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    Latest News

    Supercomputing Comes to the Rust Belt
    Posted by Kenneth Farmer, Thursday April 12 2007 @ 07:40AM EDT

    BusinessWeek.com: New initiatives are starting to bring the transformative benefits of supercomputer power to small and midsize businesses.

    Three years ago, when Michael Garvey began looking for ways to revive his family's 85-year-old manufacturing business in down-on-its-luck Youngstown, Ohio, he settled on a surprising solution: supercomputing. For much of a century, the tiny company—originally Trumbull Bronze Co. but renamed M-Seven Technologies—specialized in casting bronze parts for steel mills. But now, it has started making money by collecting and analyzing vast storehouses of data to help larger manufacturers improve their operations.

    A job that M-Seven did for BMW late last year shows how a company like Garvey's can be reborn thanks to the highest of high technology. BMW planned on retooling its 900,000-square-foot paint shop in North Carolina, and it hired M-Seven to scan the entire space using sophisticated laser scanning equipment.

    Read more...


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    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



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