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NextSilicon’s Maverick-2 Wins Best HPC Server and Top New Product to Watch in 2025 HPCwire Readers’ Choice Awards

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NextSilicon’s Maverick-2 Wins Best HPC Server and Top New Product to Watch in 2025 HPCwire Readers’ Choice Awards
Business

Business

NextSilicon’s Maverick-2 Wins Best HPC Server and Top New Product to Watch in 2025 HPCwire Readers’ Choice Awards

2025-11-18 08:00 Last Updated At:14:46

ST. LOUIS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Nov 17, 2025--

NextSilicon, a leader in next-generation computing solutions for AI and high-performance computing (HPC), has been recognized in the 22 nd edition of the HPCwire Readers’ Choice Awards, presented at the 2025 International Conference for High Performance Computing, Networking, Storage, and Analysis (SC25), in St. Louis, Missouri. NextSilicon was recognized with the following honors:

This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20251117918173/en/

The awards recognize Maverick-2, built on the company’s Intelligent Compute Architecture (ICA ™ ), for delivering up to 10x performance improvements over leading GPUs while using 60% less power. Its revolutionary dataflow architecture enables out-of-the-box acceleration for unmodified code and has already been deployed at dozens of customer sites including Sandia National Laboratories’ Vanguard-II supercomputer.

“While the early advances in applying AI to science and engineering are producing exciting and impressive results, traditional HPC continues to drive breakthrough discoveries for mission-critical workloads and applications,” said Tom Tabor, CEO of TCI Media, publishers of HPCwire. “The 2025 Readers’ and Editors’ Choice Awards truly capture this dynamic era of innovation.”

The coveted annual HPCwire Readers’ Choice Awards are determined through a nomination and voting process with the global HPCwire community, as well as selections from the HPCwire editors. The awards are an annual feature of the publication and constitute prestigious recognition from the HPC community. They are revealed each year to kick off the annual supercomputing conference, which showcases high performance computing, networking, storage, and data analysis.

“Across the globe, grand challenge problems are being tackled — and often solved — thanks to HPC, now amplified and accelerated by AI. Yet, many of these remarkable achievements rarely receive the recognition they deserve for their impact on society. With input from our worldwide community of HPC experts and the industry’s most respected editorial panel, the Readers’ and Editors’ Choice Awards stand as a powerful acknowledgment of the depth and diversity of HPC accomplishments worldwide. We extend our sincere gratitude and warmest congratulations to all of this year’s winners,” added Tabor.

NextSilicon recently disclosed architecture and performance details for Maverick-2, the next-generation processor enabling order-of-magnitude better compute for HPC and AI. Full benchmarking results are available here: https://www.nextsilicon.com/maverick

“This recognition from the HPCwire community validates that the future isn’t about squeezing out incremental gains from old architectures, but fundamentally rethinking how computing works,” said Elad Raz, NextSilicon’s Founder and CEO. “Maverick-2 achieves meaningful performance gains today by dedicating silicon to actual computation instead of overhead. We’re proud that the HPC community values genuine breakthroughs.”

More information on these awards can be found at the HPCwire website ( www.HPCwire.com ) or on X through the following hashtag: #HPCwireRCA25.

About NextSilicon

NextSilicon is revolutionizing the future of high-performance computing with its Intelligent Compute Architecture (ICA), which blends adaptive computing with self-optimizing software-hardware integration. The company’s ICA solutions are designed to address the most demanding computational challenges by delivering unmatched performance, efficiency, and scalability. Industries such as finance, energy, healthcare, manufacturing, and scientific research that rely on intensive and complex computations benefit from its dynamic workload optimization.

Established in 2017, NextSilicon has grown to over 350 employees globally and has raised more than $300 million in funding from leading investors like Amiti, Aleph, Liberty Technology VC, Playground Global, Standard Investments, StepStone, and Third Point Ventures. Its rapidly expanding partner ecosystem includes native support for commercial HPC libraries with partners such as NAG and Bio Team, as well as hosting and integration services with partners like Dell Technologies, Penguin Solutions, Databank, Vibrint, E4, and Partec.

For more information, please visit: www.nextsilicon.com

About HPCwire

HPCwire is a news site and weekly newsletter covering the fastest computers in the world and the people who run them. As the trusted source for HPC news since 1987, HPCwire serves as the publication of record on the issues, opportunities, challenges, and community developments relevant to the global High Performance Computing space. Its reporting covers the vendors, technologies, users, and the uses of high performance, AI and data-intensive computing within academia, government, science, and industry. Subscribe now at www.hpcwire.com

Maverick-2 Dual-Die OCP Accelerator Module

Maverick-2 Dual-Die OCP Accelerator Module

NEW YORK (AP) — Zuby Ejiofor had a career-high eight blocks along with 15 points and nine rebounds, anchoring a strong defensive performance that carried No. 23 St. John's past Mississippi 63-58 on Saturday night at Madison Square Garden.

Ejiofor scored all but two of his points in the second half, and the Red Storm (5-3) held on after leading by 14 with eight minutes remaining. He blocked six shots in the first half to go with three steals.

St. John's limited Ole Miss to 36.4% shooting from the field, including 2 for 16 from 3-point distance (12.5%), and forced 20 turnovers. The Johnnies went 25 of 35 on free throws to 16 of 20 for Mississippi and had a 13-0 advantage in fast-break points, enabling them to win despite shooting 34% from the floor and finishing with more turnovers (20) than field goals (17).

Malik Dia had 18 points and 10 rebounds in 27 minutes off the bench for the Rebels (5-4), who have lost four straight games — all to power-conference opponents. Dia started all 44 of his previous games at Ole Miss.

Ilias Kamardine scored 16 points for Mississippi, and Kezza Giffa added 10 points and seven steals off the bench.

AJ Storr, a 2023 All-Big East Freshman Team selection at St. John's, was booed throughout and scored only two points for Ole Miss. He missed all six of his field goal attempts.

Storr is playing for his fourth Power Five program in four years. He entered averaging 13.8 points per game, tied with Kamardine for the team lead.

The only previous meeting between the schools came on the St. John's campus in the first round of the 1989 National Invitation Tournament won by the Johnnies.

It was Mississippi's first game at The Garden since a 68-63 loss to Dayton in the semifinals of the 2010 NIT.

Mississippi plays Southern Miss next Saturday in Biloxi, Mississippi.

St. John's is back at MSG next Saturday to host local foe Iona, the suburban MAAC school where coach Rick Pitino spent three seasons before jumping to the Red Storm.

Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign up here and here (AP mobile app). AP college basketball: https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-basketball-poll and https://apnews.com/hub/college-basketball

St. John's forward Zuby Ejiofor (24) reacts after making a three-point basket against Auburn during the second half of an NCAA college basketball game in the Players Era tournament Wednesday, Nov. 26, 2025, in Las Vegas. (AP Photo/Steve Marcus)

St. John's forward Zuby Ejiofor (24) reacts after making a three-point basket against Auburn during the second half of an NCAA college basketball game in the Players Era tournament Wednesday, Nov. 26, 2025, in Las Vegas. (AP Photo/Steve Marcus)

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