In case our lengthy papers and tedious blogs aren’t enough – here’s commentary by Dan Olds on what the future holds for the Unix market. It’s really worth a look, though, because we share some of the charts from our…
Read MoreIBM STG Moves Beyond the Box
I recently returned from IBM’s annual STG Analyst Conference, and it was way, way different than any I’ve attended in the past. Those differences are very instructive: they show the metamorphosis of IBM from a company that makes money selling computers, storage, networking, software, and stuff to a company whose mission is to help customers solve their business problems with technology. When you strip it down to the fundamentals, it’s really about helping customers become more competitive. This can mean helping public agencies become more efficient, or it can mean giving business clients the tools they need to out-compete their competitors.
Read MoreSeventeen Essential Travel Tips
Many a cross-country business trip concludes with a lesson learned – the hard way. Today’s bit of wisdom: how to successfully utilize the town car service that your hosts may thoughtfully provide for your convenience. You client pals are trying to do you a solid, but they can’t control everything. Don’t think that just because there’s a guy holding your name on a piece of cardboard, you can let your guard down. A bit of attentiveness and forethought will pay big dividends in this situation. Here are some key points to remember:
Read MoreCell Phone Supercomputing II: In the Flesh
In one of my earlier Register blogs, I wrote about how tiny ARM-based compute nodes were assembled into a 16-way cluster and displayed at the recently concluded SC09 supercomputing conference. The nodes were put together by Plugcomputer.org and contain a single 1.2GHz Marvell Sheeva Processor (ARM compatible), 512MB RAM, 512MB flash, and one each Gigabit Ethernet and USB sockets. While my blog was scintillating and packed full of useful information, it was not a substitute for actually seeing this beast in person.
‘Read More’ to see our video interview on plug computing…
Read MoreHP Shows Smallest Pod in the World, Talks HPC
Now that every vendor has a shipping container (pod) computing solution, how do you differentiate your offering? You can’t go bigger and stick to the form factor. But wait a minute: you can go smaller… hmmm…
While stalking the floor at SC09, we believed we found Hewlett-Packard pursuing this strategy with their new pod. The diminutive container measured around 4’ long, 10” wide and about 18” tall – perhaps enough to hold 10 blades with storage, or more without storage. For non-US readers using unconventional measurement systems, I’ll translate: 1.22 meters x 25.4cm x 45.72 cm… or, using the Roman cubit/palm measure: 2 cubits 4 palms long x 3.43 palms wide x 1.03 cubits tall. (Click here for details and additional conversions.)
‘Read More’ to see our video interview with Hewlett-Packard…
Read MoreSC09: Two Guys, a Cluster, and a Dream
The annual Supercomputing show is refreshing in that it pulls exhibitors of all stripes, ranging from colleges and research labs to the usual slate of large system, software, and infrastructure vendors. We stumbled upon the Two Guys and a Cluster booth as we were looking for a place to get something to drink. Their simple booth and equally simple pitch were effective in capturing our attention. The pitch?
‘Read More’ to see our video interview with Two Guys and a Cluster…
Read MoreSC09: As Infiniband Expands, Mellanox Thrives
Mellanox was a big presence at SC09. Not only did they have a good-sized booth of their own, but their products were featured or referred to at a significant number of other booths. They also made a major announcement with NVIDIA about a joint effort to provide technology that allows GPUs to talk directly to storage, thus taking load off of the general purpose CPUs and driving performance up even higher.
‘Read More’ to see our video interview with Mellanox…
Read MoreSC09: NVIDIA
At SC09, it was hard to travel the floor without running into hybrid computing in some way, shape, or form. In fact, you couldn’t swing a cat without hitting someone or something related to using accelerators to maximize performance. (I know this because I actually did bring in a cat to test this theory… an actual live cat… well, it was alive at the beginning of the testing.) The chief beneficiary of all of this interest in hybrid computing looks to be NVIDIA who, with their Tesla line of GPU accelerators, is currently offering the most robust product line.
‘Read More’ to see our video interview with NVIDIA…
Read MoreMaking Big Ones out of Small Ones, Part 3: The Biggest
As we noted in two previous blogs, large shared-memory computing seems to be making a bit of a comeback. The two players we talked about earlier, ScaleMP and 3Leaf, use primarily off-the-shelf servers (with a special ASIC, in 3Leaf’s case) along with Infiniband connections and specialized software to build cache-coherent, shared-everything systems. With this, they can build systems spanning 16 motherboards – which is a pretty damned big system when you factor in the core counts you can get today. SGI is taking a different, and much larger, swing at this with their new UltraViolet Nehalem-based clusters.
‘Read More’ to see our video interview with SGI…
Read MoreSC09: Mineral Oil Computing – The Coming Wave?
OK, sure: liquid can hold and transfer way, way more heat than air – we all know that. But is dropping an entire rack of servers into what looks like an enormous deep fryer the right solution? The answer from the folks at Green Revolution Cooling is a resounding, “Yes!”
‘Read More’ to see our video interview with Green Revolution…
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