Special Features:
TEXAS TECH CHOOSES SAS FOR GRID COMPUTING
SAS announced that Texas Tech University has chosen SAS as one of the key
applications to support Grid computing across the campus. With Grid computing,
Texas Tech will be able to handle various research projects throughout the
university with greater efficiency and effectiveness. Texas Tech is one of the
first universities in Texas to use Grids to enable professors and businesses
to solve compute-intensive business intelligence (BI) projects.
"Texas Tech University recently embarked on a high-performance computing
initiative to use Grid computing to leverage resources campus-wide," said
Peter Westfall, director of the Center for Advanced Analytics and Business
Intelligence at Texas Tech. "SAS' advanced multiprocessing capabilities are
critical in driving the success of this initiative and enabling us to be
innovative, such as in the creation of our advanced analytics and business
intelligence center. With SAS, we are able to significantly improve the
performance of particular projects that would normally require a great deal of
time and resources."
Grid computing is a method of harnessing the power of many computers in a
network to solve problems that require a large number of processing cycles and
involve huge volumes of data. Grid computing taps the unused processor
capacity of hundreds, sometimes even thousands, of computers. In this way,
users can achieve much faster results on large projects at a lower cost.
Added Westfall, "People here are excited when they see that whatever job they
need done runs in the background, and they don't even notice that their
computer is being used."
Texas Tech has used SAS to Grid-enable various applications, focusing
initially on finance, but plans to expand to other areas, such as genomics, in
the future. One recent Texas Tech project involved analyzing stock portfolios
to highlight a methodology in selecting and managing various portfolios, a
process that will benefit financial service companies. This analysis was
accomplished in 14 days. Without Grid, it would have required more than 500
days of continuous computing time on a dedicated machine.
According to Westfall, "The SAS Grid is the only viable option in which to
accomplish this."
In addition, Texas Tech used Grid computing to identify how anomalies (e.g.,
hurricanes) can affect stock prices, thus creating a process that the
financial community can use to better predict and manage certain situations.
The time to process this level of data was significantly decreased, reducing
what would normally take more than a week to just one afternoon.
"Grid computing is becoming increasingly necessary as organizations look for
ways to quickly and cost-effectively process and analyze all the data
available to them," said Keith Collins, chief technology officer at SAS. "SAS'
large-scale parallel processing capabilities allow our customers to
effectively handle compute-intensive applications while reducing execution
time and total cost of ownership. Grid computing is becoming more mainstream,
and Texas Tech is enabling that at a local level through its new business
intelligence center, which can accommodate academic needs as well as more
commercial requests."
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