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David Saffo dsaffo

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mcburton / jupyter-on-a-supercomputer.md
Last active April 9, 2024 12:03
A short(ish) guide on how to get Jupyter Notebooks up and running on the Bridges supercomputer.

Running Jupyter on a Supercomputer

This quick guide for getting a Jupyter Notebook up and running on Bridges, a supercomputer managed by the Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center. Bridges is a new machine designed to accommodate non-traditional uses of High Performance Computing (HPC) resources like data science and digital humanities. Bridges is available through XSEDE, which is the system that manages access to multiple supercomputing resources. Through XSEDE, Bridges is available researchers or educators at US academic or non-profit research institutions (see the XSEDE eligibility policies) Allocations are free, but there is a somewhat difficult to understand application process filled with jargon and acronyms that take time to understand. See the XSEDE getting started guide for more information about getting acc