Cadence Unveils Nvidia-Based Supercomputer to Accelerate Engineering and Biotech Design
Cadence Design Systems (CDNS.O) unveiled a powerful new supercomputer on Wednesday, built with Nvidia’s latest Blackwell GPUs, to dramatically speed up complex simulations in chip design, aerospace, and biotech research. The Millennium M2000, Cadence’s newest system, represents a major leap forward as the company expands beyond traditional chip design into engineering, drug discovery, and system modeling.
Key Details:
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Millennium M2000 Supercomputer
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Powered by ~32 Nvidia Blackwell GPUs
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Target price: ~$2 million per unit
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Dramatic simulation improvements: e.g., 8-day CPU job completed in <24 hours
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Builds on Cadence’s 2023 system, now covering a broader software suite
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“There’s this insatiable need for faster simulation,” said Michael Jackson, VP at Cadence, noting its use with Boeing to analyze turbulence around parts of a 777 jet.
Strategic Use Cases:
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Aerospace: Assisting Boom Supersonic and Boeing in aircraft design
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Biotech: Partnering with Treeline Biosciences for molecule simulation
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Semiconductors: Continuing its core work with clients like Apple for chip design
Industry Impact:
At a Santa Clara event, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang announced Nvidia will purchase 10 M2000 systems for its internal chip and AI data center development.
“This is a big deal for us… We’ll speed it up 50, 60, 100 times,” Huang said.
Cadence’s move to GPU-optimized computing is a major milestone in engineering software, shifting away from older CPU-centric architectures to embrace AI-powered, accelerated computing, ensuring faster innovation cycles in science and hardware design.

