Super Micro Computer, Inc. (SMCI) is expanding its HPC market
reach for a broad range of industries by innovating at the system and
cluster level. With its Total IT Solutions, Supermicro can deliver
complete rack-level solutions faster and at a lower cost to not only
scientific research organizations but also to enterprise customers in
diverse industries such as manufacturing, life sciences, and energy
exploration, as HPC and AI converge.
The
new Universal GPU server allows customers to choose the best CPUs,
GPUs, and switch configurations for their applications and workloads,
including dual-processor configurations using either the 3rd Gen Intel
Xeon Scalable processor or the 3rd Gen AMD EPYC processor.
The Universal GPU system enables system administrators to standardize
HPC/AI systems in their clusters for the desired workloads on a single
platform that is both versatile and flexible. This unique system has
been optimized for various GPUs, including the newly announced AMD
Instinct MI200 series accelerators and NVIDIA A100 GPUs. Supermicro systems, such as the SuperBlade and BigTwin systems,
are optimized for HPC applications where density, scalability, and
power savings are critical. The Universal GPU server with AMD Instinct,
MI200 series accelerators, will be showcased in Supermicro's SC'21
booth, #1117.
"Supermicro
is committed to delivering complete IT Solutions composed of advanced
HPC clusters for customers that outpace industry standard lead times
leveraging our newly expanded US and Taiwan manufacturing facilities," said Charles Liang,
president, and CEO of Supermicro. "We can now deliver large numbers of
liquid-cooled clusters that use state-of-the-art computing technologies,
allowing customers to get up and running quickly, resulting in reduced
costs. With our Made in the USA initiative,
plus other programs, customers can design optimized HPC and AI systems
for their exact workloads. In addition, the upcoming Universal GPU
system will provide customers a variety of complete systems with a
choice of the CPU, GPU, and switch technologies."
While
Supermicro continues to design the most efficient air-cooled systems,
liquid cooling is becoming a necessary technology for high-performing
servers, such as the Supermicro SuperBlade and
GPU servers containing the latest CPUs and GPUs. The new Supermicro
manufacturing facilities are equipped to manufacture entire
liquid-cooled clusters, tested at scale before customer shipment.
"We continue to work with Supermicro for some of our large-scale HPC systems for our open science projects," stated Matt Leininger, Sr. Principal
HPC, at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL). "LLNL is a
leader in investigating new computing technologies to reduce time to
solve numerically intensive applications. We look forward to a continued
relationship with Supermicro."
Historically,
Supermicro has designed and worked with partners on creating the most
energy-efficient HPC systems available today. As a result, the Preferred
Networks MN-3 Core Server optimized for Intel Xeon CPUs has recently
been ranked #1 in energy efficiency on the Green 500 list, determining
which large systems deliver the most performance per watt.