ACADEMIA
SGI completes fiscal 2007 with key customer wins
Fourth Quarter Sees Company Unveil SGI Altix ICE System as Altix XE and Storage Solutions Gain Momentum with Customers: With a new CEO at its helm, SGI completed its fiscal year 2007 with the launch of a breakthrough blade system purpose-built for high-performance computing (HPC), while racking up significant customer wins across SGI's server and storage product lines. The company also released financial results for the Fiscal Year 2007 today.
The company's fourth quarter, which ended June 29, was SGI's first fiscal quarter under the leadership of Bo Ewald, who was named CEO in April. Working with SGI's leadership and global workforce, Ewald has focused on positioning SGI for sustainable long-term growth and innovation through delivery of uniquely competitive, customer-focused solutions.
New products and industry alliances
In June, SGI unveiled SGI Altix ICE 8200, the first in a new line of bladed servers designed to close the growing gap between performance and user productivity. Built to accommodate large and varied scale-out workloads, SGI Altix ICE delivers the advantages of blade computing without forcing users to accept compromises in price/performance, power and space efficiency, reliability and manageability. Its ultra-dense rack architecture delivers up to 40 percent more compute performance per floor tile than competing blades. Meanwhile, the Altix ICE system's highly efficient design minimizes demands on the data center's space and power, helping to relieve the growing burden of housing, powering and cooling today's HPC systems.
Also during the quarter, SGI joined the BioIT Alliance, a group of organizations working together to realize the potential of personalized medicine. The Alliance unites SGI with other innovators in the pharmaceutical, biotech, hardware, and software industries to explore new ways to share complex biomedical data and collaborate among multi-disciplinary teams to speed the pace of discovery in the life sciences.
Major NASA acquisitions and contracts
In August, NASA turned to SGI to acquire the world's largest shared-memory supercomputer as part of NAS Technology Refresh (NTR), a four-phase evaluation and procurement process that eventually will replace the Columbia supercomputer system, powered by SGI Altix. Installed in August at the NASA Advanced Supercomputing (NAS) facility at the Ames Research Center at Moffett Field, Calif., the new system is the first supercomputer to operate 2,048 Intel Itanium 2 processor cores and 4TB of memory under a single copy of Linux OS; as such, it is the largest Linux single system image (SSI) in the world. NASA also acquired two ultra-dense SGI InfiniteStorage 10000 systems totaling 240TB to efficiently handle the massive data storage requirements.
Separately, SGI was again named a prime contract holder for a multi-billion dollar U.S. Government IT purchasing program, also administered by NASA. Under the seven-year NASA Solutions for Enterprise-Wide Procurement (SEWP) IV Program, every product SGI sells is available to NASA and other U.S. Government agencies at prices published on the SEWP IV schedule. The purchasing program represents total procurements that could reach as much as $5.6 billion through April of 2014. The program involves 37 Competed Prime Contract Holders offering a wide range of IT products. SGI is the only Contract Holder to win a Class 4, High-Performance Compute Servers, contract.
Customers embrace new SGI Altix ICE systems
Just weeks after its June launch, SGI reports brisk sales of its new SGI Altix ICE platform. Among the customer wins were:
-- French oceanographers expect to make waves throughout the world, now
that IFREMER, the French Research Institute for Exploitation of the
Sea, has a acquired an SGI Altix ICE 8200 blade cluster powered by 256
Intel Xeon cores and a 16TB SGI InfiniteStorage 4500 system. IFREMER
chose the SGI solution over competing clusters from IBM, HP, Sun, Dell
and Bull for several reasons: SGI's ability to deliver excellent
performance-per-core and on the institute's many scientific codes;
increased reliability on the SGI Altix ICE system due to a design
allowing for fewer cables; SGI's deep expertise in HPC; and SGI's
reliance on industry-standard components, including Intel Xeon
processors and SUSE Linux Enterprise 10 from Novell. Installed in
August, the new SGI cluster and storage solution will allow researchers
to work efficiently with ever-larger data volumes as they run a variety
of applications, including WaveWatchlll, MARS, OPA, HYCOM, CORIOLIS.
-- The University of Exeter purchased a 128-core, 16TB SGI Altix ICE 8200
system to simulate the formation of stars and planets. The Altix ICE
blade system's pre-installed software allowed Exeter's theoretical
astrophysics team to get their new system up and running the same day
it arrived. The university reports that achieving productivity so
quickly on such a powerful system helped to realize a rapid return on
investment. In fact, based on the performance of the system since it
was installed at Exeter in June, researchers expect to reduce the time
to it takes to complete a detailed simulation of a massive hydrogen
field from a year to only six weeks.
-- The Center for Parallel Computing (NACAD) at the Federal University of
Rio de Janeiro (Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro: UFRJ) acquired
a new SGI Altix ICE system and SGI InfiniteStorage solution to drive
engineering, scientific, database and data mining applications. UFRJ
researchers are leveraging the SGI deployment, which will augment
existing SGI solutions and is expected to be installed in September, to
solve a wide range of problems: simulating environmental impacts in the
Amazon, understanding the effect of waves in offshore production
platform, characterizing reservoirs, clustering analysis, and
conducting complex OLAP queries. The new SGI Altix ICE system is
powered by 152 Intel Xeon cores and 304GB of memory. UFRJ also
upgraded its SGI Altix 450 system to a configuration with 32 Intel
Itanium 2 processor cores and 64GB of memory. The SGI systems, which
run SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 10 from Novell, are backed by an
expanded 32TB SGI InfiniteStorage 4050 network attached storage
solution. UFRJ selected the SGI solutions over offerings from IBM, HP,
Sun and Bull.
Growing momentum for Altix XE
SGI also extended its reach into key vertical markets and geographies with solutions built around Intel Xeon processor-based SGI Altix XE clusters. In the fourth quarter of fiscal 2007, those wins included:
-- Miller Brothers Retail Ltd., a specialist electrical retailer selling
more than 15,000 products and accessories, invested in an SGI Altix
server solution to drive its PostgreSQL as part of a strategic move to
conduct most of its business over the Internet. A lack of in-house
expertise in deploying PC clusters prompted Miller Brothers to seek out
a single system capable of handling its database, while enabling a fast
and seamless installation to avoid impacting its fast-growing business.
(In addition to selling electrical products via its own Web site, the
company operates "white label" sites on behalf of several large
partners, including Wal-Mart subsidiary Asda, one of the UK's largest
supermarket chains.) To meet those needs, Miller Brothers purchased an
SGI Altix 450 mid-range server with eight Intel Itanium 2 processor
cores. To meet the company's tight timescales, SGI configured and
shipped the system within 24 hours, and it was fully operational the
very next day. Miller Brothers reports that its new SGI Altix 450
system has paid unexpected dividends: the additional power and
scalability of the Altix platform has allowed the company to add more
trading partners than it had originally planned, and Miller Brothers is
generating new business as a result.
-- Les Taxis Bleus (Blue Taxi), the leading cab company in Paris, is
moving its Oracle software-based order processing and reservation
management system to a new SGI Altix XE server and SGI
InfiniteStorage solution to guarantee fast, reliable service to taxi
customers 24 hours a day. The company serves as a booking center for
more than 3,000 independent cab drivers throughout Paris and the Paris
Region. Transaction processing and radio communications are
administered via a four-core SGI Altix XE240 server equipped with
8GB of memory and running Red Hat Enterprise Linux v.4. The
system taps an Oracle 10g database and 1TB of SGI InfiniteStorage
220 direct-attached Fibre Channel storage, which neutralizes
infrastructure bottlenecks that might otherwise impact service delivery
and customer satisfaction. The entire configuration is repeated in a
replicated configuration that backs up the primary system. Processing
some 40,000 calls and transactions a day, Les Taxis Bleus relies on the
SGI solution to work non-stop, day and night.
-- Vanguard Animation, to successfully create and complete the computer-
generated feature film Space Chimps, purchased 10 SGI Altix XE310
servers with 64GB RAM and four Quad-Core Intel Xeon processors running
Red Hat Linux Fedora Core 5 and PipelineFX Qube! software. In a
head-to-head server comparison, the SGI Workflow-Ready Solution for
Render Management employing PipelineFX Qube! and SGI Altix XE310
servers came out on top in terms of price-performance. Because of their
use of Renderman and Maya software, the fact that SGI Altix servers all
run the Linux environment and use Intel processors was critical to the
studio. The Altix XE310 servers delivered the ultimate performance
density; they gave Vanguard Animation a 20 to 30 percent improvement in
rendering speed.
-- To drive its increasingly difficult quantitative interpretation,
petrophysics, seismic time processing and depth imaging studies,
DownUnder GeoSolutions (DUG) purchased a 640-core, 320GB SGI
Altix XE 1300 cluster for installation at DUG headquarters in Perth,
Western Australia. The new SGI cluster increases DUG's overall
computational performance five-fold, allowing DUG experts to provide
global energy industry clients with more accurate insights into what
they can expect to find when drilling miles below the earth's surface.
-- At the University of Minnesota Supercomputing Institute for Digital
Simulation and Advanced Computation, a massive new SGI Altix XE cluster
will ensure that current and emerging generations of processor-hungry
applications won't slow down scientists and engineers. The 2,048-core
SGI Altix XE 1300 cluster, installed in May, will transform the
familiar submit-and-wait research experience into a vastly more
interactive and productive one. Outfitted with more than 4TB of memory
across 256 compute nodes, Minnesota's new Altix XE cluster will drive
research in physical, biological, medical, mathematical and computing
sciences, in addition to engineering studies and academic-industry
collaboration. Minnesota's system also is linked via a high-bandwidth
InfiniBand connection and runs SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 10 from
Novell. Minnesota acquired the system by working with SGI and James
River Technical, Inc.
-- Dedic, the contact center company from Portugal Telecom Group, acquired
an SGI Altix XE cluster to drive a payroll system for Dedic's 14,000
employees. The primary Altix XE solution, comprised of Altix XE210,
XE240 and XE310 servers, is powered by a total of 56 Intel Xeon cores
and 72GB of memory. The SGI Altix XE platform was certified by
Microsiga for its Protheus payroll software system, enabling Dedic to
take advantage of the Altix XE platform's leading price/performance to
enable a reliable, high-performance payroll environment. Installed in
June, the Altix systems run SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 10 from
Novell.
-- Queensland University of Technology (QUT) selected SGI to provide a new
HPC infrastructure to enable a new era of scientific and engineering
research. In a contract won in conjunction with Intel, SGI is providing
a hybrid SGI supercomputing, cluster and storage solution that is
tightly integrated and yet flexible enough to serve multiple research
disciplines. The solution will include a 96-core, 192GB SGI Altix 4700
shared-memory supercomputer powered by Dual-Core Intel Itanium 2
processors and a 112-core, 224GB SGI Altix XE1200 cluster powered by
Quad-Core Intel Xeon 5300 series processors. The new systems are
supported by a high-performance 28TB SGI InfiniteStorage solution.
-- Two facilities at the Universidade Estadual de Campinas (UNICAMP), the
State University of Campinas in Sao Paulo, Brazil, invested in SGI
compute and data management solutions to tackle a range of high-
performance computing problems.
-- In an effort to improve downstream processes at Brazilian oil firm
Petrobras, UNICAMP's School of Chemical Engineering purchased a
136-core, 272GB SGI Altix XE1300 cluster supported by an 8TB
network-attached SGI InfiniteStorage 350 solution. The new cluster
and storage deployment will help solve increasingly complex CFX
computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations. Leading performance
of the Altix XE platform and Intel Xeon processors prompted UNICAMP
to select SGI over HP and Dell. The Altix XE cluster runs SUSE Linux
Enterprise Server 10 from Novell.
-- A mounting need to provide HPC resources to a growing number of
simultaneous users led UNICAMP CENAPAD, a National Center for High-
Performance Computing, to purchase a 176-core SGI Altix 450 compute
solution and a combination of new and upgraded SGI InfiniteStorage
systems that added more than 56TB of capacity to its HPC storage and
data management infrastructure. Selected over competing solutions
from HP, IBM and Bull, the new SGI deployment will allow CENAPAD to
support more researchers at one time, while reducing their time to
discovery. UNICAMP CENAPAD supports users from many different
research institutes and Universities in Brazil. CENAPAD users will
rely on the SGI solutions to derive maximum performance from such
applications as Gaussian, VASP, CPMD and other chemistry and physics
codes. The Altix 450 system also will run SUSE Enterprise Linux
Server 10 from Novell.
-- Massey University in Auckland, New Zealand, acquired an Altix XE
cluster to drive a range of scientific disciplines. Outfitted with 208
Intel Xeon processor cores and 416GB of memory, Massey's new Altix XE
cluster will form part of the New Zealand BESTGRID project, giving the
new system high national visibility. Three InfiniBand switches enable
fast communication between nodes. The university selected the SGI
cluster, built from 13 SGI Altix XE310 nodes and three InfiniBand
switches, because it delivers best-in-class price/performance and
density, while InfiniBand provides fast HPC-class interconnect
capabilities. SGI delivered the cluster to Massey in August.
-- Central Queensland University deployed an extensive SGI Altix XE and
SGI InfiniteStorage installation to enable new areas of scientific
research and data management at the Australian institution. The Quad-
Core Altix cluster is comprised of multiple SGI Altix XE310
computational nodes, an SGI Altix XE240 file server and SGI Altix XE210
administration and head nodes. Delivered in June, the cluster is
integrated with a 6TB SGI InfiniteStorage 220 solution and SGI Data
Migration Facility, which will provide the ongoing data management
capability necessary for multiple researchers to access and manage data
on demand.
-- Otago University, one of New Zealand's leading research institutions,
acquired a turnkey SGI Altix XE1200 Cluster Solution and SGI
InfiniteStorage 220 solution to equip its physics and chemistry
departments with a state-of-the-art compute and data management
platform powered by Intel Xeon quad-core processors. The Quad-Core
cluster was selected in a competitive evaluation after SGI demonstrated
the Altix XE performance advantage through extensive benchmark tests.
Installed in July, the factory-integrated Altix XE and InfiniteStorage
solution will allow Otago researchers to focus on science, and minimize
system management.
More wins for SGI InfiniteStorage, Altix and Professional Services
Across its product lines, SGI saw significant customer wins, including many that leverage the company's award-winning Professional Services offerings:
-- Vodafone McLaren Mercedes turned to SGI, its official supplier for
computational fluid dynamics (CFD) solutions, for help in trimming
seconds off of lap times in next season's MP4-23 car. To drive large
CFD studies on the new car design using STAR-CCM+ software, Vodafone
McLaren Mercedes increased the capacity of its CFD platforms with a
256-core SGI Altix 4700 system with 1TB of memory. A longtime SGI Altix
customer, Vodafone McLaren Mercedes selected the Altix 4700 based on
the platform's proven performance and reliability in handling
sophisticated CFD problems for its Formula 1 cars, each of which
features more than 11,000 separate components.
-- Professor Stephen Hawking's UK COSMOS consortium is Europe's leading
group of investigators studying all aspects of cosmology-from
simulating the universe fractions of a second after Big Bang, to
identifying correlations in the distribution of galaxies as we see them
today. As a user of SGI supercomputing solutions since 1997, the
consortium has now purchased a 152-core, 456GB SGI Altix 4700 in a deal
that took less than a month to complete. The consortium includes 28
investigators at 10 UK institutions, as well as international
collaborators.
-- The Translational Genomics Research Institute (TGen), a non-profit
research institute in Phoenix, Ariz., purchased an SGI Altix system to
more quickly and efficiently analyze data sets in TGen's search for
cancer cures. Acquired through James River Technical Inc, SGI's
designated partner for higher education and research, the system was
installed in late May. TGen selected an SGI Altix 4700 system with
576GB memory and 48 Intel Itanium 2 cores running Novell SUSE Linux
Enterprise Server 10. TGen chose SGI Altix for its powerful 64-bit
global shared memory architecture, which will allow researchers to
conduct searches across multiple chromosomes without having to break
the problems into pieces, enabling them to look at the whole instead of
a sum of the parts. While custom in-house code will be written for
large data searches, TGen reports SGI Altix improved performance by 10
to 50 percent when benchmarks were run on BLAST, ClustalW and NAMD
software.
-- A new 115TB SGI InfiniteStorage virtualized data management solution
will allow the University of Utah's Scientific Computing and Imaging
(SCI) Institute to help faculty, students and research staff
strategically access information essential to their projects-a growing
challenge in an environment where researchers in multiple disciplines
work with the same source data, often at the same time. Built on a
SGI InfiniteStorage NAS 4550 solution, the SCI Institute environment
relies on SGI InfiniteStorage Data Migration Facility to seamlessly
move aging or low-priority data off of the 38.4TB of primary high-
performance Fibre Channel storage to a more economical 40TB of
secondary Serial-ATA on an InfiniteStorage 4500 RAID array. Eventually,
the lowest priority data moves to a 40TB StorageTek SL500 tape library.
As the SCI Institute's needs warrant, the InfiniteStorage NAS platform
can scale its support for NFS and CIFS users, and for ever-larger data
storage capacity. James River Technical, Inc., SGI's designated value-
added reseller for higher education, participated in the sale.
-- The University of West Florida's School of Science and Engineering in
Pensacola recently deployed SGI technology to optimize research and
development in the Chemistry, Physics, Mathematics, Engineering and
Computer Science Departments. The SGI Altix 450 system is expected to
accelerate a variety of projects by a factor of 10, and allow
researchers to run up to 50 times larger data sets than previously
possible. The primary applications include MatLab, Castep, DMOL, and
Gaussian for electromagnetics, simulations of nuclear reactions, and
solid state material design used in battery technologies, energy
technologies, and fuel cell membranes. Home-grown codes are being
developed and will be ported to the SGI Altix for infrastructure
security, such as managing the power grid under unstable conditions
caused by natural or other disasters. Through SGI's exclusive higher
education partner, James River Technical, Inc., (JRTI), the UWF
purchased an SGI Altix 450 system with 32 Intel Itanium 2 Dual Cores
(64 core total) and 248GB memory, with SUSE Enterprise Linux 10 from
Novell installed. Purchased in late April, the system was installed in
late June.
-- After evaluating systems from different manufacturers, the European
Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL) selected a shared-memory Altix
system from SGI to drive bioinformatics studies, such as meta-genomics
data analysis, that are rapidly growing in size and complexity.
Equipped with 256GB of memory, all of which can be made available to a
single data mining problem, the 16-core SGI Altix 450 server can be
upgraded as needed, with more CPUs, more shared memory and such special
components as highly efficient SGI RASC (Reconfigurable Application
Specific Computing) technology. The new system was installed in August
and runs Novell SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 10 with SGI ProPack
5 software.