Digital Engineering 24/7

Helping design and engineering professionals discover, evaluate and specify technologies and processes that shorten the design cycle and enable success.

Editor's Pick: Portable Workstations Use NVIDIA's Quadro 6000

NextComputing announces availability of graphics card leveraging NVIDIA Quadro 6000 GPU for its portable workstations and servers.

Latest Engineering Computing News

Latest Engineering Computing Resources

By Anthony J. Lockwood  

November 24, 2010

By Anthony J. Lockwood

 

Dear Desktop Engineering Reader:

NextComputing is an interesting outfit. They make high-performance portable workstations, rugged potables, and rack-mount servers. NextComputing's stuff is geared to high-end applications from CAD to medical imaging, but none of it is your typical stuff. Meaning what, Lockwood? Well, these are high-end systems as you think of them ... to a point. But pretty much all of what NextComputing manufactures is meant to be ready to go out in the field away from its cozy office if that is where you happen to be today. A case in point is today's Pick of the Week write-up.

NextComputing recently announced that it has integrated NVIDIA's Quadro 6000 GPU for its portable workstations and servers. Incidentally, the integration comes by way of PNY Technologies, which, among things, makes professional-level graphics cards.

Anyway, back in July I selected the Quadro 6000 for a Pick of the Week. Back then, I noted that this was a great time for workstations and that the Quadro 6000 meant great things for visualization. Its raw performance hops to it at 1.3 billion triangles per second.

Combining the Quadro 6000 with a workstation or a server designed to handle compute-intensive applications and that you can take into the field changes the field for those of you who have to set up a quickie oil and gas visualization, a traffic analysis system, or onsite CFD simulation training session. Or, to put it another way, the integration of the Quadro 6000 in NextComputing's line of high-end portable workstations means that you could have a visual supercomputer with you out in the middle of nowhere. Cool.

Thanks, pal. -- Lockwood

Anthony J. Lockwood
Editor at Large, Desktop Engineering

Read today's Pick of the Week write-up.

This is sponsored content. See how it works.

 

More about NVIDIA

Since its founding in 1993, NVIDIA (NASDAQ: NVDA) has been a pioneer in accelerated computing. The company’s invention of the GPU in 1999 sparked the growth of the PC gaming market, redefined computer graphics, ignited the era of modern AI and…

Cut Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) Hallucinations by 50%

Most teams hit the same wall with enterprise AI: LLMs that hallucinate, pipelines that don’t scale, and infrastructure that’s harder to design than the models themselves.

Latest in NVIDIA

Latest in Engineering Workstations

About Anthony J. Lockwood

Anthony J. Lockwood

Anthony J. Lockwood is Digital Engineering's founding editor. He is now retired. Contact him via [email protected].

Follow DE
on Facebook
on Linkedin

Related Topics

Engineering Computing   Sponsored   Editors Pick of the Week   Engineering Workstations   High–performance Computing HPC   NVIDIA   All topics
 

Subscribe

Subscribe to our FREE magazine, FREE email newsletters or both!

Join over 90,000 engineering professionals who get fresh engineering news as soon as it is published.

Subscribe today

 
 

From our Sponsors

Meltio Takes Metal Additive to the Next Level
Meltio's DED technology enables industries to tailor and customize their solutions to create & repair metal parts.
Easing the Transition from ETO to CTO with Configuration Lifecycle Management
Manufacturers are discovering that the Configure-to-Order (CTO) model provides significant benefits when it comes to customization.
Siemens + Altair = The Next Chapter in Design and Simulation
With its acquisition of Altair, Siemens creates a unified simulation portfolio combining generative design with high-performance computing and AI workflows.