As the name suggests, a supercomputer has more processing power and can complete more tasks more quickly than a less powerful computer.
The BBC are getting too technical.
Submitted 2 days ago by Davriellelouna@lemmy.world to unitedkingdom@feddit.uk
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c8rpnlrj7ppo
As the name suggests, a supercomputer has more processing power and can complete more tasks more quickly than a less powerful computer.
The BBC are getting too technical.
I work on this. Any questions, let me know.
Can it run Doom?
Can it remake Doom?
What do you work on for this?
Can I work on it too?
I’d like to ask what OS it’s running and also ask you to bear in mind what the correct answer is.
I don’t know what to ask specifically but can you talk more about the project or like anything cool that isn’t mentioned in the article? I’m an undergrad at a U.S. Uni and we have a supercomputer(cluster I think?) but everything is new to me and I would like to learn more.
What’s the admin password? Is it *******?
The article doesn’t really explain. Isn’t this just a computer that belongs to the university or is this actually got something to do with the government.
The government fronted £225M for it. Therefore it’s being seen as a national resource that’s located in Bristol where they’ve built previous machines like this.
How machine time is allocated would be interesting to know. Whether it’s only an academic resource, or if it’s available to other organisations?
That picture reminds me of the Internet in the IT Crowd.
I’m confident that the BBC could have taken a better picture of their correspondent! Blimey.
Best info I’ve found on the is on the Nvidia blog
It’s a platform to accelerate breakthroughs in:
Early flagship projects include:
Blackmist@feddit.uk 7 hours ago
Another £225 million of tax payers money sent to Jensen Huang so he can spend it on more leather jackets.
They could have spent that on something useful, like about 100 metres of HS2 track…