Business | Supersize me

Europe wants startups to do AI with supercomputers

The idea is appealing on paper but fraught in practice

The Juwels supercomputer at the Julich Research Centre.
Seeking commercial tenantsPhotograph: Forschungszentrum Jülich/Sascha
|JÜLICH AND SEATTLE

IT IS NOT just technology firms that are fighting over the AI pie. Countries, too, want a bigger slice. As with companies, national spoils are unevenly distributed. If America is big tech, Europe looks more like an early-stage startup. Whereas America boasts many computing clusters of more than 20,000 top-end AI chips, in Europe a 1,000-processor facility counts as big. The EU hopes to give its AI startups a boost by tapping its growing fleet of supercomputers. This idea was one of the themes of the EuroHPC Summit, which drew Europe’s supercomputing experts to Antwerp on March 18th-21st. The gathering drew less attention than the concomitant “Woodstock of AI” hosted in Silicon Valley by Nvidia, the unstoppable maker of AI chips. But for Europe’s AI ambitions, the meeting in Belgium may end up playing an important role.

Explore more

This article appeared in the Business section of the print edition under the headline “Supersize me”

From the March 23rd 2024 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Business

Larry Ellison face feeding a sand timer with some planet and stars elements above. Two small figures on the right of the it looking scared.

What Elon Musk should learn from Larry Ellison

The founder of Oracle has demonstrated remarkable staying power

Kylian Mbappe of Real Madrid dribbles the ball during the LaLiga EA Sports match between Real Valladolid v Real Madrid.

Football clubs are making more money than ever. Players not so much

For both teams and their top stars, it helps to have a brand


A surreal city of LEGO-like houses with identical figures walking along grey paths

The allure of the company town

Lego, Corning and the survival of an old idea


From cribs to carriers, high-end baby products are in vogue

Demographic and technological changes are making infancy more expensive

No one gains from American tariffs on cars from Mexico and Canada

Donald Trump’s levy will hit his country’s carmakers hardest

DeepSeek poses a challenge to Beijing as much as to Silicon Valley

The story of Liang Wenfeng, the model-maker’s mysterious founder