WELCOME TO EUROCC ACCESS

The National Competence Centres (NCCs) are the central points of contact for HPC and related technologies in their country.
Their missions are to:
- Develop and display a comprehensive and transparent map of HPC competences and institutions in their country
- Act as a gateway for industry and academia to providers with suitable expertise or relevant projects, may that be national or international
- Collect HPC training offers in their country and display them in a central place together with international training offers collected by other NCCs
- Foster the industrial uptake of HPC
LET’S GET YOU STARTED!
About the project
About this website
About this HPC
About Green HPC
About the EuroCC Origins
OUR SERVICES
COMPETENCES
Find an overview about the general and NCC specific competences of the EuroCC Network!
TRAINING
Find the various training offers from our EuroCC network!
EVENTS
Find the events of our EuroCC Network!
RESOURCES
Find useful infomation about all HPC-related topics in the form of documents, presentation and videos!
OUR PARTNERS
We connect the NCCs to different stakeholders in the HPC ecosystems. You can see some of our collaborators here:



WHAT’S NEW?
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Welcome, NCC Turkey!
NCC Turkey has been coordinating activities to create collaboration between academia and industry for HPC solutions on different topics ranging from modern computing tools to applied subjects. To create awareness on HPC among SMEs weekly seminars have been held online. The SME case studies have been initialised through the academic consultancies and NCC Turkey monitors…
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Welcome, NCC Luxembourg!
EuroCC Luxembourg is now online: The Luxembourg National Competence Centre in High-Performance Computing just launched its brand new webpage. Check it out at the >link. We also freshly landed on LinkedIn! Don’t miss the chance to follow us! It’s free of charge 😉 check it >here
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Criminological research at NCC Belgium
The Flemish Supercomputer Center (VSC), part of NCC Belgium, highlights the remarkable achievement by Christophe Vandeviver from Ghent University in criminological research. He uses supercomputers to study how burglars select their targets.