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Press Release
Stony Brook University Scientist Uses NCSA's SGI Altix System to Earn Top Prize for Humanitarian Research Itanium Solutions Alliance Honors Six Altix Users for Innovative Use of Intel Itanium 2 Technology SUNNYVALE, Calif. (April 17, 2007)—SGI (NASDAQ: SGIC) today announced that several researchers honored in the Itanium Solutions Alliance Innovation Contest conducted their acclaimed work on SGI® Altix® systems.Dr. Carlos Simmerling at Stony Brook University in New York won $50,000 and top honors for his breakthrough medical research, while the University of California-Riverside (UCR) earned Honorable Mention and $5,000. Four other Altix users were named finalists: Imperial College, London; Interactive Supercomputing, Inc; McLaren Racing; and Stanford University. The contest recognizes projects that utilize the full potential of systems based on Intel® Itanium® 2 processors, such as SGI Altix. From a pool of 25 finalists in three categories, winners were announced today at the Intel Developer Forum in Beijing and Gelato ICE: Itanium Conference and Expo in San Jose, Calif. Stony Brook's Simmerling won the top award in the Humanitarian Impact Innovation category. Working on an SGI Altix system located at the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA), Simmerling and his team have developed simulation methods that can explore the molecular basis for diseases such as AIDS, cancer and tuberculosis. The team recently achieved the most extensive computer simulations ever done on HIV protease, a molecule that slices a pre-HIV protein chain into the pieces that ultimately assemble into a mature and infectious virus. The simulations modeled how the viral protease changes structure over time, revealing for the first time how it transiently opens during its function, allowing drugs to gain access to the interior and inactivate it. The results provide vital data in the effort to develop new treatments for the 40 million people currently living with AIDS. "This is a tremendous honor — one that recognizes what human effort and technological advances can achieve when brought to bear on a problem that had previously proved insurmountable," said Simmerling, an associate professor in Stony Brook's Department of Chemistry and director of Computational Biology for Stony Brook's Institute for Chemical Biology and Drug Discovery. Simmerling has concluded that using NCSA's powerful Altix system has made a dramatic difference in his research. "The Altix allows us to obtain new medical advances in months, rather than in years," he said. Another Altix user, the University of California-Riverside, earned Honorable Mention in the Entrepreneurial Innovation category for its use of an SGI Altix system outfitted with an SGI® RASC (Reconfigurable Application Specific Computing) blade. Biological scientists leveraged solutions provided by UCR's Department of Computer Science and Engineering to develop and run a new compilation tool called ROCCC (Riverside Optimizing Compiler for Configurable Computing). The tool makes it easy to customize Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) technology, which is used in SGI RASC solutions, for specific uses. Four other SGI Altix users were named finalists in the competition:
"The Innovation Contest submissions operating on SGI Altix servers showed that exciting and innovative computing on Itanium-based systems is taking place in sectors ranging from pharmaceutical research to weather forecasting," said Mark K. Smith, Innovation Contest judge and managing director of the Gelato Federation. "In the future, these data-intensive deployments will continue to evolve and Itanium 2-based systems will continue to grow and scale to the needs of innovative users." "SGI applauds the remarkable work of these researchers, and we are delighted that they have been honored by the Itanium Solutions Alliance," said Ravi Pendakanti, director of marketing, SGI. "Powered by Intel Itanium 2 processors, SGI Altix systems regularly help scientists and engineers achieve what just a short time ago was considered impossible. The achievements of these visionaries illustrate that SGI Altix truly delivers Innovation for Results." SGI | Innovation for Results SGI, Altix, the SGI cube and the SGI logo are registered trademarks, and RASC is a trademark of SGI in the United States and/or other countries worldwide. Linux is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds in several countries. All other trademarks mentioned herein are the property of their respective owners This news release contains forward-looking statements regarding SGI technologies and third-party technologies that are subject to risks and uncertainties. These risks and uncertainties could cause actual results to differ materially from those described in such statements. The reader is cautioned not to rely unduly on these forward-looking statements, which are not a guarantee of future or current performance. Such risks and uncertainties include long-term program commitments, the performance of third parties, the sustained performance of current and future products, financing risks, the ability to integrate and support a complex technology solution involving multiple providers and users, and other risks detailed from time to time in the company's most recent SEC reports, including its reports on Form 10-K and Form 10-Q. | |