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WHTop → 📋 News → MegazoneCloud Brings Pasqal Quantum Access to Korea
Jul, 2026 : MegazoneCloud Brings Pasqal Quantum Access to Korea
📅 - Pasqal and MegazoneCloud have signed an agreement to explore quantum computing services in South Korea, linking Pasqal's neutral-atom systems with MegazoneCloud's managed cloud reach, enterprise customers and possible on-site deployments. The deal is not a product launch. It is a market-access move aimed at making quantum look less experimental to Korean enterprise buyers and procurement teams alike.
The memorandum of understanding gives both companies room to test commercial routes without promising too much too early. Pasqal gets a domestic channel in one of Asia's most demanding technology markets. MegazoneCloud gets a quantum story for customers already spending heavily on cloud, AI, [...][... Check source for end of article ...]
📅 - Rambus DDR5 9600 Targets AI Server Memory Gap - Rambus has introduced a DDR5 9600 Server RDIMM chipset aimed at AI-heavy data center platforms, as memory bandwidth becomes a more visible constraint in inference, agentic workflows, and HPC systems. The chipset, built around its sixth-generation registering clock driver, supports RDIMMs running up to 9600 MT/s, a 20 percent bandwidth increase over the prior generation.
The announcement sits in a less glamorous part of the AI infrastructure market, but one that increasingly decides whether expensive servers perform as expected. GPUs get the attention. Networking gets more of it now. Power and cooling dominate planning calls. Yet CPU-attached memory still shapes throughput for a large [...]
📅 - Vultr, SUSE Bring NVIDIA AI Stack To Enterprise Buyers - Vultr and SUSE have launched a validated enterprise AI platform on Vultr infrastructure, combining SUSE AI Factory, NVIDIA software and GPU acceleration for companies trying to move workloads out of pilots. The offer targets buyers who want production AI stacks without assembling Kubernetes, security, orchestration, and infrastructure components themselves across cloud, edge, on-premises, and sovereign environments today.
The product arrives in a market that has mostly moved past the first wave of AI experimentation but has not quite solved the deployment problem. Enterprises can test models. They can run proofs of concept. They can buy access to GPUs, usually at uncomfortable prices. [...]
📅 - Samsung Starts PM1763 SSD Mass Production for AI Infrastructure - Samsung has started mass production of its PM1763 enterprise SSD, a PCIe 6.0 drive aimed at AI and high-performance computing servers. The launch gives infrastructure buyers another storage component tuned for accelerator-heavy systems, where data movement, power draw, cooling design, and security controls are becoming harder to treat as secondary engineering details in production environments.
The PM1763 is not the flashiest part of an AI server. That job still goes to GPUs, accelerators, and high-bandwidth memory. But storage is becoming harder to ignore as model sizes increase and inference systems demand fast, repeated access to large datasets, checkpoints, embeddings, logs, and [...]
📅 - Cerebras Plans 200 MW Europe AI Data Center Buildout by 2027 - Cerebras Systems plans to bring European AI data center capacity online by late 2026, then scale across France and the Nordics to 200 MW by the end of 2027. Some capacity is expected to serve OpenAI workloads, putting Cerebras' inference infrastructure closer to European customers asking for faster, regionally located compute, under tighter sovereignty expectations today too.
The company is talking about Norway and Finland for 2027 deployments, with France also part of the planned build-out. That geography is doing work. Cheap or cleaner power. Cooler climates. Grid politics. Data residency pressure. Europe wants AI capacity, but not only as imported API access from U.S. platforms running [...]