Applications:
IBM SHOWCASES NEW GRID TECHNOLOGIES FOR DEVELOPERS
IBM unveiled new Grid computing software that is available to developers via
its alphaWorks emerging technology Web site. IBM's latest Grid technologies
will help developers design applications that enable businesses attain more
value from their IT investments by unlocking idle computing capacity,
improving productivity and transforming business processes.
The Grid system takes distributed computing to the next level, giving
businesses an integrated and fully utilized on demand IT infrastructure. It
also addresses two of the biggest technology challenges that enterprises face
today -- increasing the utilization of existing resources and reducing
infrastructure complexity. IBM's Grid offerings ultimately allow businesses to
connect underutilized assets, harness their collective power and manage them
like a single, large computer.
"IBM alphaWorks gives developers an edge by providing them with emerging
technologies for creating more productive on demand applications," said Marc
Goubert, senior manager of IBM alphaWorks. "Today's announcement reinforces
our continued support for Grid computing across the entire company from
research to development, to software and services. It also provides our
business partners with a unique opportunity for creating more innovative
applications that have an immediate and lasting impact."
Many companies make significant investments in computing capacity, much of
which sits idle 80 to 90 percent of the time. IBM alphaWorks is helping
developers address this problem by equipping them with the proper tools,
including ZetaGrid -- a platform that enables a business or organization to
harness the free capacity of multiple computers, while ensuring the privacy of
participating clients. This technology represents the first ever specification
of a simple J2EE interface that enables the distribution of applications
securely and reliably in a Grid environment. It also provides an efficient
infrastructure for protecting Grid resources. ZetaGrid was first tested by
IBM's Boeblingen lab to verify a mathematical computation across 10,000
computers in a heterogeneous, dynamic environment. It is also being used to
solve computational problems in computer science and life science research.
Within geographically dispersed environments where data is shared across a
Grid infrastructure, it is often necessary to create remote read-only copies
or replicas of files. Replication is used to reduce latency when accessing
files and to improve the locality of data on a Grid, so it can be accessed
more quickly and easily. Currently managing Grid replicas is a very
complicated, error-prone task. IBM's Grid File Replication Manager (GFRM)
builds upon the industry's open source Replica Location Service system to
provide a more user-friendly, Web-based tool for managing Grid replicas.
The emergence of computationally-intensive Grid applications in fields, such
as bioinformatics and financial analytics is requiring the development of
faster, better performing distributed/parallel applications. IBM's Distributed
Parallel Programming Environment for Java (DPPEJ) provides a set of
easy-to-use tools for developing these types of applications using the Java
programming language.
Interest in Grid computing continues to grow as customers experience
real-world benefits, such as faster time-to-results, better decision making
and improved utilization of IT resources. IBM and its network of business
partners, including resellers and distributors, consultants and integrators,
and developers, all play a critical role in bringing these benefits to large
enterprise and mid-market companies. IBM continues to establish key business
partnerships with leading middleware ISVs to provide customers with the most
robust Grid solutions in the industry. IBM currently has 19 industry-specific
Grid offerings in the marketplace with more than 100 customers up and running
on a Grid infrastructure.
IBM's Grid technologies support the Open Grid Services Architecture (OGSA), a
set of specifications and standards that form a common framework for building
Grid solutions. IBM is also committed to actively participating in the Global
Grid Forum on the development of the standards, and its Grid offerings as well
as its server, storage and middleware products will support OGSA.
For more information or to download ZetaGrid, GFRM or DPPEJ, visit IBM
alphaWorks at
www.alphaworks.ibm.com.
|