There's two sides to the artificial intelligence and machine learning coin. One is training. Big, huge machines like Frontier are really good at training. And if you steer them right, they'll just copy what they've learned before. The key is you probably want to use them everywhere all over the computer.
Last May, the Oak Ridge National Lab, run by the US Department of Energy, unveiled Frontier–the world's fastest supercomputer. It’s capable of performing a quintillion calculations per second, breaking what's called the exascale barrier.
The system requires its own power plant, 6,000 gallons of water to keep it cool, and a highly trained staff to operate. So what can it do? And who gets to use it?
We set out for Knoxville, Tennessee to try to wrap our brains around Frontier’s limitless potential.
See more about Frontier here: It Takes 6,000 Gallons of Water to Cool the World’s Fastest Supercomputer
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