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News digest March 2006
>Industry
  >HPCN industry
>Linux Networx announces largest supercomputing order in the company's history
>Cray is back in Europe
>Are FPGAs ready for HPC?
>Cray supercomputer excels in interconnect bandwidth
>TACC's top-ranked Terascale compute cluster gets significant upgrade
>TotalView Memory Debugger now available on IBM Blue Gene/L
>NEC SX-8 Multi-TeraFlop-System at HLRS
>IWOMP 2006 Workshop to take place in Reims, France
>PathScale releases highest performance OpenIB software stack
>United Devices unveils HPC Collaboration Center
>A supercomputer for Iowa State University
>Korea Meteorological Administration's new Cray X1e supercomputer is world's fastest weather prediction system
>Sun HPC Workshop and Consortium Meeting to take place March 13-17 in Aachen, Germany
>Blade.org bladeserver community organised by large number of IT companies
>IBM unveils Cell Broadband Engine computer
>Georgia Institute of Technology accelerates drug discovery with new IBM supercomputing cluster
>NSF names Daniel Atkins to head new Office of Cyberinfrastructure
>Mitrionics enhances FPGA supercomputing platform with diagnostics and optimization features
>IBM introduces new high performance POWER5+ server
>Linux Networx announces record orders and growth in 2005
>Terra Soft offers Xserve bioinformatics cluster
>ClusterVision reports another record year
>New Maui patch improves integration & compatibility
>18 million hours of supercomputing time awarded to 15 teams for large-scale scientific computing
>New IBM Blade computers
>Bioinformatics Consortium at the University of Missouri adds SGI technology for large-scale computational life sciences research
>Biodesign and TGen form joint Center for Systems and Computational Biology
>Altair Engineering announces establishment of Trans-National European and Asia/Pacific operations
>Dr. Iwao Toda to join Liquid Computing as Asia-Pacific Strategic Advisor
>Dennis McKenna to succeed Bob Bishop as Chairman and CEO at SGI
>February 28 deadline for submitting Birds-of-a-Feather proposals for ISC2006
>Sun spotlights growing momentum with world-record setting performance for new Sun Fire server line running UltraSPARC IV+ processors
>ProCurve Networking by HP expands functionality at Network Edge with new intelligent switches
>Oracle sets world record in performance on Bull NovaScale server for a 32 CPU system with TPC-H One Terabyte benchmark
>Dell delivers advanced Blade server connectivity
>Sun plans to put the UltraSPARC T1 processor in the upcoming Netra AdvancedTCA Blades
>Sony DADC streamlines disc production with SGI storage technology
>Dot Hill introduces Green Storage system for the enterprise
>HP outships all other server vendors worldwide for 15th consecutive quarter
>HP enhances storage portfolio to further customer IT consolidation
>Lustre users worldwide confirm exceptional file system stability
  >The Grid
>CenterPoint Energy and IBM announce deployment of Intelligent Grid technology
>4th Story integrates Digipede Grid processing technology
>SOA is the past, SOKU is the future for Grid computing
>VIROLAB: GridwiseTech joins the fight against HIV
>Decentralised search finds results
>Fujitsu provides scalable computing capacity for the European Commission IST Integrated project Pico-Inside
>US National Lambda rail completes nation wide hig-performance network infrastucture
>Indian President A.P.J. Abdul Kalam to promote Virtual University Grid at the University of the Philippines
>European Commission to organise IST - Call 6 Information Day on International Cooperation in Shanghai
>UK e-Science Programme moves on with new ambassador
>Enter the Semantic Grid
>EGA and GGF to sign non-binding Letter of Intent to merge
>EELA takes off
>Official kick-off meeting of the EUMEDGRID Project: empowering e-Science across the Mediterranean
>Global Grid service for LHC computing succeeds in gigabyte-per-second challenge
>EGEE holds first User Forum event at CERN in Geneva
>Open Science Grid elects Management Team
>Voltaire releases industry’s first commercial InfiniBand Linux stack based on OpenIB
>Wilfrid Laurier University selects SGI technology for computational sciences
>Nascentric to use United Devices' Grid MP for simulation and verification clusters
>The UK e-Science Institute wins continued funding
>International Summer School on Grid Computing 2006 to be held in Ischia, Italy
>UCLA's Laboratory of Neuro Imaging (LONI) chooses Sun to help improve the study of healthy and diseased human brains
>New ECS Professor to develop ubiquitous computing
>Cassatt delivers automation and virtualization for enterprise applications on the Solaris 10
>Tangosol announces the immediate availability of Coherence 3.1
>Aspeed Software ships ACCELLERANT 3.5
>Egenera Inc. and Pernec Corporation announce distributor agreement
>Force10 Networks TeraScale E-Series to anchor Sun Grid Compute Utility
>Vodacom calls on Callidus Software TrueComp solution for Enterprise Incentive Management
>Supercomputing on your desktop by NetAlter
>Sun to acquire Aduva
>Forum Systems partners with SOA Software to deliver accelerated SOA management and security solutions
  >Applications
>Aerospace design strategies headline Altair Engineering's product innovation magazine
>Grand challenges, US national lab-style
>Innovative VR simulation framework cuts time-to-market
>Robarts Research Institute chooses SGI technology to enable advanced medical simulation for minimally invasive surgery
>IBM and Scripps Research Institute to collaborate on pandemic research
>Supercomputer study of water
>CSIRO increases investment in ICT R&D
>HP awarded more than US$700 million in IT business from GM
>IBM opens electronics innovation center at Tokyo Research Lab
>Three Pitt 'teacher-scholars' honoured By NSF with Career Awards
>Enron e-mail database proves easy pickings for LBNL's FastBit Search technology
>XCOR Aerospace teams with SGI and Metacomp for next-generation space vehicle design
>Ascent Media Group selects SGI to enable secure film and TV post-production facilities
>University of Nebraska Advanced Training and Research Centre for IBM on demand systems
>Networking
>Western North Carolina Health Network to link 16 area hospitals to electronically share critical patient information
>NC Statewide Research and Education Network boosts bandwidth, provides foundation for innovation
>AARNet selects Cisco to extend and enhance Australia's Higher Education and Research Infrastructure
>Sun network-based desktop computing system connects high-tech city in The Netherlands
UCLA's Laboratory of Neuro Imaging (LONI) chooses Sun to help improve the study of healthy and diseased human brains
Santa Clara 07 February 2006 UCLA's Laboratory of Neuro Imaging (LONI) selected Sun to create an affordable high performance computing (HPC) Grid to help improve the study of the brain. Based on the Solaris 10 Operating System (OS), Sun N1 Grid Engine, 306 Sun Fire x64 (x86, 64-bit) servers and Sun StorEdge L8500, the Grid will run complex and data-intensive algorithms to assist LONI in researching causes, cures and treatments for ailments such as Alzheimer's disease and schizophrenia, and analysing brain development.
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LONI is creating a "brain database" that will provide appropriate statistical power and visualization capabilities to examine an individual or group of people to better understand the brain's structure, deformations and atrophy. The system will support hundreds of scientists worldwide as they combine information from more than 10,000 images, leveraging LONI's series of algorithms and mathematical computations to study brain development, Alzheimer's disease, drug treatments for conditions such as schizophrenia, and the effect of AIDS on the brain. Prior to the implementation of the Grid, these computations were extremely complex, expensive and time-intensive.

"The new technology is really kind of a wonderful way to leapfrog what had been a very serious impediment to asking fundamental questions about the brain. Prior to the Grid, people were unable to move forward on specific research because they did not know how to do it or because the data would take weeks to process", stated Dr. Arthur W. Toga, Laboratory Director, LONI. "Our powerful Grid, based on the Solaris 10 OS, AMD Opteron processor-based Sun Fire x64 servers and Sun StorEdge L8500, is web-interfaced so our neuroscientists who aren't mathematical by nature can easily gain access to the information. And the price/performance is outstanding - at a budget-friendly price point the speed allows us to more quickly analyse data and realize conclusions in hours rather than weeks."

LONI chose Sun technologies and services after an extensive evaluation process. In addition to beating competitors on price and performance, Sun's reputation, commercial stability and HPC engineering expertise also served as critical decision-making factors for LONI.

"Companies are coming to Sun for our technologies and services because of our demonstrated expertise in the HPC market. Sun is increasing the reach and impact of HPC by making it readily available to more customers as a key tool for solving real world problems", stated Bjorn Andersson, director of HPC and Grid Computing, Network Systems Group, Sun Microsystems. "Our innovations place us in a unique position to build the world's most powerful computers without breaking our customers' IT budgets."
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