Washington - 27 Jun 2012: Researchers at IBM (NYSE: IBM) and Lawrence
Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) today announced that
they are broadening their nearly 20-year collaboration in
high performance computing (HPC) by joining forces to work
with industrial partners to help boost their
competitiveness in the global economy.
Under a recently concluded agreement, IBM and LLNL have
formed an HPC collaboration called Deep Computing Solutions
to take place within LLNL's High Performance Computing
Innovation Center (HPCIC). Announced last June, the HPCIC
was created to help American industry harness the power of
supercomputing to better compete in the global marketplace
(http://hpcic.llnl.gov). Deep Computing Solutions will
bring a new dimension to the HPCIC, adding IBM's
computational science expertise to LLNL's own, for the
benefit of Deep Computing Solution's clients.
"The capabilities of California's Lawrence Livermore
National Laboratory are uniquely suited to boost American
industry's competitiveness in the global marketplace. The
new collaboration between the Lab and IBM is an excellent
example of using the technical expertise of both the
government and the private-sector to spur innovation and
investment in the U.S. economy," said Sen. Dianne
Feinstein, (D-Calif.). "The strength of supercomputing
facilities like Livermore's High Performance Computing
Innovation Center offers a broad range of solutions to
energy, environmental and national security problems. I
look forward to following the progress of this new
collaboration in accelerating the development of products
and services to maintain the nation's competitive
advantage."
Feinstein delivers remarks on the collaboration today at a
Capitol Hill briefing on "Big Data: The New Natural
Resource." The focus of the briefing is how Congress
and the Administration can harvest the great new resource
of Big Data to address the nation's pressing societal
challenges. Follow the discussion on twitter with
#IBMpolicy and tweets from the event @IBMpolicy.
LLNL's HPCIC aims to become the nation's premier
provider of advanced computing solutions to understand and
manage complex systems that underlie 21st century
technology. Working within the HPCIC, Deep Computing
Solutions will deploy the complementary strengths of IBM
and LLNL to develop and implement industrial strength
solutions that can help address its clients'
enterprise-critical problems.
Computer and domain science experts from IBM Research and
LLNL will work together with a broad range of American
industry collaborators to devise HPC solutions that can
help accelerate the development of new technologies,
products and services. Areas of interest include, but are
not limited to: applied energy; green energy, including
renewable(s); biology; materials science; fabrication;
manufacturing; data management; and informatics.
The HPCIC effort helps to address the broader issue of
economic competitiveness. "Maintaining a technological edge
over the competition in the global marketplace is vital to
both national security and the country's economic
prosperity. Deep Computing Solutions will be an important
ingredient of the HPC Innovation Center, building on IBM
and LLNL's mutual experience in applying HPC to complex
technical problems. Together we will help equip U.S.
industry with the tools for technological innovation needed
to stay ahead of the global competition," said Frederick
Streitz, director of the HPCIC.
"Deep Computing Solutions will deploy a comprehensive range
of experienced researchers and developers from both IBM and
LLNL to help develop robust solutions for its clients that
can address enterprise-critical challenges, such as
processing very large data sets to fuel competitive
insights," said James Sexton, program director,
Computational Science Center, IBM T.J. Watson Research
Center, NY. "The potential is to aggressively
increase the rate and pace of innovation for our clients
and to deliver significant economic impact as a
result."
High performance computing has the potential to provide
groundbreaking impact in research and industrial
applications. However, it has remained inaccessible to the
broad community because its deployment requires access to
special expertise and systems. LLNL's HPCIC and Deep
Computing Solutions will directly address the accessibility
problem that currently limits development and deployment of
advanced computing solutions by commercial organizations.
LLNL has procured a five-petaflop (quadrillion floating
point operations per second) system to support HPCIC and
Deep Computing Solutions efforts as well as unclassified
National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) research
programs, academic alliances and LLNL institutional science
and technology efforts. Called Vulcan, the new 24-rack IBM
Blue Gene/Q system based on the POWER architecture will be
delivered in Summer 2012. Vulcan is part of the contract
that brought Sequoia, the 20-petaflop Blue Gene/Q machine
recently ranked no. 1 on the TOP500 list of the world's
fastest supercomputers, to Livermore.
The NNSA/LLNL/IBM collaboration has produced six HPC
systems that have been ranked among the world's most
powerful computers including: The Accelerated Strategic
Computing Initiative (ASCI) Blue Pacific; ASCI White; the
Advanced Simulation and Computing (ASC) Purple; Blue
Gene/L; Blue Gene/P, Dawn; and Blue Gene/Q, Sequoia. ASCI
White, Blue Gene/L and now Sequoia all attained a no. 1
ranking on the TOP500 list. The Blue Gene line of
supercomputers received a Presidential Medal of Technology
and Innovation from President Obama in 2009.
IBM and LLNL have a strong record of award-winning science
and technology innovation. Research teams from LLNL and IBM
running breakthrough calculations on Blue Gene systems have
garnered a total of five Gordon Bell Prizes, the
prestigious award for innovations that advance HPC and the
science it makes possible.
The HPCIC resides in Livermore's open campus collaboration
area. See the HPCIC Website for more information: http://hpcinnovationcenter.llnl.gov/
Founded in 1952, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
(www.llnl.gov) provides solutions to our nation's most
important national security challenges through innovative
science, engineering and technology. Lawrence Livermore
National Laboratory is managed by Lawrence Livermore
National Security, LLC for the U.S. Department of Energy's
National Nuclear Security Administration.
For more information on IBM go to http://www.ibm.com. For
more information on IBM Research go to
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@IBMResearch.www.ibm.com/technicalcomputing
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