SINGAPORE – Research into weather forecasting, disease prediction and chatbots that understand the nuances of Asian languages has received a significant boost with the launch of Singapore’s latest national research supercomputer.
Called Aspire 2B, the supercomputer has the country’s largest cluster of advanced graphics processing units (GPUs) from US chipmaker Nvidia, allowing it to have more computing power than 120,000 high-end artificial intelligence laptops combined.
This massive computing power will, in turn, help the more than 9,000 public researchers from universities, research institutes and government agencies here build more complex AI models and shorten experimentation time.
“We see AI as a multiplier for our research community to redesign your workflows and speed up breakthrough discoveries and applications,” said Minister for Digital Development and Information Josephine Teo during the launch event on June 8 at Nanyang Technological University (NTU).
“With Aspire 2B, models that were previously too large can now be trained in Singapore to meet our specific needs… Workloads that had to be sent overseas can now use our national research infrastructure,” she said.
Minister for Digital Development and Information Josephine Teo (second from right), with (from left) NSCC chairman Quek Gim Pew, National Research and Development Permanent Secretary Tan Chorh Chuan and NSCC chief executive Terence Hung at the Aspire 2B launch event held at NTU’s Innovation Centre.
ST PHOTO: JASON QUAH
These workloads include advanced climate modelling that combines AI and physics-based simulations, and higher-resolution weather forecasting modelling.
“This can help us anticipate intense rainfall and rising seas earlier, and plan our urban development and coastal defences around them,” said Teo.
Aspire 2B, located within NTU’s Innovation Centre, is part of the national AI infrastructure the National Research Foundation (NRF) committed to build in 2024 with a budget of $270 million.
Read Full Article At Source

