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News digest May 2006
>Industry
  >HPCN industry
>Sandia-designed supercomputer ranked world's most efficient in two of six categories of HPCC Challenge benchmark
>Galicia to install Europe's highest capacity shared memory supercomputer
>Liquid Computing wins most promising start-up award
>IU to acquire United States' fastest university-owned supercomputer and largest disk-based storage facility
>Parasoft C++Test extends automated unit testing to the embedded systems environment
>Maplesoft teams with top French research centres
>Cray initiatives fuel rapid sales growth in Japan's high-performance computing market
>Scali strengthens Board of Directors with Fortune 50 executives
>SC06 Technical Programme is now seeking submissions
>2006 International Supercomputer Conference to offer tutorials on Blade Systems, Benchmarking Initiatives and HPC Software Tools
>Fujitsu Siemens Computers prepares new Services Division for take-off
>CommVault and Fujitsu Siemens announce certification of CentricStor for CommVault QiNetix software
>Fujitsu Siemens Computers PRIMERGY BX630 Blade server achieves world record in the MMB3 benchmark
>HP leads high-performance computing market for third consecutive year
>Sun and SAS announce Business Intelligence Software Support for Solaris 10 on x64 Platforms
>IBM launches open test drive of SOA-tuned DB2
>Power.org member Rapport achieves breakthrough in power efficiency
>Cluster Resources Inc. celebrates flagship product anniversaries
>Locuz extends its Infrastructure Management Services outside India
>HP simplifies management for Linux on blades
>Cray to delay filing of 2005 Form 10-K
>IBM launches new system x servers and software targeting large scale x86 virtualization
>Cray files 2005 Form 10-K consistent with preliminary results
  >The Grid
>NCSA and SDSC add compute systems to TeraGrid
>On-line storage - will the second wave succeed?
>Grid computing system for telecom carriers
>BBC Climate grid needs a restart
>Third International Conference on Grid Services Engineering and Management issues Call for Papers
>SETI@home looks for funding
>Sun has completed the acquisition of Aduva
>Metascheduling: a free study compiled by field experts, GridwiseTech
>Digging deep to unlock the Grid
>Launch of the Platform Alliance Network to enable virtualization of enterprise IT solutions
>Paremus announces availability of Infiniflow 2.1
>The Gridbus Project to release GridSim Toolkit 4.0
>Intel and Red Hat launch global solution acceleration programme
>UNICORE Summit 2006 introduces Call for Papers
>Enterprise Grid Alliance identifies data provisioning requirements to accelerate adoption of Enterprise Grid deployments
>First computational international effort to fight avian flu
>Crosswalk introduces iGrid storage
>Investment banks are using Grid computing deployments as the connective 'fabric' for shared enterprise IT infrastructure
>International speakers confirmed for Fourth Grid Summer School
>IBM expands business partner ecosystem for open standards-based Grid and Grow Programme
>Digipede joins the BioIT Alliance
>Oracle and Novell to offer Grid-ready solution for the data centre
>Voltaire Solutions available for integration through Sun customer ready systems programme
>Globus Toolkit 4.0.2 Now Available for Download
>GigaSpaces announces launch of Version 5 of its award-winning infrastructure product
>Callidus Software unveils Callidus On-Demand solutions for Enterprise Incentive Management
>Attunity expands its partnership with Oracle
>Oracle further extends Oracle Enterprise Manager with systems management support for IBM DB2 universal database
>Sun updates Sun Java Availability Suite and adds Sun Cluster Advanced Edition for Oracle Real Application Clusters deployments
>Strong industry adoption drives Oracle Fusion Middleware Q3FY06 growth
>Themis Computer's Quorum resource manager software wins Grid Technology Award at LinuxWorld 2006
>Interpolis drives competitive advantage with Informatica PowerCenter Advanced Edition
>Deutsche Post AG Mail Division standardizes on Informatica for data integration
>NEWS, but not as we know it
>HP introduces industry-specific service-oriented architectures
>Crosswalk partners with Bell Microproducts to improve its supply chain of storage components
>Univa launches enterprise software for Grid solutions
  >Applications
>Moores UCSD Cancer Center creates Bioinformatics Center
>An easy-to-use tool for automated control systems
>Rick Stevens named Argonne Associate Laboratory Director for Computing and Life Sciences
>Third International Conference on Mobile Computing and Ubiquitous Networking calls for participation
>SGI Technology powers award-winning cave at Seinäjoki University of Applied Sciences
>NASA achieves breakthrough in black hole simulation
>Galaxy simulation breaks new ground
>PSA Peugeot Citroën to take innovation to the next level with PLM solutions from IBM and Dassault Systèmes
>Avian flu modelled on supercomputer, explores vaccine and isolation options for thwarting a pandemic
>New video-conferencing method cheaper, more sophisticated, according to developers
  >Linux
>Linux Networx and SilverStorm Technologies announce contract to support five new Defense Department supercomputers
>Networking
>Collaboration spurs progress on networking technologies
>BELIEF, a new opportunity for eInfrastructure communities
>Landmark achievement for CSIRO wireless sensor network
>Rising to the challenge of managing bandwidth
>University of Idaho's boost in bandwidth opens world of opportunities for university as well as state
IU to acquire United States' fastest university-owned supercomputer and largest disk-based storage facility
Bloomington 05 April 2006 Indiana University is acquiring the nation's fastest university-owned supercomputer and largest disk-based research storage facility. This uniquely places IU's cyberinfrastructure capabilities among the very best in the nation and on par with a small number of federally funded agencies and research centres. The new supercomputer from IBM uses the company's newest processors and will be one of the 20 most powerful computers in the world. It will support IU research into new discoveries in the life sciences, astronomy, informatics, computational physics and the humanities. IU will have one of the largest systems connected to global research networks.
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IU President Adam W. Herbert said this news is the culmination of much work and planning over the last two years to give research scientists the computing power and data storage they need. It will help IU to retain top researchers, as well as in recruiting new thought leaders across all disciplines.

"Much of the scientific research being conducted today involves the collection of vast amounts of data, which must be rapidly moved, stored, searched, manipulated and analysed. The top research universities of the 21st century will be those that can best perform these essential information technology functions", Adam Herbert stated. "Today, I can tell you that IU has a head-start on all of them."

Michael A. McRobbie, interim provost and vice president for academic affairs at IU Bloomington, added: "Today we make clear IU's commitment to the technologies needed for continued success. Put simply, these systems will provide IU's scientists and researchers with the best cyberinfrastructure at any university in the United States if not worldwide. Only national centres and government laboratories have better. In 2001 and 2003, we announced IU had among the 50 fastest supercomputers in the world, and today we continue to provide the essential technologies for developing the Indiana economy in the life sciences.

"This new computer and other cyberinfrastructure expansions are essential to IU's success in obtaining large grants from many programmes in the National Science Foundation, National Institutes of Health, National Endowment for the Humanities, and other funding sources", Michael McRobbie stated. "These acquisitions are an essential step for IU's life sciences and IT strategic plans."

Many IU researchers advised on IU's priorities for advanced cyberinfrastructure, and they are delighted with how the new computer and storage will further their work.

"The Center for Genomics and Bioinformatics benefits enormously from IU's cyber leadership", stated biology professor Peter Cherbas. "As just one example among many, we hope to draw on IU's increased data storage capacity to develop new and innovative ways to analyze gene expression patterns in model organisms - an area where IU already plays a leading role nationally."

Sean Mooney, assistant professor in the Department of Medical and Molecular Genetics at the IU School of Medicine, said the new computing resources will aid his study of proteins and genetic variation. "As the complexity of biological knowledge increases and computational models become more sophisticated, increased capacity for high-performance computing becomes essential for modern biomedical research. The acquisition of this new supercomputer will provide IU researchers with the tools to ask, and answer, questions that were previously not feasible."

The acquisition of the supercomputer and advanced storage are part of a comprehensive strategy to serve many forms of research. Even beyond the life sciences, researchers are seeing many uses for the new tools.

"This massive storage is arriving just in time for astronomy", stated astronomy professor Catherine A. Pilachowski. "Our new prototype imaging camera at the WIYN Observatory will have 67 million pixels and will produce 20 gigabytes of data per night. The next-generation One Degree Imager will have a billion pixels and will produce a terabyte of data every three nights. In short, we need fast computers with large and fast storage to process all that data into scientifically useful images. These tools allow us to explore how planets like Jupiter formed in the early solar nebula, one of the big mysteries in astrophysics today."

Ruth M. Stone, the Laura Boulton Professor and co-director of the EVIA Digital Archives Project, said the new IBM supercomputer and the additional storage capabilities will greatly enhance her ability to analyse ethno-musicological data from Liberia, West Africa, using digital video files residing in the EVIA Digital Archives. Humanities researchers are now employing the big tools of their science colleagues.

"Analysing and utilizing these files require the latest in computer technology to process and to accommodate the storage and retrieval of massive files", Ruth Stone stated. "This research and the digital archives have taken on immense significance as Liberia has been plunged into a quarter century of civil strife that has only recently ended. The cultural record of these digital images and sounds provides data and historical memory where the living performance has been silenced by conflict."

"The new IU cyberinfrastructure is a tremendous visionary step for linking data and simulation, and enables us to compete for federal funding", stated Geoffrey Fox, professor of informatics and director of the Community Grids Laboratory for the Pervasive Technology Labs. "In particular, it will enable new results in use of cyberinfrastructure in earthquake prediction, chemical informatics and net-centric defense and Homeland Security networks. Our work in these activities was seeded by a grant from the Lilly Foundation and has attracted significant federal support and interest."

The new supercomputer is capable of performing more than 20.4 trillion numerical operations per second and will be connected to more than 1 petabyte of high speed disk storage. As a point of reference, if all the material in the IU library were digitized, it would amount to about 5 terabytes, and this new storage can hold 200 times as much data. It will be by far the largest of its type of university-owned storage in the United States. These acquisitions are just one part of a series of major efforts to expand IU's cyberinfrastructure - a term that collectively also refers to its massive data repositories, high-speed networks, visualization facilities and other advanced scientific instruments.

Major funding for the acquisitions comes from the Indiana Metabolomics and Cytomics Initiative (METACyt), a $53 million grant from the Lilly Endowment meant to advance life sciences research at IU Bloomington and in the state of Indiana, and from the National Science Foundation.
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Leslie Versweyveld

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