Rage at VMworld: Analyst Whines at Minor Inconvenience

GCG staff were summarily kicked out of the VMworld press and analyst area this morning. Our crime? Trying to have a short meeting with an industry contact while sitting inside the cordoned-off analyst/press corral. Last year, and in years past, we routinely took briefings in this area with no trouble.

The problem was that our contact didn’t have a press/analyst badge, and he was sitting on the forbidden side of the divide. I proposed a workable solution – moving the table a couple of feet so that his chair would be on the other side of the rope barrier, while we sat legally inside the designated area. That wasn’t acceptable. I guess it violated the spirit and sanctity of the press/analyst area.

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Physicists, Biologists Pick ScaleMP to Manage Memory

ScaleMP made some HPC news lately by announcing that the Bielefeld University Physics Department has selected ScaleMP’s vSMP Foundation software. This comes on the heels of another announcement, a few days earlier, that the University of Florida’s Interdisciplinary Center for Biotechnology Research made the same decision. Both of these organizations will be using ScaleMP’s software to aggregate large amounts of memory that sit on distributed systems into a single, very large, memory space.

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Large Hadron Collider Still Hasn’t Destroyed Earth

The Large Hadron Collider has been operating for a few months now, and it hasn’t ripped apart the space/time continuum – not where I live, anyway, and that’s mostly all I care about. Of course, it could be that it’s still early, and that the cumulative effects of accelerating particles really fast could still spell the end of – well – everything. Until that happens, the LHC is generating enough data to keep scientists busy from now ‘till doomsday (unless doomsday is in the next couple of years).

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Is Gordon the Future of HPC?

HPD: just what we need in the computing industry – another acronym. But this is the term that Michael Norman, interim director of the San Diego Supercomputer Center (SDSC), is using to discuss how HPD (High Performance Data) goes hand in hand with HPC.

If you have both HPC and HPD, then you’ve got something that can be an order of magnitude faster on some apps. Then you’re cooking with gas… or then you’re in the cat bird seat… or then (insert your own lame phrase here).

The proof of concept will be a 245 TFlop supercomputer that goes by the slightly eccentric name “Gordon.” When completed, the system should rank somewhere in the top 30. Gordo will sport 64TB of DRAM and a massive 256TB of flash memory, utilizing the incredible speed of SSDs (basic press release here).

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Convirture Aims Around VMware to Hit Xen and KVM

I meant to write about these guys earlier, but a vacation (and general laziness) kept it from happening in a timely manner. I recently had a briefing with Convirture, a startup that is striving to bring the full slate of virtualization bells, whistles, and management tools to the Xen and KVM hypervisors. Our pal TPM wrote a nice piece here that gives you the lowdown on who they are and what they’re bringing to the table.

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Intel Swallows McAfee: Why?

In their biggest acquisition ever, Intel has pledged to spend $7.6 billion for security firm McAfee in a bid to add security to their portfolio of mostly chippy stuff. There are lots of stories all over webdom covering this, including the take from The Register’s John Leyden here. A CRN think piece discusses more background and talks about how Intel and McAfee have been working together for nearly two years on more closely integrating security and hardware.

Most of the reader comments to the John Leyden story were along the lines of, “WTF?” “Why?” and my favorite, “First of all, why? Secondly, seriously, why?” Here’s my quick cut at answering both the “WTF” and “Why” questions.

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If Oracle Dumped HPC in a Forest, Would It Make a Sound?

Quietly – very quietly – Oracle has been dropping out of the HPC market. We’re finally seeing some outward reaction to their internal moves with these news stories (TPM here and HPCwire here) discussing Oracle’s retreat from HPC. No comments from Oracle either confirming or denying the move, of course.

I’ve been hearing rumblings along these lines for months; their absence from SC10 and the scads of HPC sales, engineering, and support people getting pink slips all but confirms their HPC disengagement to me. When pressed for an explanation, our contacts started talking about how the company is focused on mission-critical enterprise and, well, they’re maintaining that focus.

Oracle doesn’t seem to understand that HPC is the birthplace of IT innovation. Many of the technologies used in enterprise computing today got their start in HPC, including clustering for scale, the use of Linux for computationally complex tasks, and high-speed storage and networking gear.

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Something New to Be Frightened About

How the hell does a virus-infected set of motherboards find their way into the supply chain of a major system vendor? The vendor delivering the bad boards was Dell, and they’re blaming a slipshod supplier and ‘human error’. Yeah – human error. You can read all about it here and here.

The virus in question was a variant of an easily disinfected worm that was festering in the flash memory on the boards. Dell has removed all of the motherboards from their supply chain and rushed replacements to affected customers. That’s good, but it doesn’t make the fact that this happened in the first place any less deplorable.

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NVIDIA and HPC’s Second Act

In a lot of ways, NVIDIA is the belle of the GPU/accelerator ball these days. (Make your reservations early for the upcoming “GPU Fancy Dress Cotillion” later on this year; tuxedo t-shirts encouraged.) Intel withdrew Larrabee, IBM isn’t pushing Cell, FPGAs aren’t gaining a lot of traction yet, and AMD is late to the party with Fusion.

This leaves NVIDIA in a position where they are the only major vendor offering accelerator gear that has enough of a developed ecosystem to make it reasonably easy for HPC types to take advantage of it. But this isn’t going to last forever.

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NVIDIA 3.1s CUDA, Plugs Visual Studio

NVIDIA announced some new CUDA stuff today: a new developer kit (3.1) and their Parallel Nsight Visual Studio plug-in, both designed to make it easier for ISVs and other coding types to support NVIDIA GPUs in their apps. Our pal TPM has a typically detailed story here.

One thing that jumped out at me in the introductory materials is the penetration that CUDA is achieving in the industry as a whole. According to NVIDIA, there are 100,000 active CUDA developers, and there have been more than 600,000 CUDA development kit downloads.

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