The Leading Source for Global News and Information Covering the Ecosystem of High Productivity Computing
May 08, 2008
Here's a collection of highlights, selected totally subjectively, from this week's HPC news stream as reported at insideHPC.com and HPCwire.
>>10 words and a link
U Bristol's BlueCrystal a joint IBM/ClearSpeed effort;
http://insidehpc.com/2008/05/02/university-of-bristol-unveils-new-machine/
6th annual visualization challenge;
http://www.cra.org/govaffairs/blog/archives/000674.html
U of Fla researchers find new blood pressure drug;
http://insidehpc.com/2008/05/05/hpc-enables-discovery-of-new-blood-pressure-drug/
Larrabee engineer blogs confession: true love for rasterization;
http://insidehpc.com/2008/05/05/larrabee-engineer-its-all-about-the-rasterization/
8 million pixel visualization theater at the U of Houston;
http://insidehpc.com/2008/05/06/university-of-houston-builds-8-megapixel-viz-theater/
Notes from the Top500 rumor mill;
http://insidehpc.com/2008/05/06/top500-rumor-mill/
Mercury Computer Systems puts 100 GFLOPS in your palm;
http://insidehpc.com/2008/05/07/mercury-puts-100-gflops-in-your-hand/
Intel EVP announces intention to dominate HPC;
http://insidehpc.com/2008/05/07/intel-evp-confesses-dreams-of-an-hpc-future/
>>SGI and NASA: big(ger) compute
Alongside SGI's negative earnings press release this week, the company announced a large supercomputing win with NASA. There aren't many details related to the deal, but this system is the NASA Advanced Supercomputing Columbia replacement.
Rough system specs? The system will be an Altix ICE platform with 20,480 cores and 20 TB of memory, and will be water cooled. The move to the ICE system marks NASA's departure from SGI's Itanium gear.
Then, the very next day, SGI announced that it was teaming with Intel to offer NASA an even bigger system named Pleiades. The plan is to deliver a one petaflop system to NASA Ames in 2009, followed by a 10 petaflops system in 2012.
>>Sun and SGI join Cray in losing money last quarter
It's a club that no one wants to be in, but one that seems to be increasingly popular: the "I lost shareholder money last quarter" club. Last week Cray reported losses in their fiscal quarter just ended, and this week we reported that Sun and SGI are in that club as well.
Lots of ink was spilled in the IT press over Sun's quarterly results. Revenues for the quarter that ended in March were down $17M and came in $100M under analysts expectations, according to coverage at FT.com. Sun posted a loss of $34M after taxes, or 4 cents a share. The 3Q2007 result was a net income of 7 cents a share.
The real problem with all of this is that the Sun leadership team has been going on about 10 percent year-over-year growth (good coverage at TheStreet.com.) Sun is planning to offset the losses with a layoff of from 1,500 to 2,500 employees (from a total employee count of about 34,000).
SGI announced its Q3 financial results this week, tag teaming it with the 20,480-core NASA system announcement and then bracing it with the petaflops deal announced the very next day.
Evidently they were trying to soften the news that the company's revenue dropped $11M from Q2, with losses widening from $30.8M in Q3 to $40.6M this quarter
One bright(er) spot was the growth of orders, which grew 50 percent year over year, and backlogs:
Backlog at the end of the third quarter of 2008 grew to $133.9 million compared to $95.8 million at the end of the second quarter of fiscal 2008, the highest backlog level in the past five quarters.
-----
John West is part of the team that summarizes the headlines in HPC news every day at insideHPC.com. You can contact him at john@insidehpc.com.
Cray at SC08 – Celebrating Innovation
Visit us at booth #532 and see the latest technology from Cray, including the new Cray XT5 system with ECOphlex technology and the recently introduced Cray CX1 desk side supercomputer.
Visit IBM at SC08 - Experience the latest breakthroughs in High Performance Computing
As the world's leading provider of high performance computing solutions, IBM will showcase Exascale Stream Processing, Cloud Computing, Blue Brain, Interactive Ray Tracing along with many other exciting demos.
Harness the power of Sun to solve your most complex problems
Beat your competition by getting to market first, running more simulations, and solving complex problems with Sun HPC Systems. Sun HPC: Open, Simple, Reliable.
Last week, San-Francisco-based Complete Genomics came out of stealth mode to become the first provider of large-scale human genome sequencing services. HPCwire recently asked company representatives a few questions about their new offering.
Read More...
Intel has acquired the assets of NetEffect, an Austin-based company that makes iWARP-capable adapters. Intel will inherit NetEffect's product portfolio, which includes 1 and 10 GbE accelerated adapters, 10 GbE adapters for blade configurations as well as a 10 GbE ASIC.
Read More...
Woven Systems has added a new 10 Gigabit Ethernet top-of-rack switch to its product lineup. The TRX 200 is aimed at high performance datacenter environments requiring a scalable Ethernet fabric.
Read More...
Oct 15 | Linux Magazine | Today machines manage what we cannot. Are we dependent upon results or processes we do not understand? Read more...
Oct 15 | International Science Grid This Week | Exa-scale computing is probably years away. But GPUs and volunteer grids may provide a shortcut. Read more...
Oct 14 | Texas Advanced Computing Center | TACC has unveiled a new visualization laboratory capable of reproducing terascale data sets with exceptional clarity and resolution. Read more...
Oct 13 | Computerworld | Microsoft will have to overcome Windows' historical baggage if its new HPC Server 2008 offering is to be acceptable to users. Read more...
Oct 13 | Knoxville News Sentinel | Oak Ridge National Laboratory has petaflop computing in sight as it upgrades its 'Jaguar' supercomputer. 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.
Sep 05 | | The excellent scalability features of Linux, in addition to robust security and performance makes it an excellent choice for server systems, especially in the high performance computing area.
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.