NVIDIA Corporation (NASDAQ:NVDA) builds a supercomputer worth $52 million in Cambridge, England. The announcement comes on the U.S chip maker's heels announcing plans to acquire its British Rival Arm in a $40 billion transaction.
Nvidia Supercomputer
The supercomputer in question will be used to facilitate the company’s artificial intelligence research in health care. Likewise, it should provide much-needed resources and computing power for tackling the most pressing healthcare issues that require massive computing resources. Therefore the supercomputer is to serve as a hub for innovation.
Works on the Supercomputer is to begin before the end of the year. Upon completion, it will be the 29th most powerful computer in the world. The supercomputer will feature 400 pet flops of AI performance, making it one of the fastest worldwide. It will also rank among the most energy-efficient.
Being a hub for innovation, the supercomputer will help researchers at GSK, AstraZeneca, and St Thomas National Health Service in solving various medical challenges. Similarly, the supercomputer should help the brightest of minds in the U.K to carry out medical research operations.
Nvidia does not plan to generate any revenue from the supercomputer as it is not a commercial endeavor. The supercomputer will be a completely independent unit of Arm, dedicated to health case research.
Arm Acquisition Uncertainty
Even as Nvidia develops the $52 million healthcare supercomputer its $40 billion, its proposed takeover of Arm is not assured. The U.K government or the Competition and Markets Authority could still block the deal.
The Labor Party has already raised concerns that the takeover is not in the best public interest. The Party is calling the Conservative Party to do more to protect the British chip designer. Lawmakers want the government to place clear conditions touching on legal guarantees on jobs and the business model.
Nvidia has been on a fine run in 2020, even as other semiconductors continue to struggle amid the COVID-19 shocks. The company has shipped over a billion graphics processing units, and its CUDA Software development Kit attracted over 6 million downloads.