
Perspectives from SC24
$2,500.00
Authors: Mark Nossokoff, Bob Sorensen, and Earl Joseph
Publication Date: December 202024
Length: 5 pages
With approximately 18,000 attendees and over 500 exhibitors, including more than 130 new exhibitors, SC24 in Atlanta surpassed organizer expectations and delivered a vibrant and energetic environment for the global HPC community to exchange ideas while establishing or extending collaborative partnerships and relationships. As is our custom, the Hyperion Research team of analysts has compiled its primary takeaways and perspectives from more than 80 customer meetings, workshop and session attendance, and a myriad of other interactions at the event.
Related Products
2022 HPC End Users Perspectives on Trends and Forecast in HPC Storage and Interconnects – Key Findings
Mark Nossokoff, Jaclyn Ludema and Earl Joseph
Key findings from a recent Hyperion Research study indicate that HPC storage solutions, and associated storage and system interconnects, continue to be critical for HPC infrastructure to deliver optimal capabilities and provide the fastest time to results for the systems' users. Data-intensive workloads driven by new AI/ML/DL workloads, increasing scale of traditional HPC modelling and simulation, emerging edge computing, and emerging composable systems are placing greater demands and requirements on HPC storage systems. Insights into the critical factors driving these and other trends are detailed in the 2022 iteration of Hyperion Research's annual MCS end users' study, 2022 HPC Multi-Client Study: Trends and Forecasts in HPC Storage and Interconnects. Key findings from the report are summarized in this document.
February 2023 | Special Report
European Parliament Endorses EuroHPC Exascale Initiative
Steve Conway, Bob Sorensen, Alex Norton, and Earl Joseph
This report looks at the European approach to developing both exascale computers and an indigenous, self-sufficient HPC supply chain in Europe. In recent years the EU and its Member States, along with countries including China, Japan, and the United States, have increasingly recognized the strategic importance of investing more heavily in supercomputing to accelerate scientific and industrial innovation.
July 2018 | Special Report