SciTransfer
Organization

NAUDIT HIGH PERFORMANCE COMPUTING AND NETWORKING SL

Spanish SME specialising in HPC and network performance auditing, with research experience in datacenter disaggregation and 5G metro optical networks.

Technology SMEdigitalESSMENo active H2020 projectsThin data (2/5)
H2020 projects
2
As coordinator
0
Total EC funding
€350K
Unique partners
30
What they do

Their core work

Naudit HPC is a Madrid-based technology SME specialising in the performance analysis, design, and optimisation of high-performance computing systems and advanced network infrastructure. Their work sits at the boundary between compute and networking — they bring technical depth to projects requiring rigorous benchmarking, performance auditing, and architectural analysis of HPC and data centre environments. In the H2020 programme, they contributed to research on disaggregated data centre hardware (dReDBox) and 5G metro optical networks with edge compute capabilities (METRO-HAUL), suggesting their core commercial offer involves performance measurement, traffic analysis, and system evaluation for demanding compute-network workloads.

Core expertise

What they specialise in

2 projects

Both dReDBox and METRO-HAUL involve compute-intensive infrastructure where HPC performance analysis is a core requirement, consistent with the company's name and stated specialisation.

Network performance auditing and benchmarkingprimary
2 projects

The company name explicitly includes 'Networking' and 'Audit', and both projects require rigorous performance measurement — datacenter fabric in dReDBox, metro optical throughput and latency in METRO-HAUL.

Datacenter disaggregation and fabric architecturesecondary
1 project

dReDBox (2016–2018) addressed disaggregated, recursive datacenter-in-a-box concepts, where Naudit HPC participated as a technical contributor.

5G metro optical networking and edge computesecondary
1 project

METRO-HAUL (2017–2020) targeted high-bandwidth, low-latency 5G-aware metro optical networks with edge storage and compute, representing Naudit's engagement with next-generation telecom infrastructure.

Edge computing integrationemerging
1 project

METRO-HAUL explicitly includes edge storage and compute as design targets, indicating Naudit is extending its expertise toward distributed edge architectures.

Evolution & trajectory

How they've shifted over time

Early focus
Datacenter disaggregation, HPC infrastructure
Recent focus
5G metro networks, edge compute

With no keyword metadata available and only two projects — which actually overlap in time (2016–2018 and 2017–2020) — a clean early-to-late evolution is difficult to trace. What the project sequence does suggest is a broadening of scope: from compute-centric infrastructure inside the datacenter (dReDBox) toward network-centric infrastructure at metropolitan scale (METRO-HAUL). This points to an organisation that started from an HPC and compute-performance base and is extending toward large-scale network systems, 5G, and edge computing — areas with growing commercial demand. Given the limited data, this reading should be treated as directionally indicative rather than confirmed.

Naudit HPC appears to be moving from internal datacenter performance analysis toward wider network-scale infrastructure — a trajectory that positions them well for future consortia in 5G, edge computing, and software-defined networking.

Collaboration profile

How they like to work

Role: specialist_contributorReach: European9 countries collaborated

Naudit HPC has participated exclusively as a consortium partner across both H2020 projects, never taking the coordinator role — a pattern consistent with a specialist SME that contributes targeted technical expertise rather than leading broad project management. Despite their small size, they engaged with 30 distinct partners across 9 countries in just two projects, suggesting they work within large, multi-stakeholder RIA consortia rather than small bilateral arrangements. This breadth of partnership exposure, without repetition of the same partners, indicates they bring a specific technical capability that different consortium builders seek out.

Naudit HPC has built connections with 30 unique partners across 9 countries through just two projects, a notably wide reach for an organisation of this size. Their network spans major European ICT research hubs, typical of large RIA consortia in the digital infrastructure space.

Why partner with them

What sets them apart

Naudit HPC occupies a specific niche — network and HPC performance auditing — that is often underrepresented in research consortia despite being essential for validating system claims. As a small Spanish SME, they bring commercial performance-testing expertise to academic-led consortia that otherwise lack it, adding credibility to benchmarking and evaluation workpackages. For a consortium builder seeking a technically rigorous, independent performance evaluator for compute or networking research, Naudit HPC offers a rare combination of commercial accountability and research track record.

Notable projects

Highlights from their portfolio

  • dReDBox
    Their highest-funded H2020 project (EUR 199,559), addressing disaggregated datacenter-in-a-box architecture — a forward-looking concept that prefigured today's composable infrastructure market.
  • METRO-HAUL
    A 5G-era optical metro network project with edge compute components, demonstrating Naudit's ability to contribute to telecom-grade infrastructure research beyond pure HPC.
Cross-sector capabilities
Telecommunications infrastructure (5G, optical networks)Smart manufacturing (industrial IoT network performance)Security and monitoring (network traffic analysis)Cloud and distributed computing infrastructure
Analysis note: Profile is based on only 2 projects with no keyword metadata provided. Expertise inferences draw heavily on the company name and project titles rather than verified deliverable or publication data. The organisation's actual role within each consortium (e.g., which workpackages they led) is unknown, making it difficult to confirm the depth of their technical contribution. Treat all expertise characterisations as indicative.