Wednesday, July 8th 2020

Asetek Collaborates With HPE to Deliver Next-Gen HPC Server Cooling Solutions

Asetek today announced a collaboration with Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) to deliver its premium data center liquid cooling solutions in HPE Apollo Systems, which are high-performing and density-optimized to target high-performance computing (HPC) and Artificial Intelligence (AI) needs. The integration enables deployment of high wattage processors in high density configurations to support compute-intense workloads.

When developing its next-generation HPC server solutions, HPE worked closely with Asetek to define a plug and play HPC system that is integrated, installed, and serviced by HPE that serves as the ideal complement to HPE's Gen10 Plus platform. With the resulting solution, HPE is able to maximize processor and interconnect performance by efficiently cooling high density computing clusters. HPE will be deploying these DLC systems, which support warm water cooling, this calendar year.
"We are thrilled to be collaborating with HPE to enable the efficient cooling needed for HPC applications," said John Hamill, Chief Operating Officer at Asetek. "With our flexible, proven and reliable liquid cooling offering, we are able to develop complete turnkey solutions engineered to meet the myriad of HPE's requirements, without compromising manufacturability thereby guaranteeing continuity of supply."

"To meet the ever-increasing computational challenges of HPC, we evaluated multiple liquid cooling solutions," said Sammy Zimmerman, senior manager, Apollo Product Management, HPC and Mission Critical Solutions (MCS), at HPE. "Asetek and HPE will deploy systems that we truly believe will give us the best performance at the right price while being the simplest systems in the industry for first time liquid cooling customers to deploy."
Add your own comment

2 Comments on Asetek Collaborates With HPE to Deliver Next-Gen HPC Server Cooling Solutions

#1
Vya Domus
I've noticed an odd increase in interest for liquid cooling servers as of late, upcoming Intel chips maybe ?
Posted on Reply
#2
Patriot
Vya DomusI've noticed an odd increase in interest for liquid cooling servers as of late, upcoming Intel chips maybe ?
AMD's TDPs are pretty high as well, its just a thermal density thing. You just get a lot more cores for that TDP on AMDs side. :)
Posted on Reply
Apr 18th, 2024 20:18 EDT change timezone

New Forum Posts

Popular Reviews

Controversial News Posts