At UberCloud, we have found that the most effective way to provision HPC resources on Microsoft Azure is to use a tool called Azure CycleCloud. CycleCloud is a subscription benefit for Azure users.
UberCloud president Wolfgang Gentzsch was recently interviewed by our friends at Tech Company News. He discusses the future of cloud CAE and what comes next for UberCloud.
Innovative companies are adding Cloud to their High Performance Computing (HPC) tool chest. Hybrid HPC blends together Cloud computing resources (from companies like Microsoft Azure, Google Cloud Platform, HPE) and more traditional on-premise HPC clusters. Here are 3 common reasons we see our customers implement Hybrid, on-demand HPC models:
We are in the golden age of computing. Cloud is mainstream and anyone with a credit card can join the party. So you would think a high-value engineer at an enterprise would be all set, right? Not according to the data.
Your product design engineers are now up against a High Performance Computer (HPC) running Computer Aided Engineering (CAE) simulation software to solve Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD), Finite Element Analysis (FEA) problems to develop simulation driven product designs. With the help of HPC, your competitor is able to shorten their design cycles. They are able to iterate through design options faster to find the better designs.
Join us at HIMSS19 to learn about two award-winning experiments using HPC-powered simulations. The Living Heart project focused on determining the likelihood of cardiac arrhythmia caused by new drugs, while the Living Brain project explored non-invasive treatment for schizophrenia.
In this Blog, we demonstrate the impact of computer simulations on personalized health care and present two recent research projects managed by UberCloud, aiming at living heart and brain simulations which have recently been rewarded with several prestigious international awards.
Univa and UberCloud are bringing new solutions to customers.
Popular resource managers such as Univa are supporting the Cloud and making it possible to mix on-premise compute resources and Cloud resources