HPCwire

The Leading Source for Global News and Information Covering the Ecosystem of High Productivity Computing

HPCwire >> Special Features >> HPWS08 >> HPWS08 Top Item

Microsoft Aims Newest HPC Offering at Wall Street


Page:  1  of  2
1 | 2   All  »  

NEW YORK CITY -- When profits drop, businesses look to boost productivity and performance -- and nowhere is that demand more urgent right now than on Wall Street. Yesterday, about 60 blocks north of the scene of the recent financial meltdown, Microsoft announced it has released its latest product to provide that boost: Windows HPC Server 2008. The company says the new version will give firms in the financial services business a way to easily and cost-effectively deploy scalable high performance systems.

"Companies have to be more efficient than ever with IT resources, but they need to maintain their position in a competitive marketplace," said Bill Laing, VP of Microsoft's Windows Server and Solutions Division, during a speech at the HPC on Wall Street conference yesterday. Financial organizations are relying more and more on high performance systems for routine but critical operations such as real-time risk analysis, Laing said, but "they require HPC solutions that deploy quickly, integrate in a heterogeneous environment, and scale from workstation to cluster."

Built on 64-bit Windows Server, the new platform essentially puts the Windows interface on top of high-speed compute clusters. "We're providing supercomputing to the desktop guys, the financial analysts and the ones developing models -- the guys doing real-time market calculations," said Vince Mendillo, director of Microsoft's Server & Tools Business Group, during a briefing. "Our goal is to accelerate the time to insight."

Microsoft worked with dozens of companies in the financial industry to get their feedback to the server system, Laing said. One such company is Lloyds TSB, one of the largest banking groups in the UK. The IT director at Lloyds TSB Corporate Markets group in London, Ricky Higgins, reported that his team was able to stand up a new 64-node cluster in a very short time. "From bare hardware to first job submitted took barely overnight," he said. "Due to market turmoil, we need to process data much more quickly than ever before." Higgins said processing time has been cut by about 50 percent. "We've been able to greatly increase the number of transactions," he said.

To speed up processing of financial workloads, Microsoft made a series of major changes to HPC Server. Instead of using Remote Installation Service to set up a cluster, HPC Server uses Windows Deployment Service, which the company says makes scaling much faster because it uses image multicasting to deploy nodes in parallel, but it's also easier because a wizard system guides administrators through node configuration. A "to-do list" page walks the admin through the steps needed to configure a cluster, such as defining the network topology and setting up automatic deployment.

In fact, Microsoft lists simplified administration as one of the key benefits of the new platform. "Our goal was to provide efficient, scalable management tools for setting up and deploying a cluster. Reporting capabilities are very easy to use," Mendillo said. Along with reporting, monitoring and diagnostic tools are all built into the new management console. A good example is the Heat Map, which gives an at-a-glance look at the health of the cluster.

Remote Direct Memory Access enables process-to-process communications, so "there's very low latency when sending a process from one machine to another," said Mendillo. Processes can write directly to the address space in another machine. The new job scheduler has been upgraded to work better with large clusters, handle more simultaneous chores, and be used in service-oriented applications, he said. The software now follows the Open Grid Forum's HPC Basic Profile interface for interoperability with other schedulers.

Reliability is strengthened with advanced failover capabilities. "Redundancy on head nodes guarantees that the cluster will keep running, and job scheduler clients won't see any change in the head node during the failover process," explained Mendillo.

Microsoft has been working with independent software developers to build scalable applications for risk analysis, modeling trading, and other financial operations, as well as compilers, debuggers, performance optimizers, libraries, and other essential tools. Through integration with Visual Studio 2008, with its parallel programming environment, the new platform makes it easier to build software that takes advantage of distributed processing power, explained Medillo.

It's not as if HPC is new in the financial district. Like Geno Valente, a VP for database analytics device developer XtremeData, said during a session yesterday, "Most people on Wall Street have some kind of HPC in the back room."

Page:  1  of  2
1 | 2   All  »  

HPCwire on Twitter

Article Tools

  • Print This Page
  • Bookmark This Article

Share Options

(Digg, Technorati, more)


Subscribe

Discussion

There are 0 discussion items posted.  

HPC in the Cloud Part 2
People to Watch 2010


Feature Articles

The Week in Review

TACC's Ranger supercomputer celebrates its second year of enabling important research; Microsoft partners with NSF to bring cloud services to researchers; and NSF submits its fiscal year 2011 budget request. We recap those stories and more in our weekly wrapup.
Read More...

NASA Looks to Move Science Apps Into the Cloud

It seems only natural that the US space agency would be casting its eyes toward the clouds. Sure enough, NASA is now looking to cloud computing to optimize the operation of the agency's IT infrastructure for some of its science codes. Like many commercial businesses and government organizations, NASA is being asked to do more computing with fewer datacenter resources.
Read More...

Thoughts, Observations, Beliefs & Opinions About the NSF Supercomputer Centers

There is no such thing as an NSF (Supercomputer) Center and there never has been. There should be. What there are, in the words of Ed Hayes, then comptroller of NSF, are "NSF ASSISTED Supercomputer Centers." This is a double edged sword.
Read More...

Top Headlines

IBM Releases Energy Efficient Power7 System

Feb 09 | eWeek Europe | Company says new high-end servers will deliver "intelligent performance." Read more...

Inductive Coupling Packs Flash Drive in a Chip

Feb 09 | EE Times | Wireless technology promises energy-efficient chip-to-chip communication. Read more...

IBM, Microsoft Help Create Montana Supercomputer

Feb 08 | eWeek | A new kind of Rocky Mountain high. Read more...

AMD Aims for GPUs in Mainstream Servers Starting 2012

Feb 08 | Computerworld | Chip maker hopes to bring CPU-GPU processors to servers in two years. Read more...

Graphene Transistors That Work at Blistering Speeds

Feb 05 | Technology Review | IBM has created graphene transistors that leave silicon ones in the dust. Read more...

Featured Whitepapers

Virtualization for Aggregation And The vSMP Architecture™

Jan 12 | | In-depth look at vSMP Foundation server virtualization technology, technical implementation, use cases and capabilities. The technical whitepaper provides an architectural overview and details on the three vSMP Foundation products: vSMP Foundation for SMP, vSMP Foundation for Cluster and vSMP Foundation for Cloud.

Copper Cable Technologies for High Performance Computing

Jan 18 | | This white paper discusses Gore’s copper cable assemblies, and how they continue to exceed the standards for providing reliable, cost-effective solutions for high-performance computer applications.

Appro Assists LLNL with Cluster Designed for Extreme Scale Visualization

Jan 11 | | LLNL is home to some of the fastest computers in the world. In 2012, LLNL expects to have the Sequoia supercomputing cluster operational with a projected performance of over 20 PFLOP/s. These systems will focus on strengthening the foundations of predictive simulation through running large suites of complex simulations and then comparing model predictions with experimental data. To visualize this project’s large amount of data, LLNL requested an Appro Supercomputing Cluster specifically designed to support interactive data analysis.

Multimedia

Webcast: Virtualized Data Center Roundtable

Join this online panel discussion for live Q&A with leading industry experts, analysts, and end-users to discuss the latest innovations, best practices, barriers to implementation, and measurable benefits of server virtualization with a particular focus on today's real world solutions.

Webcast: Watch SC09 Birds of a Feather Video: Scalable Fault-Tolerant HPC Supercomputers

Learn about scalable fault-tolerant architectures and examples of energy efficient and scalable supercomputing clusters using dual QDR InfiniBand to combine capacity computing with network failover capabilities with the help of programming languages such as MPI and a robust Linux cluster management package.

Webcast: High Performance Computing for a Smarter Planet

LIVE@SCO9: The IBM team discusses new innovations in hardware, software and services that help clients better understand their workloads and get insight from their R&D efforts. Technology demonstrations include the soon-to-be-released Power7 HPC processor, the DCS990 system with 2.4 petabytes of storage, the xCAT management tool, secure HPC cloud computing and more. Winners of two HPCwire Readers' and Editors’ Choice Awards! Take the IBM virtual tour at SC09 or more information go online to: http://www-03.ibm.com/systems/deepcomputing/sc09.html

SC09 HPC in the Cloud

Newsletters

Stay informed! Subscribe to HPCwire email Newsletters.






HPC Job Bank


Featured Events

BrightTALK
HPCC
HPC User Forum DICE
Cloud Slam
Cloud Computing Expo
DEISA PRACE Symposium