SpyderByte.com ;Technical Portals 
      
 News & Information Related to Linux High Performance Computing, Linux Clustering and Cloud Computing
Home About News Archives Contribute News, Articles, Press Releases Mobile Edition Contact Advertising/Sponsorship Search Privacy
HPC Vendors
Cluster Quoter (HPC Cluster RFQ)
Hardware Vendors
Software Vendors
HPC Consultants
Training Vendors
HPC Resources
Featured Articles
Cluster Builder
Beginners
Whitepapers
Documentation
Software
Lists/Newsgroups
Books
User Groups & Organizations
HP Server Diagrams
HPC News
Latest News
Newsletter
News Archives
Search Archives
HPC Links
ClusterMonkey.net
Scalability.org
HPCCommunity.org

Beowulf.org
HPC Tech Forum (was BW-BUG)
Gelato.org
The Aggregate
Top500.org
Cluster Computing Info Centre
Coyote Gultch
Dr. Robert Brown's Beowulf Page
FreshMeat.net: HPC Software
SuperComputingOnline
HPC User Forum
GridsWatch
HPC Newsletters
Stay current on Linux HPC news, events and information.
LinuxHPC.org Newsletter

Other Mailing Lists:
Linux High Availability
Beowulf Mailing List
Gelato.org (Linux Itanium)

LinuxHPC.org
Home
About
Contact
Mobile Edition
Sponsorship

Latest News

PR: Rice Univ. Terascale Cluster to be Built with HP's Intel Itanium2 Systems Running Linux
Posted by Kenneth Farmer, Thursday November 21 2002 @ 01:06PM EST

Rice University Terascale Cluster to be Built with HP's Intel Itanium 2-based Systems Running Linux; Cluster Expected to Rank as Texas' Fastest Academic Supercomputer.

HP and Rice University's Computer and Information Technology Institute (CITI) today announced their plans to build Texas' fastest academic supercomputer, the Rice Terascale Cluster (RTC). Scheduled to come online early next year, RTC is to be built on HP's Intel(R) Itanium(R) 2-based workstations and servers.

RTC is expected to be the first computer at a Texas university with a peak performance of 1 teraflop, or 1 trillion floating-point operations per second. More than 30 researchers from fields as diverse as biochemistry, political science, physics and computational engineering have already booked time on RTC.

HP plans for the RTC to be composed of 132 HP Workstations zx6000 and four HP Servers rx5670. The systems, to be interconnected via a high-speed, low-latency communications system, will use the 64-bit Intel Itanium 2 processor and extend its capabilities with the performance and cost advantages of the HP Chipset zx1.

"Since RTC is a shared resource, it has to have the flexibility to meet a diverse set of high-performance computing needs -- be they computationally demanding, data intensive or mathematically complex," said Moshe Vardi, director, CITI. "HP's innovative design gave us the features we need today -- visualization capabilities, a large parallel file server and a shared front-end -- and it should make it easy and inexpensive for us to expand RTC in the future."

"Through this agreement, HP intends to provide Rice University's CITI with the performance and flexibility needed to advance their research programs," said Chris Christopher, vice president and general manager, HP Workstation Business Unit. "CITI's decision to use HP's Itanium 2-based systems running Linux is further proof of HP's ability to provide cutting-edge technology infrastructure to higher education institutions."

The supercomputer is designed to use Red Hat Linux Advanced Workstation and Server operating systems, Myricom Myrinet high-speed interconnect, NVIDIA graphics cards, Foundry switches and HP StorageWorks VA 7400 disk array and Disk System 2405 storage devices.

Almost a quarter of Rice's faculty are members of CITI. The institute brings together researchers, both in and outside Rice, to develop new computing technologies that solve tangible problems in society. These problems are wide-ranging but have two things in common: they require experts from very different fields to work closely, and they are incredibly complex -- both to study and to solve.

In addition to the broad range of interdisciplinary research to be conducted by CITI, the RTC also should enable Rice University to continue its contributions of compiler technology and tools to the Linux open source community.


< [GTT] The latest GT1.4 software is available for free download | C|Net: IBM to build fastest supercomputers >

 

Affiliates

Cluster Monkey

HPC Community


Supercomputing 2010

- Supercomputing 2010 website...

- 2010 Beowulf Bash

- SC10 hits YouTube!

- Louisiana Governor Jindal Proclaims the week of November 14th "Supercomputing Week" in honor of SC10!








Appro: High Performance Computing Resources
IDC: Appro Xtreme-X Supercomputer Blade Solution
Analysis of the Xtreme-X architecture and management system while assessing challenges and opportunities in the technical computing market for blade servers.

Video - The Road to PetaFlop Computing
Explore the Scalable Unit concept where multiple clusters of various sizes can be rapidly built and deployed into production. This new architectural approach yields many subtle benefits to dramatically lower total cost of ownership.
White Paper - Optimized HPC Performance
Multi-core processors provide a unique set of challenges and opportunities for the HPC market. Discover MPI strategies for the Next-Generation Quad-Core Processors.

Appro and the Three National Laboratories
[Appro delivers a new breed of highly scalable, dynamic, reliable and effective Linux clusters to create the next generation of supercomputers for the National Laboratories.

AMD Opteron-based products | Intel Xeon-based products



Home About News Archives Contribute News, Articles, Press Releases Mobile Edition Contact Advertising/Sponsorship Search Privacy
     Copyright © 2001-2013 LinuxHPC.org
Linux is a trademark of Linus Torvalds
All other trademarks are those of their owners.
    
  SpyderByte.com ;Technical Portals