Business | Supersize me

Europe wants startups to do AI with supercomputers

The idea is appealing on paper but fraught in practice

The Juwels supercomputer at the Julich Research Centre.
Seeking commercial tenantsPhotograph: Forschungszentrum Jülich/Sascha
|JÜLICH AND SEATTLE

IT IS NOT just technology firms that are fighting over the AI pie. Countries, too, want a bigger slice. As with companies, national spoils are unevenly distributed. If America is big tech, Europe looks more like an early-stage startup. Whereas America boasts many computing clusters of more than 20,000 top-end AI chips, in Europe a 1,000-processor facility counts as big. The EU hopes to give its AI startups a boost by tapping its growing fleet of supercomputers. This idea was one of the themes of the EuroHPC Summit, which drew Europe’s supercomputing experts to Antwerp on March 18th-21st. The gathering drew less attention than the concomitant “Woodstock of AI” hosted in Silicon Valley by Nvidia, the unstoppable maker of AI chips. But for Europe’s AI ambitions, the meeting in Belgium may end up playing an important role.

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This article appeared in the Business section of the print edition under the headline “Supersize me”

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