about data, and AI is a data-driven product. So it’s doing great things for the storage industry. But the clients understand that they do have to have the data – it has to be there, it has to be available. And then when they build these data products, they have to protect those data products. They’ve got to make sure they’re secure. So it’s driving a lot of initiatives on both sides of the fence that are good for all of us. Robert Dutt: Especially with new or newer customers, or customers who are looking to expand what they’re doing with AI – and acknowledging there’s going to be a range from folks who have had the religion since day one and folks who’ve just been randomly shoving stuff digitally wherever they can. Where do you find those newer customers are at, generally speaking, in terms of sophistication of data management and data governance and all that kind of fun? Earl Gosick: Unfortunately, I’d like to say there’s a median in there. There is not. Everybody is at a different stage in that cycle for them. So you really have to be a little bit cognizant and ask the questions to find out where they’re at before you can really sort of hold their hands and walk them down the road. Many people who started that journey early – you can learn from them. And so they’re going to tell us to start and do something, and you may fail, there may be some things, but you’re going to learn something from that. The second time will be more successful. Then you take that information, you pass it on to the newer people who are trying to get quick value from those investments they’re making on the AI front. So it could be things about how to connect those various data sources because they’re spread everywhere, to how do they build, or select which ones they put their money and their efforts behind. And so you take from the ones that have been doing this for a while, you pass that information on to the ones that are starting on this journey, and you connect the dots. You provide value and make pain go away wherever you can. And customers appreciate that. Robert Dutt: And that sounds like that’s where you’re kind of bridging that gap that exists and trying to bring customers to the level they need to be at to get something out of this. Earl Gosick: Absolutely. Like I said, everybody’s on a journey at a different stage of that journey. And so you have to communicate well to understand where they’re at and what they’re trying to achieve. Once you know that – we don’t always have the answers, but we leverage great partners like Dell who do have somebody that knows the answer. And so building this sort of ecosystem of potential partners to bridge that gap is great. And Dell does that not just from us and the partner community, but their partner community as well, to support all the component pieces that go together to build these pretty highly complex solutions in some cases. Robert Dutt: Of all the announcements, all the stuff that we heard on the main stage and elsewhere this week, what kind of caught your attention – your major aha moment – the thing that’s going to be interesting going back to your business or going back to your customers with new opportunities or the ability to do something better, faster, more? Earl Gosick: So as we talked about, I am a storage guy. So I look at something like Exascale. They’ve been talking about this for a couple of years now in the CTO cycles that I’ve been to. To see that product sort of come to fruition, where you have something and you can just put a personality on that module and build something out – I think that could be very game-changing, especially for AI. They might want to do a lot of things with file storage today, object storage tomorrow. Being able to build up a cluster and put a personality on it that meets the needs of the day – I think that could be quite interesting. That Rackscale solution you saw on the stage with Michael Dell and Jensen the other day – for the larger clients, something like that could be quite interesting. I mean, we’re building these large data centers right now and trying to fill them. Rackscale infrastructure that helps with power and energy and doing a lot of powerful things is going to probably be a game changer for a lot of people. Robert Dutt: One of the things that struck me here is what I want to call the AI agnosticism, as long as you’re doing it on Dell infrastructure – that Dell is talking about here, ranging from, if you’ve got really basic needs, run it locally on your AI PC, moving up a bit there’s the GB10, which is more of a deskside machine, up to the big old box that Jensen signed on stage. How does that map with what you see in terms of customer needs for AI, and what do you think of that kind of approach to structuring both the data center and broader AI processing across the enterprise? Earl Gosick: I think as we touched on earlier, everybody’s on a different stage in that journey. So if you’ve got a guy that’s working at his desk and he’s trying to do some cool things, but he doesn’t have access to a million tokens – that little GB10 you put on the desk beside him and he’s going to do some development, he’s going to learn some wonderful things. Then as you move up the stack in your journey, you’ve got some big clients who are going to do small proof-of-concept type scenarios where they might want a smaller box and then move up that stack. I think it’s important to have a product that covers a diverse range of those people because nobody’s in that one sweet spot – they’re all over the map. Having that full technology set supports wherever they happen to be in their life cycle. Robert Dutt: You touch on tokens, and Jeff Clarke’s presentation was really deep into tokenomics and the kind of the trap there. I’m curious how that maps with what you’ve seen in customers as they’ve started to explore AI. Are they seeing these same challenges, and how are they thinking about it? Earl Gosick: Tokens are the buzzword of the day, but they’re out there for a reason. Everybody has finite resources to put towards the solution they’re trying to build. They may or may not know what that solution is – they’re working towards something, they need tokens to achieve that. What I find interesting is the people who are very early into the game of AI and building solutions around that – it doesn’t take them long before they’re like, “I’m out of tokens. I need to do some stuff.” So it just comes back to the fact that there are only so many resources to solve the needs you have, and you only have so many tokens, and you’ve got to learn to live within what you can get your hands on. And that’s driving the economy, whether it’s at a data center level or at an internal level for any business. Robert Dutt: And does that in turn drive – which I believe is Dell’s thesis here – does that in turn drive the interest in building out infrastructure in-house, so that the relative incremental cost of those additional tokens goes way down because it’s bought and built versus rented? Earl Gosick: Yeah. I think there’s a step along that AI journey where people have potentially outgrown what they can do in the cloud in an economic fashion. We see the supply constraints are driven by CPU and memory usage. If you look at what the cloud hyperscalers offer, when you get into highly intensive memory and CPU, it starts to get very expensive. A lot of storage, a lot of bits and bytes moving back and forth – very expensive. All those things are prevalent in AI. You’re moving a lot of data back and forth, you’re touching a lot of things, you need a lot of memory at times. So once you get to a point where you’re doing useful things with your AI and building generative models, no matter what you do with inferencing, it starts to get really expensive. Then it becomes a time where you can move those things into a data center you control. You can get some economics from it and you can get some sovereignty out of it. A hyperscaler outside of your control can turn things off – they can’t do that when it’s your data center. So you’ve got a lot of control as well as the economics behind how you’re achieving the outcomes you’re looking to achieve. Robert Dutt: I used a word which is actually where I wanted to go next, which is sovereignty. When we’re talking about data center infrastructure and moving bits around and enterprise storage, how is data sovereignty trending among your customers, especially folks who have regulatory concerns and that sort of thing? Earl Gosick: Being a Canadian company, predominantly, we have a larger focus on sovereignty and data sovereignty and sovereign solutions than maybe you’ll see south of the border here. And we find our friends in the European Union are a little bit different – they’re ahead of us even. But it’s a really big concern, especially when you have any type of government agency that you’re dealing with, or anybody that really has intellectual property that they’re looking to protect. They’ve learned that open AI models may expose things – even if it’s just from how they’re creating their algorithms. But if the data gets out there, it’s a concern. They’re protecting their assets as well. These AIs are delivering very useful outcomes for them. They need to make sure they own those outcomes and that they can actually reach them when they need them. So part of data sovereignty is not just the sovereign part of your data, but it’s the actual access to your data. We’re learning things from not just the AI piece but from ransomware – all of a sudden your data goes away. The same thing could happen with a hyperscaler for some people. Sovereign IT solutions are going to be, I think, increasingly important moving forward. Robert Dutt: On that note, you mentioned ransomware, and data resilience and protection is another area I wanted to touch on. We heard the figure that 97% of cyber attacks are now specifically targeting backup infrastructure – because of the old line about, I forget the particular bank robber’s name, but why do you rob the banks? Because that’s where the money is. Why do you go after the backup? Because that’s where all the data is. Does that match with what you’re seeing, and if so, how does that change how you’re designing and recommending data protection for your customers? Earl Gosick: It is absolutely changing people’s realization of how they need to protect their data. This one doesn’t matter if it’s AI or your regular business practices – your data has value, whether it’s to support applications that are running your critical business or you’re building AI products that you need to protect. That has value and you need to access it. What we’re seeing more and more – and we’ve built a really strong practice around this – is building things like cyber vaults and using Dell’s technology partners like Index Engines, where they come in and they can quickly identify threats inside your environment and act on those. Because these guys loiter around for potentially months at a time. They know how to get to your backups. They know they’re not getting paid if you can recover. So they’re going to do everything they can to try and disrupt that. They have AI engines just like ours, but they have a lot of money and they don’t have the constraints about how they use their AI. I mean, these people are criminals, so they act in a method that makes them money. We’re going to be facing even more potential threats in the future, and some of those are going to be AI-driven. We’re going to have to react at AI speeds. There are changes coming, but certainly people are learning to build protection mechanisms that are air-gapped and can respond very quickly to threats. Robert Dutt: When you’re sitting in front of a client who thinks they’re covered – they’ve got a backup solution, they’ve got someone who’s responsible for it – what are the most common gaps that you find between what they think they have and what they actually have? Earl Gosick: I think for many clients, they don’t really understand how disruptive it’s going to be if they run into a ransomware attack. If you’re a client that may have ransomware insurance, for example, and they get hit – you have to tell them, “Do you understand you’re not going to be able to touch any of that infrastructure? Because your insurance company is going to want to do some analysis on that to see how the threat came in.” That infrastructure is dead and gone. You’re starting from scratch. You need a golden image – you need something you know nobody has touched. Protecting the data is only the first piece. Rebuilding from that data, and how fast you can do that – that’s the very critical component. That’s where an air-gapped cyber recovery solution like Dell Cyber Recovery is critical, because you can understand what data to recover and you can recover quickly. Having the data there – that’s the great first step and that’s where you should start. But following that, that is only the first step. Robert Dutt: Your client base is different from a lot of partners I talk to. Given where you sit and who you’re focused on – not necessarily organizations that are under the same kind of pressure or have the same kind of resources to pursue AI – how do you translate and filter what you hear at a conference like this, where a lot is focused towards big enterprise, to a message that makes sense for your customers and scales to their needs and appetites? Earl Gosick: That’s one I think isn’t really that difficult – it’s not as difficult as you would think. Because everybody has the same problems. They run into the same problems. How they build solutions to those problems might change on the scale, but you just have to understand and recognize that everybody’s having the same problems. You can articulate and communicate to them that you’re not the only one that has this. We can resolve this problem at a large scale, but we don’t have to. You came back to it earlier when we talked about the product sets, from small to large – you just pick the right one to meet the solution that these guys have. How you solve that problem of the day doesn’t necessarily change for a really, really large client versus a very, very small client. It’s really just the scale of the end solution and the architecture that’s put together to solve the need. Robert Dutt: From a Titanium partner’s seat, what did the program changes that we saw rolled out – the agentification of the program, some of the incentive shifts – tell you about where Dell sees growth opportunity, and how does it align with where you’re already going or where it might take you? Earl Gosick: I think you can see very easily that Dell is putting a large focus around AI and what it can do for them to streamline their business and be successful. We, like any other company we deal with, are doing the same thing. What they’re doing with their Dell One program, and having a single operation from lead generation down to quoting and pricing and follow-up – it matches what we’re doing on the back end and trying to automate that. Because as long as we can automate that process and reduce the friction in those programs and dealing with Dell, we can spend that time focusing on our clients’ needs. You see Dell, I think, leveraging the same technologies to do that. And if we’re smart business people today, we’re looking to the people around us who are being successful and trying to do what they’re doing in a sense. That’s true for us and our clients. Leveraging AI and seeing how that’s being successful for our partners is driving what we’re all doing – to drive automation and simplification through the processes that are just painful every day that we have to do better at, to support our clients. Robert Dutt: I’m guessing you guys are pretty far down this road already because you’re pretty much a pure-play Dell on the infrastructure side, as far as I understand. But when a company like Dell rolls out these incentives focused on expanding customer footprints – getting a Dell storage customer into Dell PCs or any of the other solution lines – just curious if that moves the needle for you in terms of the incentive, or is it already baked into what you’re doing? Earl Gosick: It’s baked into what we’re doing. In the end of the day, you are trying to build a rapport with a customer based on being a trusted expert. You’re not going to flip your technologies around based on what’s going to get somebody a little bit more money. You’ve got to do the right thing for the customer today and every time you deal with them. The advantage of dealing with Dell is they typically tie their incentives to the product that they are investing in today – that they see the future growing into. So they usually coincide. They understand the pain points of the year, and the incentives usually match the requirements of the day as well. So they’re really good at that. And then they usually have a lot of tools to support that initiative of IT transformation, whatever it is for that time and place in our industry. Robert Dutt: You mentioned earlier you’re on the CTO Connect program – pretty small room, an exclusive group. Tell me about what that relationship looks like on the inside of the room, and the value that an organization like ESTI gets from sitting in there. Earl Gosick: I guess I’ll put it this way. We deal with some technology providers – predominantly Dell. Dell puts us in a room, they tell us what they’re doing for the next year or two, and they ask us if they’re on the right track. That’s telling to me – they care and they listen. They talk about the technologies that we’re going to see upcoming, so it’s helpful for us to talk to our clients about where the industry is headed. But they do sometimes say, “We’re going to do this,” and the room says, “Oh, no, you can’t do that. Our customers love this,” or, “We like this for this reason.” And they say, “Oh, okay.” And we have a dialogue about those things. So I think that’s one of the most important things that comes out of CTO Connect – we hear about industry trends, but they also ask us our opinion on whether they’re on the right track, and then they listen to that opinion. I think that’s telling for any company you deal with – one that engages not only with their clients, but with their technology partners. It’s one of the things I really like about CTO Connect. Robert Dutt: You guys just turned 35 or so, as I understand, as an organization. That’s a long time to be running a consultancy in any market – and markets move, vendors come and go. What’s the philosophy behind building something that durable in a market that changes so fast, and especially in an area of the country that doesn’t necessarily get as much headline attention from vendors as a Toronto or a Vancouver or a Montreal? Earl Gosick: I think it comes back to what I stated earlier around building strong and capable expertise across the board – and that’s building relationships with the clients, building relationships with partners like Dell to solve the solutions of the day. Our clients respect that because they know they can come back to us again and again and we’ll do the right thing together. So that’s really the crux of it. Our business model is a little different in that we support a little bit more of an entrepreneurial aspect to our business. When young, capable people come on board and they build differentiating products, they get a seat at the table – and that’s critical for ESTI and the way we operate. But it’s really about looking at modern technology solutions and being agile to support those ever-changing technologies. It makes our industry exciting. You’re never doing the same thing every day. And as long as you can recognize the fact that you won’t be doing the same thing tomorrow and you just have to find a way to deal with it – that’s how we thrive in our company, and in working with Dell as well. Robert Dutt: All right, so let’s close with asking you to do a little bit of the impossible, given that pace of change. What’s one thing that you’re thinking about today, but maybe not totally all-in on at this point, that you think is going to be shaping the business for ESTI and your customers when we’re sitting here at DTW 2027? Earl Gosick: Well, that’s a really hard question. On the investment side, we do look at some of the technologies today – and as we talked about, AI is big for us. We need to build services that our clients don’t have. So we spend a lot of focus on where they have skills and where they don’t. We’re going to build a lot of expertise around cleaning data, building data pipelines and that kind of stuff, to focus on the needs our clients are asking us to help them solve. So that’s kind of an easy one because everybody sees that going forward. Beyond that – we’re making a strong effort in Saskatchewan and Alberta to build a sort of data center economy to support a lot of these data centers that need to be built. We already have access to power infrastructure to support those things. That’s going to drive a little bit of a change in our operating model just to support our local governments as they try and take advantage of the differentiators we have. That’ll drive some change for ESTI. And then as we expand across the rest of Canada, different geographies have different requirements as well. So lots of change, lots of new people coming on board all the time – interesting but dynamic. Robert Dutt: That will be an interesting thread to pull on. I remember going to an event – God, it must have been 15 years ago now – talking about how Canada really should be a data center powerhouse. When you consider we have power, clean power in relative abundance, we have cold, which turns out to be important – it sounds like maybe there’s an opportunity to realize some of that with what you guys are doing and what governments are starting to look at more seriously. Earl Gosick: They are. Also, right outside my hometown, they just announced a very large data center which is going to house some infrastructure from CoreWeave – and we’re going to see more of that, I think, because that process went very well. I sat in on a conference a couple of weeks ago where it was government and industry getting together to talk about why they were successful, what they bring to the table. Saskatchewan is unique because they have regulated power, energy, and land. They can guarantee, “We will give you power, we can guarantee you’ll get LNG.” Those types of things are very important for anybody trying to build a data center – it’s the critical piece. And with the government having control over all of those, they can guarantee them. That’s where I think Saskatchewan is going to have a real differentiator to support that technology, and the government is well aware of that fact now. They’re going to want to do more of these things. And then our neighbors in both Alberta and Manitoba are sort of on board as well. Certainly Alberta has done a few key data centers to support AI and those are going to continue to happen. We’re sometimes slow to move because it’s government. But once they realize the differentiators they have and what it can do for the market, I think there’ll be some traction there. Robert Dutt: Should be interesting times, and sitting where you’re sitting sounds like a big opportunity. Earl Gosick: Absolutely. I think it’s a big opportunity for all of us – supporting your community around you as well as building a thriving business. Robert Dutt: Earl, I appreciate you taking the time once again. I hope this has been a good DTW for you. Earl Gosick: It’s been a great discussion and a good DTW, so thanks a lot for having me. Robert Dutt: There you have it – Earl Gosick from ESTI Consulting Services. I’d like to thank Earl for his time last week in Las Vegas. Thirty-five years building deep technical expertise from Saskatoon, in a vendor relationship game that tends to reward proximity to the bigger centres – that’s not an accident, and it came through in the conversation. A few things I’ll take away from this one. First, the AI-is-a-storage-story framing. Every AI product ultimately requires data to be collected, governed, moved, and protected. That’s not news to Earl, but it’s a useful reframe for anyone still trying to connect their existing practice to the AI conversation. The hardware gets the headlines. The data work actually gets the contracts. Second, on cyber resilience – the ransomware insurance point Earl raised is worth sitting with. The moment a client files a claim, that infrastructure gets frozen while the insurance company figures out how the breach happened. Your ability to recover doesn’t just depend on whether the backup is intact – it depends on whether you built a clean, air-gapped golden image that nobody has touched. That’s the conversation. And if you’re not having it with your clients, maybe someone else is. And third, keep an eye on Saskatchewan. Regulated power, guaranteed energy supply, and a provincial government that has now seen a CoreWeave-scale data center get successfully built in the province and wants more of them. Earl thinks that’s just the start of something, and I’m inclined to agree. If you’re enjoying the show, please follow or subscribe wherever you listen. We’re on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, and most of the usual podcast directories. And if you have a moment to leave a rating or a review, that really does help folks in the channel find the show. Until next time, I’m Robert Dutt for ChannelBuzz.ca, and I’ll see you in the channel.

HPE Tech Talk
A penalty shootout with HPE CEO Antonio Neri: HPE Discover Barcelona 2025

HPE Tech Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 4, 2025 30:34


What's going on at HPE Discover Barcelona 2025. This week, Technology Now visits Barcelona for an interview with company CEO Antonio Neri. We ask what the how the world of technology is faring a quarter of the way into the 21st century, we look forward to where we're heading in the future, and we explore how HPE is responding to our changing world.This is Technology Now, a weekly show from Hewlett Packard Enterprise. Every week, hosts Michael Bird and Sam Jarrell look at a story that's been making headlines, take a look at the technology behind it, and explain why it matters to organizations. This episode is available in both video and audio formats.http://www.hpe.com/discover/barcelona

The New Quantum Era
From Exascale to Quantum Advantage with Bert de Jong

The New Quantum Era

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 22, 2025 32:29 Transcription Available


In this episode, Sebastian Hassinger sits down with Bert de Jong, a leading computational chemist and Director of the Quantum Systems Accelerator at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. They explore Bert's journey from high-performance classical computing to the front lines of quantum research, his vision for the future of the U.S. National Quantum Initiative (NQI) center he leads, and the scientific and engineering challenges that will define the next era of quantum computing.Key Topics CoveredCareer Arc: Bert reflects on his 27-year career in the national lab system, moving from classical computational chemistry and HPC to becoming a leader in quantum computing research and center management.Genesis of Quantum Focus: He describes his pivot to quantum in 2014, prompted by the scaling limitations of classical simulations and the promise of quantum systems to tackle “bigger and bigger” problems.Role of National Labs and NQI: Discussion of the U.S. National Quantum Initiative and the unique positioning of national labs in driving foundational science and cross-sector collaboration through centers like QSA.QSA's Multimodal Approach: Insight into QSA's decision not to “choose a lane,” advancing superconducting qubits, trapped ions, and neutral atoms in parallel, and the unique innovations—like integrated photonics—enabled by this breadth.Neutral Atom Milestones: Highlights the rapid progress in neutral atom systems (including work with QuEra and Misha Lukin), and the looming advent of devices with dozens of logical qubits and error correction.Logical Qubits and Error Correction: Bert explains how all quantum modalities are advancing toward error-corrected logical qubits, and why 100-logical-qubit prototypes are a realistic five-year goal.Scientific Impact: A discussion of what constitutes “quantum (scientific) advantage,” and why Bert believes that chemistry, materials science, high-energy, and nuclear physics will be the first domains to benefit from quantum systems unavailable to classical computing.Balancing Science and Engineering: Exploration of the transition from fundamental scientific challenges to applied engineering problems as quantum hardware matures—touching on device manufacturing, integrated photonics, and the symbiosis between national labs and industry partners.Quantum Software Innovation: Bert's perspective on bridging researcher expertise with usable tools, including his work on open-source quantum compilers (e.g., BQSKit/biscuit) and the importance of diverse, in- terdisciplinary teams.Looking Ahead: Bert's vision for the next five years: transitioning quantum from promise to prototypes that deliver real scientific results, and solidifying a collaborative ecosystem across labs, universities, and industry.Notable Quotes“HPC, quantum, and AI are all just tools—what matters is how we use them to solve real science problems.”“We're at the point where error-corrected quantum prototypes with 100 logical qubits and high fidelity could deliver a true scientific advantage within five years.”“National labs bring together deep science, advanced engineering, and a culture of collaboration that's essential at this stage of quantum's development.”“Quantum advantage isn't a buzzword for us—it's about doing science that can't be done any other way.”Episode HighlightsBert's transition from classical to quantum and the pivotal role of DOE research centers.How QSA's cross-modality approach both accelerates hardware and fosters cross-institutional partnerships.A preview of upcoming neutral-atom milestones and why industry is watching closely.The importance of open standards and software that supports a rapidly diversifying hardware landscape.The public sector's role in driving “over the horizon” technology, derisking pathways beyond what private startups can take on alone.Ambitious, concrete goals for the next five years: prototype quantum systems delivering early scientific wins, not just more research papers.If you enjoy deep dives into the intersection of science, engineering, and the future ofquantum technology, subscribe and share The New Quantum Era.

HPE Tech Talk
What does the future hold for the technology industry?

HPE Tech Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2025 22:09


Where do industry experts see the world of technology heading? This week, Technology Now is looking back to a conversation from HPE Discover Las Vegas with HPE's Chief Technology Officer, Fidelma Russo, about any updates since last year's Diary of a CTO episode, and where she sees the industry heading in the future.This is Technology Now, a weekly show from Hewlett Packard Enterprise. Every week, hosts Michael Bird and Aubrey Lovell look at a story that's been making headlines, take a look at the technology behind it, and explain why it matters to organizations.About Fidelma Russo: https://www.hpe.com/uk/en/leadership-bios/fidelma-russo.htmlToday I Learned:https://www.ed.ac.uk/news/microbes-transform-plastic-waste-into-paracetamolJohnson, N.W., Valenzuela-Ortega, M., Thorpe, T.W. et al. A biocompatible Lossen rearrangement in Escherichia coli. Nat. Chem. (2025). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41557-025-01845-5https://www.statista.com/statistics/242764/global-polyethylene-terephthalate-production-capacity/This Week in History: https://www.edn.com/bell-labs-announces-junction-transistor-july-5-1951/https://uk.rs-online.com/web/content/discovery/ideas-and-advice/bipolar-transistor-guidehttps://newatlas.com/computers/ibm-2-nm-chips-transistors/https://www.nano.gov/nanotech-101/what/nano-size

HPE Tech Talk
What's happening at HPE Discover Las Vegas?

HPE Tech Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2025 22:31


What is happening at HPE Discover? This week Technology Now is dialing into to HPE Discover Las Vegas, HPE's annual customer and partner event. Our reporter on the ground, Sam Jarrell, is joined by HPE's President and CEO, Antonio Neri, to explore the show floor and learn more about this year's event. This episode is available in both video and audio formats. This is Technology Now, a weekly show from Hewlett Packard Enterprise. Every week, hosts Michael Bird and Aubrey Lovell look at a story that's been making headlines, take a look at the technology behind it, and explain why it matters to organizations.About Antonio Neri:https://www.hpe.com/uk/en/leadership-bios/antonio-neri.htmlThis Week in History:https://www.iaea.org/sites/default/files/26404794246.pdfhttps://world-nuclear.org/information-library/current-and-future-generation/nuclear-power-in-the-world-today

The Brand Called You
Quantum & Exascale Supercomputing Revolution | Bronson Messer, Director of Science, Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility (OLCF)

The Brand Called You

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2025 77:23


Exascale supercomputing is transforming scientific research, from AI-driven breakthroughs to quantum advancements. Oak Ridge National Laboratory's Frontier supercomputer is at the heart of this revolution, handling a billion billion calculations per second to tackle climate modeling, biomedical innovations, and more. As we push toward Zetta-scale computing, the possibilities are endless.00:09- About Bronson Messer Bronson Messer is a Distinguished Staff Scientist and Director of Science for the Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility (OLCF) at ORNL.

@HPCpodcast with Shahin Khan and Doug Black
@HPCpodcast-98: Hyperion Research on HPC, AI, Quantum – In Depth

@HPCpodcast with Shahin Khan and Doug Black

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 27, 2025


We are delighted to have as special guests today three of the top analysts in the HPC, AI, Cloud, and Quantum fields, representing the industry analyst firm Hyperion Research. Earl Joseph is Hyperion CEO, Mark Nossokoff, Research Director, and Bob Sorensen, Senior VP of Research. Join us for an In Depth discussion of the current state and future trends in HPC, AI, Quantum, Cloud Computing, Exascale, Storage, Interconnects and Optical I/O, and Liquid Cooling. [audio mp3="https://orionx.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/098@HPCpodcast_ID_Hyperion-Research-HPC-AI-Quantum-Market_20250227.mp3"][/audio] The post @HPCpodcast-98: Hyperion Research on HPC, AI, Quantum – In Depth appeared first on OrionX.net.

Direct Current - An Energy.gov Podcast
S5 E4: Science Powered by Exascale

Direct Current - An Energy.gov Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2025 24:22


What is exascale computing? Why does it matter? To find out, we connected with the computing experts at DOE's national laboratories. Join us as we discuss the arduous journey to build three of the fastest computers in the world and their software. After more than a decade of planning and work, these powerful exascale computers are now enabling groundbreaking research that wouldn't be possible otherwise. With research in cancer, biofuels, space exploration, and more, exascale computing is bringing scientific discovery to new heights.

@HPCpodcast with Shahin Khan and Doug Black
@HPCpodcast-89: Rick Stevens and Mike Papka of Argonne National Lab

@HPCpodcast with Shahin Khan and Doug Black

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2024


We discuss the Aurora supercomputer, Exascale, AI, reliability at scale, technology adoption agility, datacenter power and cooling, cloud computing, quantum computing. [audio mp3="https://orionx.net/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/089@HPCpodcast_Rick-Stevens_Mike-Papka_ANL-update_20240919.mp3"][/audio] The post @HPCpodcast-89: Rick Stevens and Mike Papka of Argonne National Lab appeared first on OrionX.net.

The Data Center Frontier Show
The Dynamics of Exascale Data Centers

The Data Center Frontier Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 10, 2024 25:24


The increased demands of cloud services and artificial intelligence are changing the data center landscape. The days of a 20 MW to 50 MW hyperscale data center being sufficient to meet the requirements of high performance computing are quickly fading away. Today, Exascale data centers capable of providing more than 500 MW of power are increasingly taking center stage, ushering in the gigawatt era.

This Week in HPC
Episode 370: Nvidia Powers HPE's Sphere of AI; A Second Exascale System for Europe

This Week in HPC

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 1, 2024 12:32


Addison Snell and Kevin Jackson explore the HPE Discover Conference at the Sphere in Las Vegas, strong messages about generative AI, and the announcement of a second exascale system in Europe.

@HPCpodcast with Shahin Khan and Doug Black
@HPCpodcast-86: DOE Exascale Project w Christine Chalk

@HPCpodcast with Shahin Khan and Doug Black

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2024


We are delighted to be joined by Christine Chalk, physical scientist at U.S. Department of Energy and federal program manager for the Exascale Computing Project (ECP) and the Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility.  Christine is also responsible for budget formulation for Advanced Scientific Computing Research (ASCR) and management of the Advanced Scientific Computing Advisory Committee and the Computational Science Graduate Fellowship. Topics include the ECP project and what made it so successful, how policy turns into a budget, and the growing importance of the role of women in HPC. [audio mp3="https://orionx.net/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/086@HPCpodcast_ECP_Christine-Chalk_20240625.mp3"][/audio] The post @HPCpodcast-86: DOE Exascale Project w Christine Chalk appeared first on OrionX.net.

HPE Tech Talk
HPE CEO and President Antonio Neri on HPE Discover 2024

HPE Tech Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2024 20:04


In this episode we are looking ahead to the Enterprise tech event of the year, HPE Discover Las Vegas, which is on during the week of June 17th 2024. It'll see curated programs of events across Edge and networking, Hybrid Cloud, and AI. Hundreds of sessions will provide an opportunity to network for thousands of global tech leaders, customers, and partners.And, to give us a bit of a sneak peek of the event - and his own keynote at Las Vegas' iconic Sphere - we're joined today by a very special guest: HPE President and CEO, Antonio Neri. This is Technology Now, a weekly show from Hewlett Packard Enterprise. Every week we look at a story that's been making headlines, take a look at the technology behind it, and explain why it matters to organizations and what we can learn from it. Do you have a question for the expert? Ask it here using this Google form: https://forms.gle/8vzFNnPa94awARHMA About this week's guest: https://www.hpe.com/uk/en/leadership-bios/antonio-neri.html Sources and statistics cited in this episode:HPE Discover 2024 Agenda: https://www.hpe.com/us/en/discover.html#programs HPE Discover 2024 keynotes: https://www.hpe.com/us/en/discover.html#keynotes Drones fly with autonomous neural networks: https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/scirobotics.adi0591

Tech behind the Trends on The Element Podcast | Hewlett Packard Enterprise
HPE CEO and President Antonio Neri on HPE Discover 2024

Tech behind the Trends on The Element Podcast | Hewlett Packard Enterprise

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2024 20:04


In this episode we are looking ahead to the Enterprise tech event of the year, HPE Discover Las Vegas, which is on during the week of June 17th 2024. It'll see curated programs of events across Edge and networking, Hybrid Cloud, and AI. Hundreds of sessions will provide an opportunity to network for thousands of global tech leaders, customers, and partners.And, to give us a bit of a sneak peek of the event - and his own keynote at Las Vegas' iconic Sphere - we're joined today by a very special guest: HPE President and CEO, Antonio Neri. This is Technology Now, a weekly show from Hewlett Packard Enterprise. Every week we look at a story that's been making headlines, take a look at the technology behind it, and explain why it matters to organizations and what we can learn from it. Do you have a question for the expert? Ask it here using this Google form: https://forms.gle/8vzFNnPa94awARHMA About this week's guest: https://www.hpe.com/uk/en/leadership-bios/antonio-neri.html Sources and statistics cited in this episode:HPE Discover 2024 Agenda: https://www.hpe.com/us/en/discover.html#programs HPE Discover 2024 keynotes: https://www.hpe.com/us/en/discover.html#keynotes Drones fly with autonomous neural networks: https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/scirobotics.adi0591

This Week in HPC
Episode 368: Thinking Beyond Exascale; Grace Hopper Leaps Up the List

This Week in HPC

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2024 20:14


Addison Snell and Kevin Jackson discuss highlights from ISC24 including the HALO launch, Addison's Fishbowl panel, Nvidia's Grace Hopper and more.

HPE Tech Talk, SMB
HPE CEO and President Antonio Neri on HPE Discover 2024

HPE Tech Talk, SMB

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2024 20:04


In this episode we are looking ahead to the Enterprise tech event of the year, HPE Discover Las Vegas, which is on during the week of June 17th 2024. It'll see curated programs of events across Edge and networking, Hybrid Cloud, and AI. Hundreds of sessions will provide an opportunity to network for thousands of global tech leaders, customers, and partners.And, to give us a bit of a sneak peek of the event - and his own keynote at Las Vegas' iconic Sphere - we're joined today by a very special guest: HPE President and CEO, Antonio Neri. This is Technology Now, a weekly show from Hewlett Packard Enterprise. Every week we look at a story that's been making headlines, take a look at the technology behind it, and explain why it matters to organizations and what we can learn from it. Do you have a question for the expert? Ask it here using this Google form: https://forms.gle/8vzFNnPa94awARHMA About this week's guest: https://www.hpe.com/uk/en/leadership-bios/antonio-neri.html Sources and statistics cited in this episode:HPE Discover 2024 Agenda: https://www.hpe.com/us/en/discover.html#programs HPE Discover 2024 keynotes: https://www.hpe.com/us/en/discover.html#keynotes Drones fly with autonomous neural networks: https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/scirobotics.adi0591

Code Together
Ready for Exascale - Bringing Science Into the Future

Code Together

Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2024 23:54


Scott Parker joins Tony to discuss the progress getting applications running on Aurora Supercomputer nodes.  From 2022 where the project started to today, significant progress has been made using a variety of programming models.  Kokkos, OpenMP and oneAPI have enabled migration of scientific and AI applications to run on the Intel CPUs and GPUs Aurora is built on. Guest: Scott Parker is the Lead for Performance Tools and Programming Models at the ALCF. He received his B.S. in Mechanical Engineering from Lehigh University, and a Ph.D. in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Prior to joining Argonne, he worked at the National Center for Supercomputing Applications, where he focused on high-performance computing and scientific applications. At Argonne since 2008, he works on performance tools, performance optimization, and spectral element computational fluid dynamics solvers.   Scott Parker     Resources: Aurora Super Computer - https://www.alcf.anl.gov/aurora Intel Data Center Max GPU - https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/products/details/discrete-gpus/data-center-gpu/max-series.html Intel Xeon Processors - https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/products/details/processors/xeon.html Intel oneAPI Base Toolkit - https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/developer/tools/oneapi/base-toolkit.html    

HPE Tech Talk
Aurora - The world's second exascale computer officially recognized

HPE Tech Talk

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2024 22:32


In this episode we are looking at computers going fast. ‘Exascale' means a computer is running a billion, billion operations every second. At the 2024 ISC high-performance conference in Hamburg, Germany, the world's second exascale machine was officially recognised: The Aurora supercomputer at Argonne National Laboratory officially broke the exascale barrier at 1.012 exaflops. So why does exascale matter, and why is it so difficult to achieve? Joining us to discuss is Susan Coghlan, Project Director of the Aurora exascale computer at the Argonne Leadership Computing Facility at Argonne National Laboratory in Lemont, Illinois.This is Technology Now, a weekly show from Hewlett Packard Enterprise. Every week we look at a story that's been making headlines, take a look at the technology behind it, and explain why it matters to organizations and what we can learn from it. Do you have a question for the expert? Ask it here using this Google form: https://forms.gle/8vzFNnPa94awARHMA About the expert: https://www.anl.gov/profile/susan-m-coghlan Sources and statistics cited in this episode:Top500 list of the fastest supercomputers: https://top500.org/Argonne National Laboratory: https://www.anl.gov/Quantum navigation flight: https://www.gov.uk/government/news/un-jammable-quantum-tech-takes-flight-to-boost-uks-resilience-against-hostile-actors

Tech behind the Trends on The Element Podcast | Hewlett Packard Enterprise
Aurora - The world's second exascale computer officially recognized

Tech behind the Trends on The Element Podcast | Hewlett Packard Enterprise

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2024 22:32


In this episode we are looking at computers going fast. ‘Exascale' means a computer is running a billion, billion operations every second. At the 2024 ISC high-performance conference in Hamburg, Germany, the world's second exascale machine was officially recognised: The Aurora supercomputer at Argonne National Laboratory officially broke the exascale barrier at 1.012 exaflops. So why does exascale matter, and why is it so difficult to achieve? Joining us to discuss is Susan Coghlan, Project Director of the Aurora exascale computer at the Argonne Leadership Computing Facility at Argonne National Laboratory in Lemont, Illinois.This is Technology Now, a weekly show from Hewlett Packard Enterprise. Every week we look at a story that's been making headlines, take a look at the technology behind it, and explain why it matters to organizations and what we can learn from it. Do you have a question for the expert? Ask it here using this Google form: https://forms.gle/8vzFNnPa94awARHMA About the expert: https://www.anl.gov/profile/susan-m-coghlan Sources and statistics cited in this episode:Top500 list of the fastest supercomputers: https://top500.org/Argonne National Laboratory: https://www.anl.gov/Quantum navigation flight: https://www.gov.uk/government/news/un-jammable-quantum-tech-takes-flight-to-boost-uks-resilience-against-hostile-actors

HPE Tech Talk, SMB
Aurora - The world's second exascale computer officially recognized

HPE Tech Talk, SMB

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2024 22:32


In this episode we are looking at computers going fast. ‘Exascale' means a computer is running a billion, billion operations every second. At the 2024 ISC high-performance conference in Hamburg, Germany, the world's second exascale machine was officially recognised: The Aurora supercomputer at Argonne National Laboratory officially broke the exascale barrier at 1.012 exaflops. So why does exascale matter, and why is it so difficult to achieve? Joining us to discuss is Susan Coghlan, Project Director of the Aurora exascale computer at the Argonne Leadership Computing Facility at Argonne National Laboratory in Lemont, Illinois.This is Technology Now, a weekly show from Hewlett Packard Enterprise. Every week we look at a story that's been making headlines, take a look at the technology behind it, and explain why it matters to organizations and what we can learn from it. Do you have a question for the expert? Ask it here using this Google form: https://forms.gle/8vzFNnPa94awARHMA About the expert: https://www.anl.gov/profile/susan-m-coghlan Sources and statistics cited in this episode:Top500 list of the fastest supercomputers: https://top500.org/Argonne National Laboratory: https://www.anl.gov/Quantum navigation flight: https://www.gov.uk/government/news/un-jammable-quantum-tech-takes-flight-to-boost-uks-resilience-against-hostile-actors

@HPCpodcast with Shahin Khan and Doug Black

- Who will join the Exascale club next? - Nvidia "paints it green" - Other AI chips impress - Student Cluster Competition winners [audio mp3="https://orionx.net/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/HPCNB_20240520.mp3"][/audio] The post HPC News Bytes – 20240520 appeared first on OrionX.net.

HPE Tech Talk
Exploring the Isambard AI supercomputer

HPE Tech Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2024 13:22


The UK's fastest supercomputer, the Isambard-AI, is due to be completed in Summer 2024. According to the teams involved, it will reach up to 200 quadrillion calculations per second, and will give researchers and industry leaders new possibilities in the UK: the opportunity to work with the huge potential AI has to offer in the fields of robotics, big data, climate research, and drug discovery. Our guest this week is one of the project leaders: Professor Simon McIntosh-Smith from University of Bristol. We'll be looking at how Isambard-AI will be an open hub for all AI research in the UK, powered by around five-and-a-half-thousand GPUs.  This is Technology Now, a weekly show from Hewlett Packard Enterprise. Every week we look at a story that's been making headlines, take a look at the technology behind it, and explain why it matters to organizations and what we can learn from it.Do you have a question for the expert? Ask it here using this Google form: https://forms.gle/8vzFNnPa94awARHMAAbout the expert: https://www.linkedin.com/in/simonmcintoshsmith/?originalSubdomain=ukSources and statistics cited in this episode:Supercomputer name first used - https://www.hp.com/us-en/shop/tech-takes/history-of-supercomputingExascale barrier broke for the first time - https://www.hpe.com/us/en/newsroom/news-advisory/2023/03/4-ways-supercomputing-will-change-the-world.htmlAbout Isambard-AI - https://www.bristol.ac.uk/news/2023/september/isambard-ai.htmlHow the UK Government has invested £225 million - https://www.bristol.ac.uk/news/2023/november/supercomputer-announcement.html#:~:text=Isambard%2DAI%20will%20offer%20capacity,climate%20research%20and%20drug%20discovery.%22NASA's 3D-printed engine to power space rockets - https://www.nasa.gov/centers-and-facilities/marshall/nasas-3d-printed-rotating-detonation-rocket-engine-test-a-success/

Tech behind the Trends on The Element Podcast | Hewlett Packard Enterprise

The UK's fastest supercomputer, the Isambard-AI, is due to be completed in Summer 2024. According to the teams involved, it will reach up to 200 quadrillion calculations per second, and will give researchers and industry leaders new possibilities in the UK: the opportunity to work with the huge potential AI has to offer in the fields of robotics, big data, climate research, and drug discovery. Our guest this week is one of the project leaders: Professor Simon McIntosh-Smith from University of Bristol. We'll be looking at how Isambard-AI will be an open hub for all AI research in the UK, powered by around five-and-a-half-thousand GPUs.  This is Technology Now, a weekly show from Hewlett Packard Enterprise. Every week we look at a story that's been making headlines, take a look at the technology behind it, and explain why it matters to organizations and what we can learn from it.Do you have a question for the expert? Ask it here using this Google form: https://forms.gle/8vzFNnPa94awARHMAAbout the expert: https://www.linkedin.com/in/simonmcintoshsmith/?originalSubdomain=ukSources and statistics cited in this episode:Supercomputer name first used - https://www.hp.com/us-en/shop/tech-takes/history-of-supercomputingExascale barrier broke for the first time - https://www.hpe.com/us/en/newsroom/news-advisory/2023/03/4-ways-supercomputing-will-change-the-world.htmlAbout Isambard-AI - https://www.bristol.ac.uk/news/2023/september/isambard-ai.htmlHow the UK Government has invested £225 million - https://www.bristol.ac.uk/news/2023/november/supercomputer-announcement.html#:~:text=Isambard%2DAI%20will%20offer%20capacity,climate%20research%20and%20drug%20discovery.%22NASA's 3D-printed engine to power space rockets - https://www.nasa.gov/centers-and-facilities/marshall/nasas-3d-printed-rotating-detonation-rocket-engine-test-a-success/

HPE Tech Talk, SMB
Exploring the Isambard AI supercomputer

HPE Tech Talk, SMB

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2024 13:22


The UK's fastest supercomputer, the Isambard-AI, is due to be completed in Summer 2024. According to the teams involved, it will reach up to 200 quadrillion calculations per second, and will give researchers and industry leaders new possibilities in the UK: the opportunity to work with the huge potential AI has to offer in the fields of robotics, big data, climate research, and drug discovery. Our guest this week is one of the project leaders: Professor Simon McIntosh-Smith from University of Bristol. We'll be looking at how Isambard-AI will be an open hub for all AI research in the UK, powered by around five-and-a-half-thousand GPUs.  This is Technology Now, a weekly show from Hewlett Packard Enterprise. Every week we look at a story that's been making headlines, take a look at the technology behind it, and explain why it matters to organizations and what we can learn from it.Do you have a question for the expert? Ask it here using this Google form: https://forms.gle/8vzFNnPa94awARHMAAbout the expert: https://www.linkedin.com/in/simonmcintoshsmith/?originalSubdomain=ukSources and statistics cited in this episode:Supercomputer name first used - https://www.hp.com/us-en/shop/tech-takes/history-of-supercomputingExascale barrier broke for the first time - https://www.hpe.com/us/en/newsroom/news-advisory/2023/03/4-ways-supercomputing-will-change-the-world.htmlAbout Isambard-AI - https://www.bristol.ac.uk/news/2023/september/isambard-ai.htmlHow the UK Government has invested £225 million - https://www.bristol.ac.uk/news/2023/november/supercomputer-announcement.html#:~:text=Isambard%2DAI%20will%20offer%20capacity,climate%20research%20and%20drug%20discovery.%22NASA's 3D-printed engine to power space rockets - https://www.nasa.gov/centers-and-facilities/marshall/nasas-3d-printed-rotating-detonation-rocket-engine-test-a-success/

HPE Tech Talk
HPE Discover Barcelona: Analyzing Fidelma Russo's AI and sustainability keynote

HPE Tech Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2023 18:27


"In this episode, we're heading back to the floor of HPE Discover event in Barcelona to bring you the highlights of the keynote speech by HPE Chief Technology Officer, Fidelma Russo. We'll be talking about what her sustainability and AI-focused keynote says about the HPE's commitments, as well as digging deeper with expert analysis from our guest, HPE Chief Technologist for sustainability in IT, Dr John Frey. This is Technology Now, a weekly show from Hewlett Packard Enterprise. Every week we look at a story that's been making headlines, take a look at the technology behind it, and explain why it matters to organizations and what we can learn from it. Do you have a question for the expert? Ask it here using this Google form: https://forms.gle/8vzFNnPa94awARHMA About the expert: https://linkedin.com/in/johnfrey1/ Sources and statistics cited in this episode Watch Fidelma Russo's keynote here: https://www.hpe.com/us/en/discover-more-network/events/discover-barcelona-2023.html?media-id=%2Fus%2Fen%2Fresources%2Fdiscover%2Fdmn%2Fbarcelona%2F2023%2Fon-demand%2Fhpediscoverctokeynotebyfidelmarussofromhybridbyaccidenttohybridbydesign%2F_jcr_content.details.json Robotic pre-historic organisms: https://engineering.cmu.edu/news-events/news/2023/11/06-paleobionics.html

Tech behind the Trends on The Element Podcast | Hewlett Packard Enterprise
HPE Discover Barcelona: Analyzing Fidelma Russo's AI and sustainability keynote

Tech behind the Trends on The Element Podcast | Hewlett Packard Enterprise

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2023 18:27


"In this episode, we're heading back to the floor of HPE Discover event in Barcelona to bring you the highlights of the keynote speech by HPE Chief Technology Officer, Fidelma Russo. We'll be talking about what her sustainability and AI-focused keynote says about the HPE's commitments, as well as digging deeper with expert analysis from our guest, HPE Chief Technologist for sustainability in IT, Dr John Frey. This is Technology Now, a weekly show from Hewlett Packard Enterprise. Every week we look at a story that's been making headlines, take a look at the technology behind it, and explain why it matters to organizations and what we can learn from it. Do you have a question for the expert? Ask it here using this Google form: https://forms.gle/8vzFNnPa94awARHMA About the expert: https://linkedin.com/in/johnfrey1/ Sources and statistics cited in this episode Watch Fidelma Russo's keynote here: https://www.hpe.com/us/en/discover-more-network/events/discover-barcelona-2023.html?media-id=%2Fus%2Fen%2Fresources%2Fdiscover%2Fdmn%2Fbarcelona%2F2023%2Fon-demand%2Fhpediscoverctokeynotebyfidelmarussofromhybridbyaccidenttohybridbydesign%2F_jcr_content.details.json Robotic pre-historic organisms: https://engineering.cmu.edu/news-events/news/2023/11/06-paleobionics.html

HPE Tech Talk, SMB
HPE Discover Barcelona: Analyzing Fidelma Russo's AI and sustainability keynote

HPE Tech Talk, SMB

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2023 18:27


"In this episode, we're heading back to the floor of HPE Discover event in Barcelona to bring you the highlights of the keynote speech by HPE Chief Technology Officer, Fidelma Russo. We'll be talking about what her sustainability and AI-focused keynote says about the HPE's commitments, as well as digging deeper with expert analysis from our guest, HPE Chief Technologist for sustainability in IT, Dr John Frey. This is Technology Now, a weekly show from Hewlett Packard Enterprise. Every week we look at a story that's been making headlines, take a look at the technology behind it, and explain why it matters to organizations and what we can learn from it. Do you have a question for the expert? Ask it here using this Google form: https://forms.gle/8vzFNnPa94awARHMA About the expert: https://linkedin.com/in/johnfrey1/ Sources and statistics cited in this episode Watch Fidelma Russo's keynote here: https://www.hpe.com/us/en/discover-more-network/events/discover-barcelona-2023.html?media-id=%2Fus%2Fen%2Fresources%2Fdiscover%2Fdmn%2Fbarcelona%2F2023%2Fon-demand%2Fhpediscoverctokeynotebyfidelmarussofromhybridbyaccidenttohybridbydesign%2F_jcr_content.details.json Robotic pre-historic organisms: https://engineering.cmu.edu/news-events/news/2023/11/06-paleobionics.html

Computer Architecture Podcast
Ep 14: System Design for Exascale Computing and Advanced Memory Technologies with Dr. Gabriel Loh, AMD

Computer Architecture Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 6, 2023 65:02


Dr. Gabriel Loh is a Senior Fellow at AMD Research and Advanced Development. Gabe is known for his contributions to 3D die-stacked architectures, memory organization and caching techniques, and chiplet multicore architectures. His ideas have influenced multiple commercial products and industry standards. He is a recipient of ACM SIGARCH's Maurice Wilkes Award, is a Hall of Fame member for MICRO, HPCA, ISCA, and a recipient of the NSF CAREER award.

HPE Tech Talk
HPE Discover Barcelona: Analyzing Antonio Neri's AI-focused keynote

HPE Tech Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2023 20:33


In this episode, we're coming to you very nearly live from the floor of Hewlett Packard Enterprise's Discover event in Barcelona to bring you the highlights of the keynote speech by HPE CEO, Antonio Neri.We'll be talking about what Antonio's AI-focused HPE Discover keynote says about the company's direction in the coming months, as well as digging deeper with expert analysis from friend of the podcast, Matt Armstrong-Barnes.This is Technology Now, a weekly show from Hewlett Packard Enterprise. Every week we look at a story that's been making headlines, take a look at the technology behind it, and explain why it matters to organizations and what we can learn from it.Do you have a question for the expert? Ask it here using this Google form: https://forms.gle/8vzFNnPa94awARHMAAbout the expert: https://uk.linkedin.com/in/mattarmstrongbarnesSources and statistics cited in this episode:Watch Antonio Neri's keynote here: https://www.hpe.com/us/en/discover-more-network/events/discover-barcelona-2023.htmlAccenture's report on AI investment among organizations: https://newsroom.accenture.com/news/2023/among-c-suite-leaders-ai-is-top-digital-priority-in-the-path-to-operational-resilience-finds-accenture-studyMatt Armstrong-Barnes' blog series on sustainable AI: https://community.hpe.com/t5/user/viewprofilepage/user-id/1952808

Tech behind the Trends on The Element Podcast | Hewlett Packard Enterprise
HPE Discover Barcelona: Analyzing Antonio Neri's AI-focused keynote

Tech behind the Trends on The Element Podcast | Hewlett Packard Enterprise

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2023 20:33


In this episode, we're coming to you very nearly live from the floor of Hewlett Packard Enterprise's Discover event in Barcelona to bring you the highlights of the keynote speech by HPE CEO, Antonio Neri.We'll be talking about what Antonio's AI-focused HPE Discover keynote says about the company's direction in the coming months, as well as digging deeper with expert analysis from friend of the podcast, Matt Armstrong-Barnes.This is Technology Now, a weekly show from Hewlett Packard Enterprise. Every week we look at a story that's been making headlines, take a look at the technology behind it, and explain why it matters to organizations and what we can learn from it.Do you have a question for the expert? Ask it here using this Google form: https://forms.gle/8vzFNnPa94awARHMAAbout the expert: https://uk.linkedin.com/in/mattarmstrongbarnesSources and statistics cited in this episode:Watch Antonio Neri's keynote here: https://www.hpe.com/us/en/discover-more-network/events/discover-barcelona-2023.htmlAccenture's report on AI investment among organizations: https://newsroom.accenture.com/news/2023/among-c-suite-leaders-ai-is-top-digital-priority-in-the-path-to-operational-resilience-finds-accenture-studyMatt Armstrong-Barnes' blog series on sustainable AI: https://community.hpe.com/t5/user/viewprofilepage/user-id/1952808

HPE Tech Talk, SMB
HPE Discover Barcelona: Analyzing Antonio Neri's AI-focused keynote

HPE Tech Talk, SMB

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2023 20:33


In this episode, we're coming to you very nearly live from the floor of Hewlett Packard Enterprise's Discover event in Barcelona to bring you the highlights of the keynote speech by HPE CEO, Antonio Neri.We'll be talking about what Antonio's AI-focused HPE Discover keynote says about the company's direction in the coming months, as well as digging deeper with expert analysis from friend of the podcast, Matt Armstrong-Barnes.This is Technology Now, a weekly show from Hewlett Packard Enterprise. Every week we look at a story that's been making headlines, take a look at the technology behind it, and explain why it matters to organizations and what we can learn from it.Do you have a question for the expert? Ask it here using this Google form: https://forms.gle/8vzFNnPa94awARHMAAbout the expert: https://uk.linkedin.com/in/mattarmstrongbarnesSources and statistics cited in this episode:Watch Antonio Neri's keynote here: https://www.hpe.com/us/en/discover-more-network/events/discover-barcelona-2023.htmlAccenture's report on AI investment among organizations: https://newsroom.accenture.com/news/2023/among-c-suite-leaders-ai-is-top-digital-priority-in-the-path-to-operational-resilience-finds-accenture-studyMatt Armstrong-Barnes' blog series on sustainable AI: https://community.hpe.com/t5/user/viewprofilepage/user-id/1952808

Science Magazine Podcast
Exascale supercomputers amp up science, finally growing dolomite in the lab, and origins of patriarchy

Science Magazine Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 23, 2023 54:57


A leap in supercomputing is a leap for science, cracking the dolomite problem, and a book on where patriarchy came from   First up on this week's show, bigger supercomputers help make superscience. Staff Writer Robert F. Service joins host Sarah Crespi to discuss how the first exascale computer is enabling big leaps in scientists' models of the world.   Next, producer Meagan Cantwell talks with the University of Michigan's Wenhao Sun, professor of materials science and engineering, and graduate student Joonsoo Kim. They discuss solving the centuries-old problem of growing the common mineral dolomite in the lab.   Finally, books host Angela Saini is back but this time she's in the hot seat talking about her own book, The Patriarchs: The Origins of Inequality. Science Books Editor Valerie Thompson and host Sarah Crespi chat with Angela about what history, archaeology, and biology reveal about where and when patriarchy started. See our whole series of books podcasts on sex, gender, and science.   This week's episode was produced with help from Podigy.   About the Science Podcast   Authors: Sarah Crespi; Valerie Thompson; Angela Saini; Robert Service   Episode page: https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.adn0660

Science Signaling Podcast
Exascale supercomputers amp up science, finally growing dolomite in the lab, and origins of patriarchy

Science Signaling Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 23, 2023 54:57


A leap in supercomputing is a leap for science, cracking the dolomite problem, and a book on where patriarchy came from   First up on this week's show, bigger supercomputers help make superscience. Staff Writer Robert F. Service joins host Sarah Crespi to discuss how the first exascale computer is enabling big leaps in scientists' models of the world.   Next, producer Meagan Cantwell talks with the University of Michigan's Wenhao Sun, professor of materials science and engineering, and graduate student Joonsoo Kim. They discuss solving the centuries-old problem of growing the common mineral dolomite in the lab.   Finally, books host Angela Saini is back but this time she's in the hot seat talking about her own book, The Patriarchs: The Origins of Inequality. Science Books Editor Valerie Thompson and host Sarah Crespi chat with Angela about what history, archaeology, and biology reveal about where and when patriarchy started. See our whole series of books podcasts on sex, gender, and science.   This week's episode was produced with help from Podigy.   About the Science Podcast   Authors: Sarah Crespi; Valerie Thompson; Angela Saini; Robert Service   Episode page: https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.adn0660

@HPCpodcast with Shahin Khan and Doug Black

- SC23 stats - Exascale update and future - Raft of new chips - Quantum Village at SC23 - UCIe, PCIe, Ultra Ethernet [audio mp3="https://orionx.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/HPCNB_20231120.mp3"][/audio] The post HPC News Bytes – 20231120 appeared first on OrionX.net.

@HPCpodcast with Shahin Khan and Doug Black
@HPCpodcast-70: Paul Messina – Journey to Exascale

@HPCpodcast with Shahin Khan and Doug Black

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2023


With the annual observance of Exascale Day on October 18th, we were delighted to get a chance to discuss the journey to Exascale with Dr. Paul Messina who led the Accelerated Strategic Computing Initiative (ASCI) program from 1998 to 2000, and was the first director of the Exascale Computing Project (ECP) from 2015 until late 2017. [audio mp3="https://orionx.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/070@HPCpodcast_Paul-Messina_Journey-to-Exascale_20231017.mp3"][/audio] The post @HPCpodcast-70: Paul Messina – Journey to Exascale appeared first on OrionX.net.

Technology Untangled
Exascale: Are we ready for the next generation of supercomputers?

Technology Untangled

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 5, 2023 28:57


The dawn of the exascale computer has arrived. In May 2022, a computer named Frontier was switched on at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory in the USA. At well over twice the computing power of the previous world record holder, it has ushered in a new era of supercomputers, with at least two more to follow in the coming months and years.In this episode, we'll be looking at why this undeniably impressive milestone actually means, and more importantly, why it matters. We'll also be looking at some of the challenges remaining as we enter the exascale era – namely, how do we actually use computers at this scale?We're joined in this episode by Mike Woodacre, Chief Technologist at HPE. He starts by spelling out some of the core statistics underpinning the Frontier exascale computer and its 60 million parts, as well as some of the challenges endemic to computing at the cutting edge of technology.We also meet Doug Kothe, former Director of the Exascale Computing Project at Oak Ridge National Laboratory. He's hugely excited about the possibilities of exascale as a source of incredible compute in-depth with the ability to return answers to complex questions and simulations in almost real-time. At the same time, he's also keen to use Frontier as a gateway to open up HPC and supercomputing to more and more organizations, via an ‘app store' which allows potentially thousands of users simultaneous access to Frontier for their own needs.For different reasons, Professor Rick Stevens is also excited to be entering the exascale age. He's Argonne National Laboratory's Associate Laboratory Director for Computing, Environment and Life Sciences. He's keen to put their upcoming Aurora exascale computer to work on projects to revolutionise cancer treatments, from diagnostics to drug discovery, through his CANDLE program. Rick's also cautious, though. Whilst he appreciates the promise that exascale offers, he knows that it's not an end-goal, but a stepping stone to the next generation and new technological advances.That's a sentiment shared by our final guest, Cristin Merritt. She's the Chief Marketing Officer at Alces Flight, an HPC solutions provider. She's keenly across worldwide demand for supercomputing power, and sees an evolving landscape of commercial demand and supply growing out of the innovations that exascale offers. She's cautious, though – right now, exascale is too experimental and non-standard to be commercially mass-market. With time, though, she believes that might just change.

Technology Untangled
Keeping the lights on part 1: How do we make more energy?

Technology Untangled

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2023 36:05


The world is in a state of flux when it comes to energy production. Australian coal is being bought up by China as fast as it can be mined, Europe is coming to terms with Russian gas supplies being a bargaining chip in international politics, and the US is grappling with how to produce more energy whilst meeting green targets and keeping people in mining areas employed. It's a tough balancing act. So how can countries realistically become more energy independent in a sustainable way with the tech that's viable today? This is the first of a two part special. Next time we'll be looking at how to make the most of the energy we already have.We start off by meeting Doug Kothe, a Nuclear Scientist who, until recently, headed up the Exascale computing team at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory in the US. He's hugely excited by recent developments in the field, but is also a realist who understands that Fusion energy is still a way off being commercially viable and scaleable. So what are the alternatives? Professor Patricia Thornley from Aston University is Director of the Energy & Bioproducts Research Institute. They look at the energy potential of waste biomass - sewage and agricultural by-products - to provide not only electricity, but also materials such as plastics, and fuels such as gasoline, diesel and even jet fuel and hydrogen. Their research shows enormous promise -  up to 45% of the UK's energy needs could be provided in a carbon-neutral or even net negative way simply by processing agri-waste. In many parts of the world, close to 100% is achievable. But what about countries where land is at a premium? There's alternatives here, too. Carnegie Clean Energy is an Australian-based engineering firm who are perfecting their CETO wave-generation technology. They use submerged bouys pulling on cords to generate energy in an environmentally non-destructive way. As Carnegie CEO Jonathan Fievez explains, the difference in their technology is that the generators can pull on their own cords to raise, lower or angle themselves. That lets them both generate more electricity, and protect themselves from the bad weather and turbulent seas which have traditionally made the tech difficult to implement commercially. They do this via an ingenious AI tool called reinforcement learning, whereby an AI learns to control the bouys by being rewarded for the amount of energy they generate. Testing is currently ongoing, but early results suggest a 20-40% performance improvement with less wear and tear, which could be a lifeline for remote and island communities currently relying on diesel generators. Driving this AI technology is Hewlett Packard Enterprise Labs, who have been working in partnership with Carnegie. Christian Temporale and Maria Ridruejo have been implementing the project for HPE, and are excited by the progress that's been made. They believe that machine learning techniques such as this could make significant improvements in other technologies, such as 'smart' wind turbines, and developing better forms of solar panels.

Technology Untangled
Welcome to Technology Untangled: Season 4 Trailer

Technology Untangled

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 11, 2023 2:11


Welcome to season four of Technology Untangled from Hewlett Packard Enterprise. A new series means a new format, so join your hosts - yes, plural - Michael Bird and Aubrey Lovell in unravelling the stories and technologies which are changing the way we work. Every two weeks, we take a look at an emergent story in technology and interview experts from across the field to get behind the headlines and find out what's going on and why it matters. Coming up in this season, we'll be looking at bias in AI, the rise of Exascale computing, and revolutions in healthcare among many more. Subscribe on your podcast app of choice so you don't miss out.

HPE Tech Talk
HPE Discover 2023: The Wrap-up

HPE Tech Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 29, 2023 19:18


HPE Discover 2023 was held in Las Vegas, Nevada, from the 20th-22nd June. Thousands of delegates and customers gathered to network and explore the cutting-edge of enterprise-level IT and technology. And what a show it was for cutting-edge!The show was opened with a keynote speech by HPE CEO and President Antonio Neri, in which he outlined new product lines and services including cloud-based Large Language Model AI provision, security features, and closer integration with a number of datacentre and public cloud providers.Our own Aubrey Lovell was at the show and brings us a special wrap-up update!This is Technology Now, a weekly show from Hewlett Packard Enterprise. Every week we look at a story that's been making headlines, take a look at the technology behind it, and explain why it matters to organisations and what we can learn from it.We'd love to hear your one minute review of books which have changed your year! Simply record them on your smart device or computer and upload them using this Google form: https://forms.gle/pqsWwFwQtdGCKqED6Do you have a question for the expert? Ask it here using this Google form: https://forms.gle/8vzFNnPa94awARHMA

Tech behind the Trends on The Element Podcast | Hewlett Packard Enterprise

HPE Discover 2023 was held in Las Vegas, Nevada, from the 20th-22nd June. Thousands of delegates and customers gathered to network and explore the cutting-edge of enterprise-level IT and technology. And what a show it was for cutting-edge!The show was opened with a keynote speech by HPE CEO and President Antonio Neri, in which he outlined new product lines and services including cloud-based Large Language Model AI provision, security features, and closer integration with a number of datacentre and public cloud providers.Our own Aubrey Lovell was at the show and brings us a special wrap-up update!This is Technology Now, a weekly show from Hewlett Packard Enterprise. Every week we look at a story that's been making headlines, take a look at the technology behind it, and explain why it matters to organisations and what we can learn from it.We'd love to hear your one minute review of books which have changed your year! Simply record them on your smart device or computer and upload them using this Google form: https://forms.gle/pqsWwFwQtdGCKqED6Do you have a question for the expert? Ask it here using this Google form: https://forms.gle/8vzFNnPa94awARHMA

HPE Tech Talk, SMB
HPE Discover 2023: The Wrap-up

HPE Tech Talk, SMB

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 29, 2023 19:18


HPE Discover 2023 was held in Las Vegas, Nevada, from the 20th-22nd June. Thousands of delegates and customers gathered to network and explore the cutting-edge of enterprise-level IT and technology. And what a show it was for cutting-edge!The show was opened with a keynote speech by HPE CEO and President Antonio Neri, in which he outlined new product lines and services including cloud-based Large Language Model AI provision, security features, and closer integration with a number of datacentre and public cloud providers.Our own Aubrey Lovell was at the show and brings us a special wrap-up update!This is Technology Now, a weekly show from Hewlett Packard Enterprise. Every week we look at a story that's been making headlines, take a look at the technology behind it, and explain why it matters to organisations and what we can learn from it.We'd love to hear your one minute review of books which have changed your year! Simply record them on your smart device or computer and upload them using this Google form: https://forms.gle/pqsWwFwQtdGCKqED6Do you have a question for the expert? Ask it here using this Google form: https://forms.gle/8vzFNnPa94awARHMA

Exascale Computing Project Podcast
Episode 105: Computing Luminary Jack Dongarra's Perspective on the Exascale Computing Project

Exascale Computing Project Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 23, 2023 22:15


Episode notes: Jack Dongarra says ECP has been a great success in terms of human and technical accomplishments but post-project follow-on is critical.

HPE Tech Talk
HPE Discover 2023: Your pocket guide

HPE Tech Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 15, 2023 19:05


HPE Discover 2023 is being held in Las Vegas, Nevada, from the 20th-22nd June 2023. It's one of the highlights of the enterprise technology calendar, attracting thousands of delegates to hear talks on everything from edge computing to cyber security. Here's our top seven (for good luck) highlights of the upcoming show.Events we mention (in order): You can find details of all these events and more on the HPE Discover website -  hpe.com/discover‘Digital ambition is only met by reimagining your operating model panel' - Wednesday 21st at 01:30 pmFrom zero to hero: Build a private cloud that fuels your enterprise with an integrated marketplace and partner ecosystem' -  Thursday 22nd June at 9 amSolve the Data Lifecycle Nightmare - Tuesday, June 20th at 2pm.  What comes after exascale - Wednesday, June 21st at 08:30 am.Sustainability: Your game changer and change maker - Wednesday 21st at 8:30 amKeynote speech by HPE CEO and President Antonio Neri - June 20th 10amTechnology Untangled podcast episodes we mention:The Cloud: How far is too far? - https://www.technologyuntangled.fm/episodes/the-cloud-how-far-is-too-farThe cloud: Is hybrid the answer? - https://www.technologyuntangled.fm/episodes/the-cloud-is-hybrid-the-answer5G: Build it, but will they come? - https://www.technologyuntangled.fm/episodes/5g-build-it-but-will-they-come5G: Do you want that slice to go? - https://www.technologyuntangled.fm/episodes/5g-do-you-want-that-slice-to-goRansomware Attacks: Should we be worried? - https://www.technologyuntangled.fm/episodes/tbc-ransomware-should-we-be-worriedWe'd love to hear your one minute review of books which have changed your year! Simply record them on your smart device or computer and upload them using this Google form: https://forms.gle/pqsWwFwQtdGCKqED6This is Technology Now, a weekly show from Hewlett Packard Enterprise. Every week we look at a story that's been making headlines, take a look at the technology behind it, and explain why it matters to organisations and what we can learn from it.

Tech behind the Trends on The Element Podcast | Hewlett Packard Enterprise

HPE Discover 2023 is being held in Las Vegas, Nevada, from the 20th-22nd June 2023. It's one of the highlights of the enterprise technology calendar, attracting thousands of delegates to hear talks on everything from edge computing to cyber security. Here's our top seven (for good luck) highlights of the upcoming show.Events we mention (in order): You can find details of all these events and more on the HPE Discover website -  hpe.com/discover‘Digital ambition is only met by reimagining your operating model panel' - Wednesday 21st at 01:30 pmFrom zero to hero: Build a private cloud that fuels your enterprise with an integrated marketplace and partner ecosystem' -  Thursday 22nd June at 9 amSolve the Data Lifecycle Nightmare - Tuesday, June 20th at 2pm.  What comes after exascale - Wednesday, June 21st at 08:30 am.Sustainability: Your game changer and change maker - Wednesday 21st at 8:30 amKeynote speech by HPE CEO and President Antonio Neri - June 20th 10amTechnology Untangled podcast episodes we mention:The Cloud: How far is too far? - https://www.technologyuntangled.fm/episodes/the-cloud-how-far-is-too-farThe cloud: Is hybrid the answer? - https://www.technologyuntangled.fm/episodes/the-cloud-is-hybrid-the-answer5G: Build it, but will they come? - https://www.technologyuntangled.fm/episodes/5g-build-it-but-will-they-come5G: Do you want that slice to go? - https://www.technologyuntangled.fm/episodes/5g-do-you-want-that-slice-to-goRansomware Attacks: Should we be worried? - https://www.technologyuntangled.fm/episodes/tbc-ransomware-should-we-be-worriedWe'd love to hear your one minute review of books which have changed your year! Simply record them on your smart device or computer and upload them using this Google form: https://forms.gle/pqsWwFwQtdGCKqED6This is Technology Now, a weekly show from Hewlett Packard Enterprise. Every week we look at a story that's been making headlines, take a look at the technology behind it, and explain why it matters to organisations and what we can learn from it.

@HPCpodcast with Shahin Khan and Doug Black
@HPCpodcast-62: Exascale Software with Sunita Chandrasekaran

@HPCpodcast with Shahin Khan and Doug Black

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2023


University of Delaware Professor Sunita Chandrasekaran joins us to discuss exascale software, directive based parallel programming, the emergence of research software engineering as a career, what AI will mean for the industry, and the importance of communication and community among teams. This episode is sponsored by Lenovo. [audio mp3="https://orionx.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/062@HPCpodcast_Software-Exascake_Sunita-Chandrasekaran_20230613.mp3"][/audio] The post @HPCpodcast-62: Exascale Software with Sunita Chandrasekaran appeared first on OrionX.net.

Exascale Computing Project Podcast
Episode 104: Siting the El Capitan Exascale Supercomputer at Lawrence Livermore Lab.

Exascale Computing Project Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2023 31:33


Episode notes: Lawrence Livermore National Lab is preparing for El Capitan, the National Nuclear Security Administration's first exascale supercomputer.

el capitan supercomputers siting lawrence livermore national lab exascale lawrence livermore lab
@HPCpodcast with Shahin Khan and Doug Black
@HPCpodcast-55: Post-Exascale Computing for the NNSA

@HPCpodcast with Shahin Khan and Doug Black

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2023


Post-Exascale Computing for the NNSA (National Nuclear Security Administration) is the subject of a new report by a distinguished working and review committes comprised of notable supercomputing experts. We bring you a summary of the report's key findings and recommendations. @HPCpodcast is delighted that two of the panelists were guests of this show in recent months. [audio mp3="https://orionx.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/055@HPCpodcast_Post-Exascale-NNSA_20230417.mp3"][/audio]   The post @HPCpodcast-55: Post-Exascale Computing for the NNSA appeared first on OrionX.net.

Stereo Chemistry
C&EN Uncovered: What exascale computing could mean for chemistry

Stereo Chemistry

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2023 17:39


At Oak Ridge National Laboratory, a supercomputer named Frontier has broken the exascale computing barrier, meaning it can calculate more than a million trillion floating-point operations per second. In this episode, C&EN reporters Craig Bettenhausen and Ariana Remmel discuss how Frontier works and what that kind of power could mean for computational chemistry.C&EN Uncovered, a new project from C&EN's podcast, Stereo Chemistry, offers a deeper look at subjects from recent cover stories. Read Remmel's Sept. 5, 2022, cover story about exascale computing at https://bit.ly/3RkPjr6.   A transcript of this episode is available at https://bit.ly/3HNK1S0. Credits Stereo Chemistry executive producer: Kerri Jansen C&EN Uncovered host: Craig Bettenhausen Audio editor: Mark Feuer DiTusa Copyeditor: Sabrina J. Ashwell Additional review: Dorea Reeser, Manny I. Fox Morone, Michael Torrice Episode artwork: Matt Chinworth Music: "Hot Chocolate" by Aves Contact Stereo Chemistry: Tweet at us at @cenmag or email cenfeedback@acs.org.

The Sound of Science
Exascale: The New Frontier of Computing

The Sound of Science

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 1, 2022 25:17


In May 2022, history was made at Oak Ridge National Laboratory. Frontier, the lab's newest supercomputer, officially did what no other computer in the world had done before — it crossed the exascale barrier. If you're not familiar with the field of supercomputing, an exascale computer is an incredibly powerful system that is capable of a quintillion calculations per second. Frontier's arrival marks a new era of computational performance that will help enable scientific breakthroughs never before possible. But this milestone didn't happen overnight. The journey to Frontier has been years in the making, with plenty of challenges and dramatic moments along the way. In this episode, you'll hear a behind-the-scenes account of what it took to launch the world's first exascale computer.