Every day, routine inspections are conducted in the equipment room of the Gui'an Supercomputing Center (hereinafter referred to as "Gui'an Supercomputing Center"), which is located in the China Telecom Cloud Computing Guizhou Information Park. Two maintenance personnel walk through the aisles of the data center, carefully checking the temperature of the chassis and the circuits, while another two technicians use instruments to test whether the servers are operating normally. Each inspection takes approximately one hour.
The data center of Gui'an Supercomputing Center houses more than 600 servers. As a major scientific and technological infrastructure for advancing scientific research, technological development, and industrial innovation, the center is co-constructed by the Department of Science and Technology of Guizhou Province and the Administrative Committee of Gui'an New Area, and operated by Gui'an New Area Science and Technology Innovation Industry Development Co., Ltd. Serving as a key platform for Guizhou to focus on building the "Eastern Data and Western Computing" project, Gui'an Supercomputing Center can be called the "core brain" of Guizhou.
Equipped with a multi-cloud heterogeneous computing power network resource scheduling platform, Gui'an Supercomputing Center can connect computing power resources both within and outside Guizhou Province, and open up cross-industry, cross-region, and cross-level computing power channels. Up to now, the center has delivered a total of about 16 million card-hours of computing power to places such as Shenzhen, Shanghai, Guangzhou, Chengdu, and Wuhan.
In 2022, Gui'an Supercomputing Center provided cloud rendering service computing support for more than 200,000 users in over 50 countries and regions. It participated in the film and television rendering of approximately 50 film and television works, with a total of 69 million hours of rendering, including works such as The Battle at Lake Changjin II, The Wandering Earth 2, and The Three-Body Problem.
In addition, Gui'an Supercomputing Center also provides high-performance computing support for various industries such as biomedicine, artificial intelligence, and building earthquake resistance.