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Press Release
Silicon Graphics Deploys Ireland's Fastest Supercomputer in Just One Day At Irish Centre for High-Performance Computing, New SGI Altix ICE System Powers Climate Change and Life Sciences Research SUNNYVALE, Calif. (Feb. 5, 2008) — Ireland's most powerful computer was installed in three hours and powered up in just one day, thanks to a rapidly deployable computing platform from Silicon Graphics, Inc. (SGI) (NASDAQ: SGIC) that is transforming what users can expect from supercomputer deployments. Installed in November at the Irish Centre for High-End Computing (ICHEC), "Stokes," a new SGI® Altix® ICE 8200 system that operates at up to 25.1 trillion operations per second, is ranked No. 117 on the Top500 list of the world's fastest computers. Perhaps more significantly, the latest ICHEC supercomputer delivers 87.6 percent of its peak performance when running the LINPACK benchmark — the best efficiency of any industry-standard system appearing in the list's top 225 systems. This remains a serious factor for scientific and engineering institutes that use MPI and seek to minimize run times, processor counts and power use while maximizing job throughput. ICHEC selected Silicon Graphics after a competitive evaluation in which the SGI Altix ICE system delivered the highest performance in benchmark tests. Other factors included low cost of ownership, Silicon Graphics' renowned application support and collaboration with customers, positive assessments from other SGI Altix ICE users, and the reliability and scalability of the acclaimed integrated blade platform. The purchased was financed mainly through e-INIS, a national collaborative project coordinated by the Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies and funded by Ireland's Higher Education Authority together with contributions from University College Dublin and the National University of Ireland, Maynooth. Operated by ICHEC on behalf of the Irish research community, the system will allow national researchers to address some of the world's most pressing scientific challenges. The Altix ICE system will accelerate efforts to develop whole-earth weather and climate models, perform complex DNA sequencing, and simulate the immune response to HIV infection. "This new system from Silicon Graphics not only meets the application performance levels the company promised, but it exceeds them," said Dr. J.-C. Desplat, Associate Director at ICHEC, Ireland's first national computing center (www.ichec.ie). "We now have a national resource that dramatically improves our ability to solve more complex problems involving ever-larger data volumes. The SGI Altix ICE architecture gives researchers the flexibility to pursue multiple courses of investigation rapidly and interactively— a vital advantage that simply was not available to them before now. On top of all this, the ability to use Stokes so quickly means we don't have to keep researchers at bay during a long, frustrating deployment. With Silicon Graphics, we were up and running right away." The Future of Supercomputing: Immediate ROI With a tightly integrated and modular design that simplifies deployment, the SGI Altix ICE platform allows customers to realize a return on their investment sooner than is possible with traditional supercomputer systems. For instance, the ICHEC system was available to users within three weeks of arriving on site. "Now more than ever, organizations are under pressure to quickly derive value from their strategic technology investments," said Dr. Eng Lim Goh, chief technology officer, Silicon Graphics. "ICHEC's Stokes system makes good on that promise, delivering nearly immediate productivity to researchers with one of the world's most powerful supercomputers. Silicon Graphics is proud to provide the Republic of Ireland with this vital national resource." Additional Details on Stokes:
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