$11.5M NVIDIA Collaboration Will Put SMU ‘in the Fast Lane for Artificial Intelligence’ Dallas Innovates – dallasinnovates.com

Posted: November 11, 2021 at 5:53 pm

An NVIDIA DGX SuperPOD probably won't fit inside your home office. But SMU can manage it. [Image: NVIDIA]

Dallas Southern Methodist University has a thing for fast computers. It acquired its first high-speed computing cluster from NVIDIA a decade ago, enabling its researchers to analyze data from CERN. That led to SMUs role in identifying the probability of the Higgs bosonthe so-called God Particle.

Now SMUs research is getting even more superpowerful.

SMUisinvesting $11.5 million in hardware, software, and training to crank up the schools AI infrastructure with anNVIDIA DGX SuperPODbringing world-leading AI supercomputing capabilities to Dallas.

The investment will give SMU 10 times the power of its current supercomputer memory capabilities, enabling AI and machine learning thats 25 times faster than current levels.

SMU will incorporate the SuperPOD with the NVIDIA Quantum InfiniBand networking platform into its data center to produce a theoretical 100 petaflops of computing powerenabling SMU research teams to perform a blistering 100 quadrillion operations per second.

The collaboration will give SMU faculty, students, and research partners the ability to integrate sophisticated AI tech across a wide array of researchfrom computational biology to human performance, national defense, and digital humanities.

This partnership will put us in the fast lane for artificial intelligence, SMU President R. Gerald Turner said in a statement. Research universities like ours have an obligation to actively engage in the development and application of AI for societal good, and this partnership gives us the tools to do it.

NVIDIA DGX SuperPOD [Photo: NVIDIA]

This will be of great value to our faculty and students who are already using accelerated computing in areas such as drug discovery, computational chemistry, virtualization, astrophysics and engineering, Elizabeth Loboa,SMU provost and VP for Academic Affairs.Loboa said in the statement.

SMUs leap in computing capability will be pivotal in many ways, Loboa says, as the university increases its AI-focused research to address significant national and international issues.

SMU is now recruiting new faculty across multiple disciplines to join existing faculty research groups to tacklenational security issues and remote sensing of hazardsincluding nuclear test monitoring, earthquake analysis, and building and infrastructure vulnerability.

The research groups will also study 21st-century education technology, including optimizing student learning outcomes.

NVIDIA DGX SuperPOD [Image: NVIDIA]

The huge boost in SMUs computing capability could provide strong benefits for North Texas, which continues to grow as a technology hub.

Dallas has long been a hub for innovation, and this tremendous increase in supercomputing brainpower at SMU can be a powerful tool for our city, Dallas Mayor Eric Johnson said in the statement. Through research collaborations built on SMUs capabilities in artificial intelligence, we have the potential to boost our citys booming economy, improve our workforce, and learn to solve major challenges that we face.

As the Brookings Institution found in its Geography of AI report, AI activity is highly concentrated in the San Francisco Bay Area and 13 early adopter metro areas, Dallas-Fort Worth has been identified as a potential AI adoption center.

High-performance computing is transforming the world by enabling researchers to tackle some of humanitys most complex problems, said Cheryl Martin, director of higher education and research at NVIDIA, in the statement. NVIDIAs collaboration with world-class institutions such as SMU is equipping the next generation of scientists with the extreme performance to supercharge AI and supercomputing exploration and expand humanitys understanding of the universe.

The boost in SMUs high-performance computing power will bolster its commitment to reach top R1 research status as designated by the Carnegie Classification of Institutions of Higher Education. SMU currently holds Carnegie classification R2 status, leaping past 55 other universities since 2005.

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$11.5M NVIDIA Collaboration Will Put SMU 'in the Fast Lane for Artificial Intelligence' Dallas Innovates - dallasinnovates.com

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