ORNL made a splash at November’s SC12 supercomputing conference in Salt Lake City, Utah, demonstrating the lab’s high-performance computing achievements over the past year.
With the new upgrade, scientists will be better able to visualize their data to make discoveries.
Researchers led by Gerald Meehl of the National Center for Atmospheric Research used ORNL’s Jaguar supercomputer to explore just how much sea level is likely to rise and under what circumstances.
INCITE talks time and Titan in Japan’s Science City
Oak Ridge National Laboratory’s Julia White recently got the opportunity to visit …
The new Energy Sciences Network (ESnet5) will boost ORNL’s connection speed from 10 to a screamingly fast 100 gigabits per second.
The OLCF will hit the road in early 2013, taking its three-day Titan Users and Developers Workshop to NVIDIA headquarters in Santa Clara, California.
The OLCF took home awards in green computing and industry collaboration from the 2012 HPCwire “Readers’ Choice Awards.”
ORNL has launched a new era of scientific supercomputing with Titan, a system capable of 20 petaflops, by employing a family of processors, called graphics processing units (GPUs), first created for computer gaming.
ORNL’s James Hack was a member of a 15 person committee that recommended ways to advance climate modeling over the next two years.
Researchers from ORNL and the University of Tennessee are using OLCF supercomputers to help cut time and risk in new drug development.