The Leading Source for Global News and Information Covering the Ecosystem of High Productivity Computing
July 28, 2006
A breakthrough in performance thanks to new technology brought together by Cisco Systems, Tungsten Graphics and Obsidian has allowed a 7.5 megapixel image to update at 20 frames per second over a 2 km InfiniBand connection.
This unique capability was showcased this week at the Commodity Cluster Symposium 2006 (CCS2006), which addressed challenges associated with the rapidly expanding interest in and acceptance of the use of commodity computer clusters for scientific applications. This year's international symposium focused on clusters operating in heterogeneous production computing environments used to solve very large scientific problems. The symposium was held July 25-27, 2006 at the Wyndham in Baltimore, Maryland.
Typically, high performance visualization applications require a render farm and visualization node locally clustered with InfiniBand. For this live technology demonstration, the visualization node is isolated and located 2 km away from the render nodes, simulating a campus environment. The exhibit features the Tungsten Graphics Render Server, a three node Tungsten Graphics Visualization Cluster using Cisco InfiniBand internal interconnect, and the Obsidian Longbow for the long-haul connection. The client-side viewer on the remote end of a second Obsidian Longbow connects to Tungsten Graphics View via a second Cisco InfiniBand switch.
Attendees to the show were treated to a high fidelity 7.5 megapixel scientific visualization display rendered 2 km distant from the six-panel display head at 20 frames per second. Longbow technology integrates with the Tungsten Graphics and Cisco Systems infrastructure, while InfiniBand's high guaranteed bandwidth and its low deterministic latency yield a compelling real-time remote visualization experience. Campus area InfiniBand allows large-scale InfiniBand clusters to be efficiently and cost-effectively shared throughout an organization even in demanding real-time, high fidelity and interactive workload environments.
Cisco Systems, the leader in InfiniBand clustering technology, was instrumental in bringing the project participants together to help bridge the gap between leading edge technology and commercial products. Cisco SFS 7000 series InfiniBand Server Switches provide high-speed and reliable InfiniBand switching to enable campus-wide solutions for high-end visualization applications.
Even though the cost of servers still dominates the datacenter budget, storage is actually on a steeper growth curve. HPC storage, in particular, is being singled out as high-growth opportunity. Vendors are scrambling to keep up.
Read More...
Google datacenters most energy efficient; Cluster Resources to demo Moab Hybrid Cluster; Red Hat Linux releases HPC distro. John West recaps those stories and more in our weekly wrap-up.
Read More...
Last week, IBM and King Abdullah University of Science and Technology announced a collaboration to build "Shaheen," a 222 teraflop Blue Gene/P supercomputer. When deployed in 2009, it will represent the most powerful computer in the Middle East and one of the top systems in the world.
Read More...
Oct 06 | The Register | Does the HP Oracle Database Machine represent InfiniBand's big chance to break out its HPC niche? Read more...
Oct 06 | BusinessWeek | A body scan can save a lot of time in the fitting room, and fields from medicine to architecture are adopting 3D computing applications. Read more...
Oct 03 | UCSD News | Despite the evolution of computer science over the past 30 years, structural engineering -- hindered by a reluctance to adapt to digital innovations -- has remained relatively unchanged as a discipline. Read more...
Oct 02 | New York Times | Silcon Valley is starting to feel the effects of the credit crunch. Read more...
Oct 01 | Data Center Knowledge | Google today disclosed details of its data center energy usage, confirming that it operates some of the most efficient facilities in the world. Read more...
Sep 04 | | Disk drives are approximately 250 times denser today than a decade ago. This is good news for users who are creating, manipulating and storing more data than ever before. It gives them an opportunity to derive more value from their stored data and lowers the capital acquisition and operating expense associated with that data.
BlueArc's Titan architecture represents an evolutionary step in file servers by creating a hardware-based file system that can scale bandwidth, IOPS, and overall data capacity well beyond conventional software-based devices. With its ability to virtualize a massive storage pool of up to four usable petabytes of tiered storage, Titan can scale with growing data requirements, offering a competitive advantage for businesses, researchers, or other enterprises seeking to better manage data growth while still ensuring optimal performance.
Get updates and insights on the High Productivity Computing industry delivered driectly to your inbox.