AMD has inked a $1 billion deal with the US Department of Energy to co-develop two high-performance AI supercomputers at Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee. The project, worth over $1 billion, is aimed at accelerating scientific discovery and innovation in areas such as energy, biology, advanced materials, national security, and manufacturing.
The first supercomputer, Lux, will be designed as an "AI Factory" to train, fine-tune, and deploy AI foundation models that will drive breakthroughs in science, energy, and national security. According to AMD, Lux is purpose-built for data-intensive and model-centric workloads, with an advanced architecture optimized for these types of applications.
The second supercomputer, Discovery, will feature a "Bandwidth Everywhere" design that improves on the performance and energy efficiency of the Frontier supercomputer currently housed at ORNL. This design will deliver more computing output at a similar cost, making it an attractive option for scientific research in various fields.
Both Lux and Discovery are expected to play critical roles in driving innovation in key areas such as next-generation reactors, batteries, catalysts, semiconductors, and critical materials. The development of these supercomputers marks the latest collaboration between AMD and the US government on a high-performance computing project.
The deal represents a significant investment by AMD into AI research and development, with the company looking to leverage its expertise in designing high-performance computing hardware to support the country's scientific ambitions.
The first supercomputer, Lux, will be designed as an "AI Factory" to train, fine-tune, and deploy AI foundation models that will drive breakthroughs in science, energy, and national security. According to AMD, Lux is purpose-built for data-intensive and model-centric workloads, with an advanced architecture optimized for these types of applications.
The second supercomputer, Discovery, will feature a "Bandwidth Everywhere" design that improves on the performance and energy efficiency of the Frontier supercomputer currently housed at ORNL. This design will deliver more computing output at a similar cost, making it an attractive option for scientific research in various fields.
Both Lux and Discovery are expected to play critical roles in driving innovation in key areas such as next-generation reactors, batteries, catalysts, semiconductors, and critical materials. The development of these supercomputers marks the latest collaboration between AMD and the US government on a high-performance computing project.
The deal represents a significant investment by AMD into AI research and development, with the company looking to leverage its expertise in designing high-performance computing hardware to support the country's scientific ambitions.