Special Features:
MANY UNIVERSITIES TURN TO SUN FOR GRID SOLUTIONS
Universities from around the globe, including the College of William and Mary,
Texas Advanced Computing Center at the University of Texas, and Pennsylvania
State University are using Sun Microsystems' Grid computing technologies to
enhance their academic research centers and improve their return on
investment. Impressive research including the use of a visual Grid to analyze
time-critical problems of emergency response management or compute intensive
studies on earthquake simulation and bioinformatics are proving the tremendous
value that Grid deployments can have. By leveraging a Grid computing
infrastructure from Sun, these universities can lower their costs and maximize
their resources, all within a secure environment that enables collaboration
both within and outside of the university.
"Universities are leading the Grid revolution, whether it's to power
diverse
research efforts in biotechnology or advanced weather simulation, or simply to
virtualize and share compute resources with greater efficiency," said Kim
Jones, vice president of global education and research at Sun Microsystems
Inc. "These research facilities have proven the overall value and business
benefits of Grid computing, not only to improve performance, but also to
enhance productivity and reduce costs."
College of William & Mary SciClone Cluster Powers Academic Research And
Enhances Classroom Curriculum
The College of William & Mary, founded in 1693, is the second oldest public
university in the nation. Students from seven science departments work
directly with the school's SciClone cluster, a Solaris OS-based environment
including Sun Fire servers and Sun StorEdge software and hardware. Between 300
and 400 users utilize 207 server nodes and 14 terabytes of storage running
Solaris OS and Sun StorEdge QFS software to conduct large-scale computations
in a wide variety of disciplines including computer science, physics,
chemistry, mathematics, biology and marine science. From the college's
freshmen course on DNA analysis and sequencing to its research utilizing
parallel mesh generation to create highly-detailed three-dimensional models
used in simulations for applications in aerospace, medicine and several
engineering fields, academic research and classroom curriculum are forever
changed.
Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC) Brings 3-D Graphics Technology to
Remote Users Nationwide
The University of Texas at Austin's TACC is using Maverick, a new
UltraSPARC-based supercomputer with 3D visualization capability, to provide
compute power, storage resources and visualization capabilities to
researchers, scientists and engineers nationwide on the National Science
Foundation's TeraGrid. The high-performance Grid-based computer is built to
accelerate large-scale data analysis and remote terascale visualization for
time-critical problems like global weather prediction, emergency response
management and homeland security.
Pennsylvania State University Enables Researchers To Probe The Universe
And
Propel Computational Research
Penn State, a national leader in interdisciplinary education and research,
has
completed two new initiatives. The Pleiades cluster, built with 128 Sun Fire
V60x, is part of the International Virtual Data Grid Laboratory (iVDGL), an
international computational laboratory of unprecedented scale and scope,
comprised of heterogeneous computing and storage resources across the world,
linked by high-speed networks and operated as a single system for the purposes
of interdisciplinary experimentation in Grid-enabled data-intensive scientific
computing. The cluster is dedicated to the analysis of data from the Laser
Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory (LIGO), an NSF-supported
facility that is designed to detect gravitational waves as a new tool for use
in making astronomical discoveries. The Lion-XO cluster, built with 84 Sun
Fire V20z servers connected with both infiniband and gigabit ethernet
technologies, meets the ever-growing computational needs of over 500
researchers in the fields of engineering (aerospace, chemical, mechanical),
meteorology, chemistry, physics, biology, materials science, mathematics,
statistics and more. Researchers are solving problems requiring large-memory
and extremely fast networking.
About Sun Microsystems Inc
Since its inception in 1982, a singular vision -- "The Network Is The
Computer" -- has propelled Sun Microsystems Inc to its position as a provider
of industrial-strength hardware, software and services that make the Net work.
Sun can be found in more than 100 countries and on the World Wide Web at sun.com/.
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