Europe's fastest supercomputer is now operational, and boy howdy does it have an impressive specs sheet. The JUPITER project (which stands for Joint Undertaking Pioneer for Innovative and Transformative Exascale Research, apparently) had its official [[link]] earlier this week at the campus in Germany, attended by the great and the good of European scientific researchers—and the odd politician, too.
JUPITER itself is built around 50 container modules over a 2,300 square meter site, and contains . The Booster module contains roughly 6,000 nodes, over which 24,000 are interconnected via the company's Quantum-2 InfiniBand networking system, complete with a slew of Arm-based CPU cores, 288 per node.
Ah, but JUPITER is destined for much greater purposes than playing silly old video games. It will instead be used for research purposes, focusing on climate science, generative AI models, neuroscience for drug discovery, mapping the human brain, and quantum simulation, among others.
As a given example, the is said to be using JUPITER to simulate climate predictions and extreme weather events. I'm imagining the results are going to come back as something like [[link]] "we're really screwed", just like every other I've seen over the past two decades—but with all this computer power at its disposal, at least we've all got a good chance of knowing exactly how screwed we are in more accurate ways than ever before.
Which will be nice, won't it? Anyway, it seems like some real good might come from [[link]] this fantastic machine, as beyond simulating climate events, it's also going to be simulating protein assembly in cells in , study (and potentially discover new) particle interactions, and "develop spatio-temporal compression and diffusion architectures that enable the creation of high-quality, accessible video models to advance applications from medical imaging to autonomous driving."
All of which sounds like good stuff. So, put away the tired old Crysis gags, folks. This is an Nvidia-powered machine that might be doing some serious good, and one that I reckon might be worth setting aside the power requirements for. Godspeed, JUPITER. Perhaps you might be the eventual saviour of us all.

👉👈
1. Best overall:
2. Best budget:
3. Best high-end:
4. Best compact:
5. Alienware:
6. Best mini PC: