Similar Projects

 

CAMMP

CAMMP (Computational and Mathematical Modeling Program) is a project in which students and teachers actively engage in solving real, relevant problems with the help of mathematical modeling and computers in a series of workshops. The problems are taken from everyday life, industry, or research. CAMMP brings the social significance of (school) mathematics and simulation sciences to life.

 

Galaxy

Galaxy is an open-source system for scientific workflows designed to make research accessible, reproducible, and transparent.

 

bwVisu

Visualization and interactive processing of data in research and teaching

The web-based service bwVisu enables user-friendly execution of interactive and graphical applications on the powerful hardware of the high-performance computer bwForCluster Helix for processing scientific data stored in bwForCluster Helix and the storage service SDS∂hd. A list of available applications can be found in the bwVisu-wiki. bwVisu can also be used specifically for teaching courses and workshops.

 

Jupyter4NFDI

Jupyter4NFDI is an interactive, browser-based platform that provides seamless access to multiple cloud resources. Whether you are working on large-scale simulations, machine learning models, or data analysis, Jupyter4NFDI gives you the flexibility to perform these tasks interactively using familiar Jupyter notebooks.

 

bwUniCluster

The bwUniCluster 3.0+KIT-GFA-HPC 3 is the joint high-performance computing system of the universities and technical colleges of Baden-Württemberg for general purposes and teaching and is located in the Scientific Computing Center (SCC) at the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT). The bwUniCluster 3.0 complements the four bwForClusters and their specific scientific areas of application.

On January 27, 2014, the SCC put a parallel computer into operation as a state service under the name “bwUniCluster” as part of Baden-Württemberg's implementation concept for high-performance computing, bwHPC. On May 2, 2017, an extension of the cluster was put into operation, which continues to exist as part of bwUniCluster 2.0.

The parallel computer served to provide basic computing power to the universities in the state of Baden-Württemberg and could be used free of charge by employees of all universities in Baden-Württemberg.

On March 10, 2020, the older part of the HPC system was taken out of service.