ACCESS Makes Security a Priority
The ACCESS Operations Cybersecurity Team has been building and improving cybersecurity since the program awards in May, 2022.
The ACCESS Operations Cybersecurity Team has been building and improving cybersecurity since the program awards in May, 2022.
A team from Carnegie Mellon University and the Santa Fe Institute compared data from more than 400 world religions in a unique way by applying landscape metaphors – peaks and valleys – to examine functional patterns of worship and belief. Their approach using the Bridges-2 system revealed how some religions persist or change and others die out.
University of Kansas researchers who study a rare form of Alzheimer’s disease used Expanse at the San Diego Supercomputer Center at UC San Diego to conduct studies on how mutations of a critical protein enzyme could be treated to better control thought, language and memory.
Purdue’s Anvil supercomputer has only been operating for a year, but it already has racked up an impressive number of achievements.
ACCESS resources aid in the cataloging of almost two hundred thousand new galaxies and thousands of possible black holes.
The National Science Foundation-funded open-source portal, Open OnDemand, allows users to access supercomputers through the web from anywhere, on any device
Researchers use Bridges-2 supercomputer to develop software that mimics properties of AI that are more understandable to humans.
XDMoD metrics tool used by ACCESS offers valuable insights for a wide range of stakeholders, including ACCESS users, HPC administrators, and the National Science Foundation.
What if your clothes could tell your phone you’re in distress? Or your shoes could recharge your phone? ACCESS enables The Internet of Everything.
To help democratize ACCESS for new communities and for projects with modest resource requirements, the ACCESS Allocations team has implemented a new Diversity, Equity & Inclusion Plan