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InternetNews August 30, 2004 Michael Singer |
Orion Debuts Cluster Workstation The new company comes out of stealth mode with a family of business workstations that think like a cluster of servers. |
Bio-IT World February 18, 2004 |
A Preventable Informatics Crime If informatics computing on loosely coupled dedicated servers (clusters or compute farms) is such an attractive solution, why are life science IT shops still blowing big bucks on refrigerator-look-alike symmetric multiprocessor machines? |
Bio-IT World February 11, 2005 Salvatore Salamone |
Strategic Insights: No Researcher Left Behind Many open-source and commercial diagnostic tools can probe a cluster's performance, but virtually all of these tools are designed for use by the experienced software developer. Now, a new crop of user-friendly cluster productivity tools targets the scientist/engineer. |
InternetNews June 9, 2006 Clint Boulton |
Microsoft to Bang High Performance Drum at TechEd Microsoft released to manufacturers the finished, "golden" bits of its Windows Compute Cluster Server 2003, a software package that runs high-performance computing applications in parallel. |
Bio-IT World March 8, 2005 John Russell |
A Perfect X Revenge is sweet for Apple, now savoring the rise of Mac OS X and Xserve in the lab, but this is still the planting. A difficult growing season lies ahead. |
Bio-IT World July 11, 2002 Judith N. Mottl |
Learning to Love Linux Hungry for computing power, life science companies are turning toward Linux clusters as the preferred high performance solution. |
Bio-IT World April 2006 Bill Van Etten |
Easing In to Ease of Use The dramatic change in the bioinformatics and related information technology user profile requires an appropriate response from the producers of these technologies to provide a level of "ease of use" that is consistent with the large-volume, low-cost, and less specialized user. |
InternetNews May 14, 2004 Michael Singer |
Apple Searches for a Few Good Clusters The Macintosh maker holds a contest to supply five scientific research projects with its bioinformatics hardware and software. |
Bio-IT World November 19, 2004 Salvatore Salamone |
New Breed of Workstations Can Take On Bigger Tasks A new breed of scientific workstations is leading to a shift in how life scientists use such systems. |
Bio-IT World Dec 2005/Jan 2006 Chris Dwan |
Interfaces Will Save the World Bioinformatics has passed the level of complexity at which any one individual can understand the entire stack of skills required in its practice. Well-defined interfaces can also help to span the chasm between the IT and research worlds. |
Bio-IT World October 14, 2004 Chris Dagdigian |
IT's Alive! Notes from the Lab First up is storage, traditionally a key area for bio-IT practitioners... A Desktop Cluster and a New Favorite... What's with the Poky USB?... |
Linux Journal May 1, 2002 Glen Otero |
The Beowulf State of Mind Beowulf has grown into the poster child for open-source, clustered computing. The Beowulf concept is all about using standard vanilla boxes and open-source software to cluster a group of computers together into a virtual supercomputer... |
InternetNews April 27, 2005 Michael Singer |
Orion Workstation Strength Gets Personal NASA and a handful of universities pick up on the 'personal supercomputer' from Orion Multisystems, which has 96 nodes and can fit under a desk. |
InternetNews November 15, 2005 Clint Boulton |
Supercomputing With Microsoft Microsoft's new Windows Compute Cluster Server 2003 is aimed at serving departments and work-groups. |
Bio-IT World November 2005 Michael Athanas |
A New Window on HPC Clusters In recent years, scalable clusters have become commodity and are often encapsulated as single items in vendor catalogs to be issued as part of the greater data center solution. |
Linux Journal August 1, 2007 James Gray |
The Best Game in Town Terra Soft's CEO Kai Staats talks about the building of the world's first supercomputing cluster using the Sony PlayStation 3, which utilizes the IBM Cell Broadband Engine and the Linux operating system. |
Chemistry World May 8, 2014 Kai Kohlhoff |
The wisdom of clouds The next generation of scientists must be trained to use cloud resources whenever it makes sense. Then their work will be maintained and used indefinitely, and not end up abandoned in an office corner. |
Bio-IT World June 2005 Salvatore Salamone |
Wanted: Tough Computational Problems Bio*IT World and Orion Multisystems have teamed to launch the Personal Supercomputing Contest intended to help a life science group tackle a difficult computational challenge by providing what amounts to four years of CPU time on an Orion personal supercomputer. |
InternetNews September 15, 2005 Colin C. Haley |
Microsoft Aims at Cluster Computing Microsoft plans new software to compete against Linux offerings in a growing field. |
Wall Street & Technology May 15, 2006 Paul Allen |
Banks Take Their Places on the Grid As new alternative investment products are added to the mix, and portfolio managers and risk managers strive to get an accurate view of a fund's value and associated risk, systems are being stretched to the limit of their computing power. |
Bio-IT World February 2006 Chris Dwan |
Notes from the Lab: Multicore and More Benchmarks for the new quad-chip, dual-core Xeon systems from Intel... Web Services... Getting the Most from Grid Engine... Coming Soon: Server Virtualization Bakeoff... |
Bio-IT World June 12, 2002 Beth Schachter |
Informatics Moves to the Head of the Class The race is on to increase the quantity and quality of bio-IT training programs as government and academia bet the need will be great. Will the job market back up that bet? |
Chemistry World July 18, 2014 Katie Bayliss |
Soft matter goes digital Researchers have designed a system of reconfigurable colloidal clusters which show potential for performing computational functions in unconventional environments. |
InternetNews February 20, 2004 Ron Miller |
Pentagon Clusters Around Linux DoD purchases largest cluster ever from Linux Networx to equip research centers. |
Bio-IT World February 10, 2003 Salvatore Salamone |
Made in Manhattan A talk with the new head of the Computational Biology Center at Memorial Sloan-Kettering. |
InternetNews September 23, 2008 Andy Patrizio |
One Datacenter, One View, Says IBM New Systems Director works with Tivoli to manage all IBM hardware from one interface. Separately, the company spawns another supercomputer. |