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News digest January 2006
>Industry
  >HPCN industry
>AMD and IBM unveil new, highter performance, more power efficient 65nm process technologies at gathering of industry's top R&D firms
>M/C Evaluations Workshop - Challenges of Multi-core Chips
>International Supercomputer Conference 2006 issues Call for Papers for June meeting in Dresden, Germany
>International review of research using high performance computing in the United Kingdom
>eBay and Sun expand global collaborative alliance highlighting support for Sun's Dual Core x64 server strategy
>Intel and BMW enter comprehensive partnership
>HP owns no. 1 rank in worldwide total disk storage systems revenue for 14th consecutive quarter
>Japan's Institute of Fluid Science, Tohoku University to install new system architected around SGI's Linux OS-based supercomputer
>Sun Microsystems introduces Sun Fire T1000 and T2000 servers
>IBM announces new software strategy for GPFS file system
>IU Bloomington and Purdue universities join efforts to strengthen the state's economic development
>Sun shift to free and open source software
>Sun's UltraSPARC IV+ processor-based Sun Fire servers continue to beat IBM Power5 systems on performance, price/performance
>Oracle, Symantec and BEA lead unprecedented ISV support for Sun's Eco-responsible Sun Fire T1000 and T2000 systems
>Infineon delivers high-performance GDDR3 memory for ATI's next-generation mobility Radeon X1600 graphics processor
>HP expands storage partner programme to help customers better manage information
>Xyratex and Digi-Data partner with Storage Elements to deliver shared storage utility
>SBE announces two iSCSI design wins; PyX iSCSI software selected for integration into SAS and SATA storage servers
>HP positioned as "leader" in storage assessment report
>Sun Microsystems launches OpenSPARC project
>Sun and Synopsys collaborate to certify VCS verification solution for the Solaris 10 OS on x64 platforms
>Fluent 6.3 beta release shows CFD performance enhancements with the new Intel C++ Compiler 9.0 for Linux
>Dot Hill announces OEM agreement with Alliance Systems
  >The Grid
>European and American supercomputing infrastructures linked through a common wide-area global file system
>Grids to aid breast cancer diagnosis and research
>BIG GRID the Dutch e-Science Grid gets funded with about 20 million euro
>Computing power breaks new boundaries in understanding stem cells
>M-grid distributes scientific computing all over Finland
>Web-based system will speed drug discoveries
>i3Archive brings On-Demand to the challenges of digital medical imaging disaster recovery
>GGF16 issues Call for Participation
>US Congress passes bill to spend $5 million for supercomputer Grid in northwest Indiana
>Understanding Grid semantics for virtual collaboration
>DataSynapse and Sophis deliver high performance front-to-back office trading solution
>US National Science Foundation awards $13.3 million for Globus Toolkit development
>Early experiences with utility models indicate strong demand for enterprise 'agility' through Grid architectures
>HP opens its data centres to the public via utility computing services
>Sun Grants Princeton University 100,000 CPU Hours on the Sun Grid
>Paremus announces adoption of OSGi for superior enterprise system agility and resilience
>TeraGrid management team announces new Deputy Director
>Sun adds two Sun Grid storage services
>Accelrys to co-ordinate UK Government-sponsored materials design project
>Azul Systems and GigaSpaces set new application performance standards for service-oriented architectures
>IBM and Universities launch Latin American Grid Computing initiative
>TXU and Current Communications to create the USA's first multipurpose Smart Grid, marriag of electricity and computing Grid
>Callidus extends TrueComp software to new health care client
>Oracle Database 10g Release 2 secures world record TPC-H benchmark result with Sun Fire E25K server in 10TB category
>Codefarm launches next generation financial optimization software for CDO structuring
>Oracle certifies PeopleSoft applications with Oracle Fusion Middleware
  >Applications
>Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution selects SGI technology to explore the planet's biggest earthquake zones
>Virtual modelling goes high performance
>US Naval Surface Warfare Center uses SGI Altix and storage solutions to advance study of underwater explosions
>U.S. Army purchases SGI and VRSim immersive Virtual Reality Welding Trainer systems
>The French Post Office invests 147 million euro and selects Bull and Lockheed Martin to supply the information system running its future mail sorting machines
>US Naval Research Laboratory leverages SGI visualization and storage solutions to advance ocean, atmospheric and space sciences
>General Dynamics-Lockheed Martin team demonstrates Army's WIN-T tactical warfighter network
>SGI expands portfolio of available CAE software for U.S. Department of Defense applications
  >Media
>The 451 Group deepens its analyst ranks as demand for its insight into the business of enterprise IT innovation increases
>Networking
>A bright outlook for global weather forecasting
>High energy physics team captures network prize at SC|05
>Interactive distance learning and collaboration highlighted at NCREN community celebration
>Indiana University and Cisco Systems to support National LambdaRail networking services
>Force10 TeraScale E-Series enables record setting demonstrations during Bandwidth Challenge at SuperComputing Conference
>Broadcom's StrataXGS III switches power Alcatel's new core chassis enabling next generation enterprise networks
>The Pennsylvania State University and TelCove partner on major joint fiber build
>Global Crossing Network supports world record in international visualization
SBE announces two iSCSI design wins; PyX iSCSI software selected for integration into SAS and SATA storage servers
San Ramon 08 December 2005 Two networking and storage equipment providers, Open Source Storage (OSS) and Yang Ming International (YMI) Corporation, have chosen to license and integrate SBE's PyX iSCSI target software into their next generation storage devices.
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OSS is porting SBE's PyX iSCSI software to its Linux-based SATA storage server solutions supporting up to 16 terabytes. A provider of high-performance networking solutions for the open source community, OSS specializes in supplying large-scale data centres with robust and reliable systems that can address its customers' mission-critical applications.

"Our development team has been very pleased with the results of the evaluation and testing that we've conducted on the PyX iSCSI target and initiator stacks", commented Eren Niazi, Chief Executive Officer of OSS. "Particularly, we are eager to bundle the advanced performance features, full standards compliance and interoperability of the PyX iSCSI solution into our new SATA box so our customers can reap the many benefits."

YMI is using the PyX iSCSI target protocol stack in both their Rackmountpro-branded Serial Attached SCSI (SAS) and Serial ATA (SATA) storage servers. Established over a decade ago as a provider of networking equipment, including servers and chassis, YMI sells its product solutions directly to the government, educational institutions, major enterprises and small businesses.

"After considering various iSCSI solutions available in today's market, we selected SBE's PyX iSCSI protocol stack for several reasons", stated Jack Lin of YMI Corporation. "One was clearly the strong technical knowledge and support that SBE provided during the product evaluation process. Most importantly, the PyX iSCSI target software best suits our customers' requirements, delivering a full feature set and exceptional performance at an affordable price. We validated our decision last month at the Supercomputing show where we successfully demonstrated the SATA storage server running SBE's PyX iSCSI target stack."

"We're pleased that OSS and YMI have chosen our iSCSI stack for their new storage products, and look forward to broadening our reach into their established bases of enterprise, government, educational, and technology customers via these SAS and SATA devices", commented Chris Short, Vice President of Business Development at SBE. "The OSS and YMI wins came as direct results of enhancing our channel strategy with proven manufacturer's representative firms - in this case from Fourfront and Centaur, respectively. And, based on the flurry of opportunities that our new reps have already introduced us to in the last few weeks, we expect to see our recently expanded distribution channel produce further successes as we head into 2006", continued Chris Short.

Both the OSS and YMI storage devices featuring SBE's PyX iSCSI software will be available in the first quarter of 2006.

The advanced features designed into the architecture of the PyX iSCSI protocol stack enables efficient and cost-effective storage transport by optimizing bandwidth usage, enabling unlimited storage to be attached to each target device, and leveraging existing network technologies. The iSCSI technology, fully compliant with the IETF RFC 3270 standard, enables an enterprise-level IP storage platform that transports data to and from networked storage with full error recovery (ERL2), automatic load balancing, and multi-path capabilities previously available only in costly Fibre Channel architectures. Because of the ubiquity of IP networks, iSCSI transmits data from any storage (SATA/SAS/SCSI, Fibre Channel/etc.) over LANs, WANs, or the Internet and enables location independent data storage and retrieval.

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