The companies are extending their AI partnership, and one key initiative is a supercomputer that will be integrated with AWS services and used by Nvidia’s own R&D teams. Credit: Shutterstock Amazon Web Services and Nvidia have announced an expansion of their alliance that includes plans to add supercomputing capabilities to AWS’s artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure. The companies announced the news at the AWS re:Invent conference in Las Vegas. The biggest of the initiatives is Project Ceiba, a supercomputer that will be hosted by AWS for Nvidia’s own research and development teams. It will feature 16,384 Nvidia GH200 Superchips and be capable of processing 65 exaflops of AI, the companies said. The Project Ceiba supercomputer will be integrated with a number of AWS services, including Amazon Virtual Private Cloud (VPC) encrypted networking and Amazon Elastic Block Store high-performance block storage. Nvidia plans to use the supercomputer for research and development to advance AI for LLMs, graphics and simulation, digital biology, robotics, self-driving cars, Earth-2 climate prediction and more. New Amazon EC2 G6e instances featuring Nvidia L40S GPUs and G6 instances powered by L4 GPUs are also in the works, AWS announced. L4 GPUs are scaled back from the Hopper H100 but offer much more power efficiency. These new instances are aimed at startups, enterprises, and researchers looking to experiment with AI. Nvidia also shared plans to integrate its NeMo Retriever microservice into AWS to help users with their development of generative AI tools like chatbots. NeMo Retriever is a generative AI microservice that enables enterprises to connect custom LLMs to enterprise data, so the company can generate proper AI responses based on their own data. “Generative AI is transforming cloud workloads and putting accelerated computing at the foundation of diverse content generation,” said Jensen Huang, founder and CEO of Nvidia, in a statement. “Driven by a common mission to deliver cost-effective, state-of-the-art generative AI to every customer, Nvidia and AWS are collaborating across the entire computing stack, spanning AI infrastructure, acceleration libraries, foundation models, and generative AI services.” In other news, AWS will be the first cloud provider to bring Nvidia’s GH200 Grace Hopper Superchips to the cloud. The Nvidia GH200 NVL32 multi-node platform connects 32 Grace Hopper Superchips by Nvidia’s NVLink and NVSwitch interconnects. The platform will be available on Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2) instances connected with Amazon’s networking, virtualization (AWS Nitro System), and hyper-scale clustering (Amazon EC2 UltraClusters). AWS will host Nvidia’s DGX Cloud cluster of GPUs for AI. DGX Cloud on AWS will accelerate training of generative AI and LLMs that can reach beyond 1 trillion parameters. Related content news Oak Ridge seeks next-level supercomputer to blow away Frontier The US government is shopping for the successor to the fastest supercomputer in the world. You might want to sit down before we tell you what it wants. By Lynn Greiner Jul 24, 2024 4 mins Government IT Supercomputers analysis DARPA program aims to sift through quantum computing hype DARPA’s Quantum Benchmarking Initiative will work to validate the progress of quantum computer hardware development. By Michael Cooney Jul 18, 2024 5 mins Supercomputers High-Performance Computing Networking news China seeks 30% growth in national compute capacity by 2025 The expansion will be aided by technology from US-based electric vehicle manufacturer Tesla, according to reports from Chinese news outlets. By Anirban Ghoshal Jul 08, 2024 3 mins Supercomputers Technology Industry news Elon Musk’s xAI to build supercomputer to power next-gen Grok The reported supercomputer project coincides with xAI’s recent announcement of a $6 billion series B funding round. By Gyana Swain May 27, 2024 3 mins Supercomputers GPUs PODCASTS VIDEOS RESOURCES EVENTS NEWSLETTERS Newsletter Promo Module Test Description for newsletter promo module. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe