NEWSFLASHES

A transitional system called Hunter will be installed in 2025, with an exascale system called Herder to follow in 2027.

In June, leadership of the EuroHPC Joint Undertaking agreed in principle on Europe’s first exascale machine coming to Germany. Now it is official, with the Jülich Supercomputing Centre signing a hosting agreement in Luxemburg this month

Hardware company and research institute plan to focus on optimizing and port applications to Arm-based architectures.

Partnership between JSC, Atos, ParTec, und NVIDIA set to increase computing performance from 12 to 70 petaflops.

The High-Performance Computing Center of the University of Stuttgart (HLRS) and Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) announced a joint collaboration to build a next-generation supercomputer. The new HPC system Hawk will be 3.5 times faster than HLRS’ current flagship HPC system Hazel Hen.

The start-up phase of HPC system SuperMUC-NG was officially launched at LRZ on Monday, September 24, 2018. The transition from LRZ’s current SuperMUC machines (Phase I and II) to the third itineration of the SuperMUC series is scheduled to be completed in 2019.

Jülich Supercomputing Centre (JSC) celebrates the installation of a new modular HPC system, the first modular architecture in the world going into operation.

The three GCS centres HLRS (High Performance Computing Center Stuttgart), JSC (Jülich Supercomputing Centre) and LRZ (Leibniz Supercomputing Centre, Garching near Munich) are working to implement better network tools and cooperation.