Giving business a competitive edge with HPC

12 January 2023

Since our foundation, we have worked with commercial partners to bring them the competitive advantages of high performance computing.

Commercial activities at EPCC can be separated into cycle sales for on-demand access to our Supercomputing infrastructure and project-based income where EPCC staff work on collaborative or contract research projects with industrial customers. These can be short-term or long-term depending on the type of engagement and funding model.

The last quarter has seen a rise in new user accounts for on-demand access to both ARCHER2 and Cirrus from companies in the life sciences, manufacturing, and materials science sectors. These companies are leveraging the ability to parallelise large-scale problems across ARCHER2’s 5,860 compute nodes and using the extensive GPU cluster available on Cirrus.

We have also seen an increase in applications for access to EPCC’s new AI-specific infrastructure (including systems from Cerebras and Graphcore) and our team is looking forward to supporting new deep-learning proof-of-concept projects in the telecommunications and robotics industries.

Collaborative and contract research projects have continued to be successful at EPCC, with recent success stories including working with Jacobs on code optimisation for HPC environments, providing cloud computing and machine learning support to creative industries start-up Black Goblin Audio. We have also been supporting Quantum Base Alpha, a quantum computing SME, with its recent Innovate UK grant funding success that will research the effectiveness of quantum algorithms to optimise flight paths in the aerospace industry.

One of our HPC specialists recently worked with agri-tech SME and University spin-out Mercury to better optimise its data processing ingest pipeline using Python. We have also started working with Orbital Microsystems (OMS) and the University of Edinburgh’s School of Geosciences to provide a data ingest pipeline for OMS’s microwave telemetry data from its GEMS satellite network. This work was funded by an EPSRC Impact Acceleration Account.

EPCC is providing significant resource and support to various strategic collaborations across the University including projects such as Data Slipstream with Geosciences, Natwest Group, and Abrdn with Edinburgh Futures Institute and Smart Data Foundry at the Bayes Centre.

These projects will utilise the unique capability of the Edinburgh International Data Facility, which includes the provisioning of data safe haven environments alongside world-class compute facilities to optimise research outcomes and develop innovative products and services.

Image: Getty Images/Ihor Reshetniak

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Author

Dr Julien Sindt
Julien