Supermicro
Supermicro (Super Micro Computer, Inc.) is an information technology company that designs, manufactures, and sells server, storage, and related computing systems for data center, cloud, enterprise, and embedded workloads.
- Server, storage, and full system platforms for data centers, cloud service providers, and enterprises (compute infrastructure)
- GPU-accelerated and CPU-based systems for Artificial Intelligence (AI), Machine Learning (ML), and High performance computing (HPC) workloads (AI infrastructure, HPC infrastructure)
- Multi-node, blade, rack-scale, and modular building-block architectures for on-premises (on-prem), edge, and hybrid deployments (data center infrastructure)
- Motherboards, server chassis, and related hardware components for OEMs and system integrators (compute hardware components)
- Management firmware, monitoring tools, and configuration utilities for deployment, operation, and lifecycle management of Supermicro platforms (infrastructure management)
More About Supermicro
Supermicro focuses on server and storage systems that target enterprise data centers, cloud environments, telecom, edge computing, and AI infrastructure. Its portfolio spans rackmount servers, Graphics Processing Unit (GPU) systems, high-density multi-node platforms, and storage servers designed to support workloads such as virtualization, databases, container platforms, analytics, and training and inference for AI models. Customers use these systems to deploy private and hybrid cloud stacks, run business applications, and host data processing pipelines in corporate and service-provider environments.
A central element of Supermicro’s approach is a modular, building-block architecture (compute infrastructure) that combines server motherboards, chassis, power, cooling, and networking options into configurable platforms. This approach allows enterprises to align compute, memory, storage, and accelerator configurations with workload needs, including CPU-only deployments and GPU-accelerated or accelerator-based systems for AI and HPC. Supermicro systems support industry-standard x86 processors and widely used GPU and accelerator technologies (AI infrastructure), as well as common storage interfaces and networking technologies used in modern data centers.
Within AI and ML use cases, Supermicro offers GPU systems and racks (AI infrastructure) oriented toward training large models and running inference services. These systems are typically integrated into clusters using standard Ethernet or high-speed networking technologies and are designed to fit into common data center rack formats. Enterprises deploy these platforms alongside Machine Learning Operations (MLOps), data pipeline, and orchestration stacks from other vendors, using Supermicro hardware as the underlying compute, storage, and interconnect layer.
For general-purpose enterprise IT, Supermicro provides rackmount and multi-node servers (compute infrastructure) that support virtualization platforms, container orchestration frameworks, software-defined storage, and Software Defined Networking (SDN). These systems are used to host business applications, web services, back-office workloads, and line-of-business systems. Storage-focused platforms (storage infrastructure) combine disk and flash configurations to support backup, archival, object storage, and database workloads, integrating with common enterprise storage software and protocols.
Supermicro also supplies motherboards, server chassis, and sub-systems (compute hardware components) to OEMs, system integrators, and organizations that build custom platforms. In addition, the company provides management firmware and tools (infrastructure management) that enable remote monitoring, power control, firmware updates, and basic lifecycle operations across fleets of servers. In a marketplace or directory context, Supermicro fits into categories such as rack and blade servers, GPU and AI systems, data center and edge servers, storage servers, and server components, with offerings positioned for both enterprise IT departments and cloud or service-provider environments.