SCIENCE
ScaleMP Receives Honors in 2010 HPCwire Editors’ Choice Award
ScaleMP has been recognized in the annual HPCwire Readers’ and Editors’ Choice Awards, presented at the 2010 International Conference for High Performance Computing, Networking, Storage and Analysis (SC10), in New Orleans, Louisiana. The list of winners was revealed today before the opening gala of the conference and will be posted on the HPCwire website. ScaleMP received the Editor’s Choice Award for Best HPC Cluster Solution or Technology (for vSMP Foundation for Cluster)
The coveted HPCwire Readers’ and Editors’ Choice Awards are determined through online polling of the global HPCwire audience, along with a rigorous selection process involving HPCwire editors and industry luminaries. The awards are an annual feature of the publication and constitute prestigious recognition from the HPC community. The awards program kicked off the SC10 conference, which showcases high performance computing, networking, storage, and data analysis.
“ScaleMP’s award represents HPCwire editors' confirmation of vSMP Foundation's groundbreaking server virtualization technology, which enables customers to create large, shared memory machines on an on-demand basis,” said Tomas Tabor, publisher of HPCwire. “I’m happy to congratulate ScaleMP for being selected for a 2010 award.”
"This marks the second year in a row that we have been recognized by a well-regarded industry publication like HPCwire," said Shai Fultheim, CEO of ScaleMP. "This announcement, coupled with the recent, enthusiastic reception we received for our new vSMP Foundation 3.5 version, which provides improved, on-demand SMP capabilities, enhanced 4-socket performance and faster cluster performance, is strong validation for our software-based HPC alternative to proprietary SMP systems.”
TRENDING
- A new method for modeling complex biological systems: Is it a real breakthrough or hype?
- A new medical AI tool has revealed previously unrecognized cases of long COVID by analyzing patient health records
- Incredible findings from the James Webb Space Telescope reshape our understanding of how galaxies form