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Contents October 2008
IBM to offer remote 'test drive' of Microsoft's new Windows HPC Server 2008
Armonk 24 September 2008 IBM will offer remote, $99 "test drives" of Microsoft's newly launched supercomputer operating system, Windows HPC Server 2008, via its global network of IBM Computing on Demand facilities.
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IBM Computing on Demand, an IBM cloud computing service, leverages IBM's broad portfolio of cloud computing technologies and services to provide businesses with a dynamic infrastructure to access more computing power.

IBM maintains a broad selection of pay-by-the-hour supercomputing hardware in its Computing on Demand centres for customers and resellers who tap into the high-performance network as needed - hourly, weekly or yearly.

Facilities in New York and London offer global users a highly secure and scalable infrastructure featuring more than 56 terabytes of storage and 13,000 processors based on the latest technologies from Intel and IBM.

"With the Computing on Demand facility, Microsoft and IBM are delivering supercomputing performance to companies that could previously not afford it or never had access to it", stated Vince Mendillo, director of HPC marketing at Microsoft Corp.

IBM plans to offer the Windows HPC Server 2008 test drive in units of 14 to 16 nodes on IBM BladeCenter or System x servers featuring Intel Xeon multi-core processors.

"IBM's On Demand Centers are an effective way for new users to tap into the power of supercomputers", stated Steve Remondi, CEO of Exa Corp., Burlington, Massachusetts. Exa packages engineering software with IBM's On Demand resources to offer businesses remote supercomputer applications. "Many of our customers have never used supercomputers before", Steve Remondi stated. "But they immediately realize that high-performance computing offers a competitive edge."

IBM also will make available to on-demand users its high-end 3D visualization engine known as Deep Computing Visualization (DCV). Already used by clients in the automotive, life sciences, aerospace and energy industries, DCV allows for extremely detailed 3D modelling of data.

By tapping into DCV on demand, clients can reduce in-house network bottlenecks and offer powerful 3D graphics capabilities to more users. DCV also allows multiple remote users to work on the same data simultaneously.

IBM plans a new web portal interface to help on-demand users schedule computing resources. Automation will help ensure authorized resources are dynamically provisioned into a secure virtual LAN for the client to access at the committed start time, significantly streamlining the on-demand process.

IBM's Computing on Demand Centers help clients reduce data centre expenses, especially power and cooling costs. A variety of security levels help ensure compliance with U.S. Government requirements.

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Source: IBM

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