Similar Articles |
|
Bio-IT World July 2005 Salvatore Salamone |
Visualize This An attractive combination of features -- high performance, component standardization, and the ability to access large amounts of memory -- is making new visualization systems appealing for many computationally intensive biomedical applications. |
Bio-IT World October 10, 2003 Salvatore Salamone |
The 64-Bit Question New processors from Intel, AMD, and Apple/IBM offer more speed and access to much more memory. But upgrading involves more than wanting to go faster. |
Bio-IT World July 2005 |
A History of Architecture Over the past few years, high-end desktop and server systems based on commodity Intel, AMD, and Apple/IBM processors have become more powerful and started to encroach into, albeit on the low end, the graphical workstation market. |
InternetNews October 23, 2007 Andy Patrizio |
Sun Looks To Intel To Boost Workstation Sales Desktop workstations with Intel Core 2 processors are now on the menu from Sun. |
InternetNews June 27, 2005 Clint Boulton |
Sun to Offer Sub-$1,000 Workstation Sun Microsystems has created a new workstation, the Sun Ultra 20, for computer-aided design engineers and software developers that has a lower entry cost point than competing machines. |
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. |
PC Magazine February 3, 2004 Jim Akin |
The 64-Bit Advantage The TeraGrid marks an evolutionary leap in clustering, in which relatively inexpensive commodity computers are combined to do work that once required superexpensive supercomputers. |
InternetNews June 7, 2004 Clint Boulton |
Dell Debuts 64-bit Itanium Server The company's latest offering handles heavy-lifting applications such as Microsoft SQL Server and enterprise resource planning software. |
PC Magazine October 7, 2003 Michael J. Miller |
The 64-Bit Revolution The move to 64-bit computing won't happen overnight, and it probably won't be easy. But 64-bit environments will probably be an integral part of computing for the next 20 years. |
InternetNews January 30, 2006 David Needle |
Sun's Workstations Hit High Note Ramping up its bread-and-butter workstation line, Sun Microsystems today announced new systems based on AMD's 64-bit Opteron processor. |
Linux Journal June 1, 2002 Thad J. Beier |
Product Review: Hewlett-Packard x4000 Workstation We tested this x4000 as an artist workstation as well as a batch renderer... |
InternetNews October 13, 2004 Michael Singer |
Sun, NVidia Forge Graphics Pact Sun Microsystems will continue to enhance and develop its workstations with nVidia graphics processors. |
CFO November 17, 2003 Peter Krass |
64-Bit Computing Moore is merrier: for power users everywhere, your chip has come in. The main advantages of 64-bit are faster computing and lower IT costs. |
InternetNews September 27, 2004 Michael Singer |
HP Dumps 64-bit Interests The computer maker said a lack of Windows applications helped its decision to dump its investment in 64-bit workstations. |
PC World October 2004 David Essex |
Should Your Next PC Be a Workstation? Astute PC shoppers who see workstations following conventional desktop PCs down past the $1000 barrier are asking: Should I buy a workstation instead? |
InternetNews July 29, 2004 Michael Singer |
Dell Releases New Linux Workstations Why not? Dell has already been performing well with Linux thanks in part to low-end (under $5,000) x86-based servers. |
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. |
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. |
PC World August 2001 Yardena Arar |
A Windows for Supercomputing? Microsoft's 64-Bit OS for Intel's Itanium Microsoft is quietly launching an OS to handle Intel's new, 64-bit Itanium CPU... |
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 January 5, 2005 Michael Singer |
Microsoft Kills XP Workstation for Itanium Microsoft has shut the window on its workstation operating system for Intel's Itanium 2 processors. The decision to disconue reflects a trend in the marketplace to focus on 32-bit and 64-bit x86 systems by Intel and AMD. |
Bio-IT World October 14, 2004 Robert Mcmillan |
High-Performance Computing: Muscle in the Middle New processor designs are giving a price/performance boost to midrange Unix servers. |
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 September 16, 2004 Michael Athanas |
From the PC to the PCC Personal compute clusters enable bioinformatics researchers to compute outside the total control of the data center. |
InternetNews June 18, 2007 Clint Boulton |
Computing Without Boundaries? Verari Says Yes Verari Systems is leveraging Teradici's PC-over-IP chipset to transport high-resolution DVI signals from the data center over a TCP/IP network to workstations and desktop PCs. |
The Motley Fool September 27, 2004 Seth Jayson |
HP Spurns Intel Is this the beginning of the end for HP and Intel's formerly cozy relationship? The financial fallout from today's announcement may be minimal, but investors need to wonder whether the litany of goofs will be stopped anytime soon. |
Wired July 2003 Gary Rivlin |
McNealy's Last Stand Technical muscle and a history of innovation made Sun a Silicon Valley standard-bearer. It also blinded famously combative Scott McNealy to the coming Linux wars. Now he's fighting to survive. |
Linux Journal February 2001 Robin Rowe |
Linux as a Video Desktop Rowe introduces a new article series on developing Linux multimedia applications from scratch... |
InternetNews January 21, 2004 Clint Boulton |
IBM Eyes Big Year for Linux on PowerPC IBM plans to use LinuxWorld as a showcase for its Linux on PowerPC momentum, as well as unveil new EAL certifications for security-conscious government businesses. |
PC Magazine September 19, 2003 Troy Dreier |
Apple Power Mac G5: Neck-and-Neck with Intel PCs The G5 brings 64-bit processing to the Mac platform and is much stronger in accessing memory and handling computing-intensive tasks. And, its performance runs neck-and-neck with Intel PCs. |
InternetNews April 15, 2004 Clint Boulton |
SGI Sheds Graphics Software Business Server company, looking for market share in the burgeoning Linux space, unloads high end graphics software unit. |
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?... |
PC World March 2005 Harry McCracken |
64-Bit PCs: The Long and Winding Road Next-generation computing will change the way you work and play. But when? |
InternetNews February 20, 2004 Ron Miller |
Pentagon Clusters Around Linux DoD purchases largest cluster ever from Linux Networx to equip research centers. |
InternetNews April 25, 2005 Jim Wagner |
Microsoft Launching 64-Bit XP, Server 2003 After nearly two years of beta testing, Redmond releases 64-bit versions of its two primary operating systems. |
PC World April 24, 2002 Tom Mainelli |
AMD Readies Opteron to Challenge Intel's Itanium Microsoft promises Windows XP support for newly named chip (formerly SledgeHammer)... |
PC World November 2003 Tom Mainelli |
64-Bit Takes Off AMD's chip supports 64-bit computing, ushering in a new era for desktops. But the best reason to buy the CPU is strong performance on familiar 32-bit apps. |
InternetNews July 8, 2005 Michael Singer |
A Roundup of 64-Bit Computing Faster speeds. Dual core futures. Growing application support. When should your company make the jump to x86 64-bit? |
InternetNews August 24, 2005 Clint Boulton |
The Force is Now With HP Hewlett Packard will sell over 1,000 workstations and storage arrays to Star Wars' film company Lucasfilm in a three-year deal. |
PC Magazine March 22, 2005 Michael J. Miller |
Two Cores Are Better than One This year, the high end of the market moves to microprocessors with multiple cores--single chips that contain the guts of two or more chips. |
InternetNews February 5, 2004 Michael Singer |
WOW64 for AMD Released to the Public Microsoft pushes out its customer preview of this summer's 64-Bit operating system but only for AMD Athlon 64 powered desktops or Opteron processor-powered workstations. |
Bio-IT World June 2005 John Russell |
India Genomics Institute Chooses HP Supercomputer The Institute of Genomics and Integrative Biology (IGIB) has chosen a 4-teraFLOPS Hewlett-Packard supercomputer running the Linux operating system to advance its life science computational biology research. |
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? |
PC Magazine August 19, 2003 Jan Ozer |
Entry-Level Workstations Get a Boost PC makers are bringing out affordable graphics workstations that take advantage of the newfound speed of Intel's Canterwood Pentium 4 platform, supplanting Xeon-based models. |
InternetNews June 25, 2004 Michael Singer |
64-Bit Comes to Xeon Intel's Nocona and its related chipsets mark a new direction for enterprise computing. |
CIO November 15, 2001 Meridith Levinson |
Nixed for Linux The master of illusion in the entertainment industry, Industrial Light & Magic -- George Lucas's visual effects and 3-D animation studio -- is undergoing its own metamorphosis and sloughing off longtime partner SGI in the process... |
InternetNews July 26, 2004 Michael Singer |
Sun Serves Up AMD Servers, Workstations The company unveils its 4-way Opteron based Sun Fire and two workstations to better compete with offerings from HP and IBM. |
InternetNews January 14, 2004 Erin Joyce |
Drug Company Taps IBM, AMD for Computing Bristol-Myers decides to run all-important drug tests on cheaper lines of supercomputer clusters. Will competitors follow suit? |
InternetNews June 8, 2004 Clint Boulton |
VERITAS a Believer in Itanium VERITAS reaffirms its commitment to offering Linux on Itanium support for its storage management and clustering software. |
IEEE Spectrum April 2005 Alan Sullivan |
3-Deep New displays render images you can almost reach out and touch. A few small companies are just now emerging to try to carve out a piece of a market for volumetric displays that could be worth $1 billion by 2006. |