SRC shocases forthcoming SRC-6 supercomputer

Colorado Springs 30 October 2000 SRC Computers, the company founded by legendary computer architect Seymour R. Cray, will preview Serial Number 1 of its forthcoming SRC-6 computer at SC2000, showcasing the architecture that company officials say represents both Seymour Cray's final design and "the next big thing" in high performance computing (HPC).

The SRC-6 computer, which the company will introduce in 2001, combines up to 512 Intel based microprocessors with reconfigurable, field programmable gate array (FPGA) technologies to deliver unparalleled computing power at an affordable cost.

"The SRC-6 is the first machine to combine the irrefutable Intel price/performance curve with the explosion occurring in FPGA technology in a general-purpose HPC architecture," said Michael Henesey, vice president of marketing and sales at SRC Computers. "The implications for both peak and sustained performance measurements are staggering. By delivering up to 512 Intel processors on a common memory switch, and then adding over 5 billion gates of configurable logic, the SRC-6 shatters convention and promises substantial performance gains for both technical and commercial applications including Internet infrastructure."

Targeted applications for the new machine include performance-intensive codes in areas such as bioinformatics, signal and image processing, business intelligence and data mining, scientific and technical computing, and some Internet infrastructure applications.

SRC Computers makes innovative use of commodity microprocessors and reconfigurable computing technologies to provide fast, powerful, cost-effective computing systems for the engineering and scientific markets and segments of the Internet economy. SRC was established by Seymour R. Cray, a visionary giant in the field of supercomputing, and the company's forthcoming SRC-6 computer will embody the architecture conceptualized by Cray before his death in an automobile accident in 1996. For more information about SRC Computers and reconfigurable computing, please visit http://www.srccomp.com.


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