Among the TOP500 supercomputing announced today, the supercomputing Frontier based on AMD processors and encryption cards won the championship. This is also the first publicly confirmed exascale supercomputing in the United States and the world, with a peak performance of over 11 billion exaflops. The last time AMD won the TOP500 was the Titan supercomputing in 2012. At that time, it used a 16-core Opteron processor, but the accelerator card was NVIDIA’s K20X. Now Frontier is the highlight moment of AMD processor and MI250X accelerator card. 10 Years are not in vain. Frontier uses AMD’s third-generation EPYC processor, but it is not the common milan series, but the 7A53 code-named “Trento”, which is also 64 cores and 128 threads, but supports XGMI bus. It is a customized product for supercomputing. 1-way 64-core processor with 4-way MI250X accelerator card, connected through Infinity Fabric, 4-way NIC high-speed network and 4-way PCIe 4.0 NVMe SSD hard disk, these together form a node. The final Frontier supercomputing consists of 74 cabinets, .
[related_posts_by_tax taxonomies=”post_tag”]
The post AMD’s world’s strongest supercomputer revealed: 64-core CPU only 2GHz frequency, 100% liquid cooling appeared first on Gamingsym.