Gridget > U Florida Expands High Performance Computing Center with Penguin ...

[Campus Technology: All Articles] "The mission of the HPC Center is to enable and support the leading-edge research being conducted at the University of Florida. Penguin Computing provided us with the equipment and expertise we needed to support that mission," said Erik Deumens, director of the HPC Center.

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[HPCwire: High Performance Computing in Research & Academia] HPCwire: Penguin Powers University of Florida HPC Expansion: SAN FRANCISCO, Calif., May 12 -- Penguin Computing, experts in high performance computing solutions, today announced that the University of Florida's new High-Performance Computing (HPC) Center Phase III expansion is powered by a fully-integrated Penguin HPC Linux Cluster. The University of Florida, which unveiled a major HPC expansion last week, adds to the growing list of top educational institutions that have selected Penguin's Linux clusters to enable high performance computational academic research.

[insideHPC] Penguin Powers U of Florida HPC Phase III | insideHPC.com: Penguin Computing, today, announced details that the University of Florida’s High Performance Computing Center Phase III installation will be a Penguin integrated cluster system.  The University of Florida unveiled details last week to expand their HPC capacity to around 2500 cores, rated at an estimated 11 TFlops.  The center’s charter will be to support campus-wide research efforts in high-energy physics, computer science, computational biology, agricultural and life sciences and engineering.

[Boycott Novell] Links 13/05/2009: First Beta of KDE 4.3; France Gives Hollywood ...: Penguin Computing, experts in high performance computing solutions, today announced that the University of Florida’s new High-Performance Computing (HPC) Center Phase III expansion is powered by a fully-integrated Penguin HPC Linux Cluster. The University of Florida, which unveiled a major HPC expansion last week, adds to the growing list of top educational institutions that have selected Penguin’s Linux clusters to enable high performance computational academic research.

[HPCwire: Emerging Applications for High Productivity Computing] HPCwire: Ohio Researcher Tracks H1N1 Virus: Many organizations that could benefit from the use of HPC clusters find that it is complicated to get the systems up and running because of limited IT resources or the complexities of the clusters themselves. Learn how the Intel Cluster Ready program, for which Dell was an original partner, seeks to address this challenge for entry level and mid-range HPC users.

[Mike Marshall's TS2 Rag] Microsoft Gains Technical-Computing Toehold! (CNET News.com ...: That's exactly what happened in the case of the South Florida Water Management District, which is using Windows CCS to power a modest-size five-server cluster that computes water flow to as part of a multibillion-dollar habitat restoration project in the Everglades National Park. The group also has a much larger Linux cluster, but the group also had Windows-based modeling tools that they moved easily to the cluster, said Akin Owosina, program manager for the district's Interagency Modeling Center.

[LinuxSpace Your linux and unix community] LONG [News Digest] Mark Kent Linux News Digest for the ...: browser is V8, a high-performance JavaScript virtual machine that was | developed by a team of specialists in Denmark. Although Chrome's performance | beats the current stable version of Firefox, benchmarks show that Mozilla's ...

[VB Helper] VB Helper: Karen Watterson's Archived Destinations and Diversions ...: Ecco's January 2005 Scientific American column challenges us to a game of "four 4s." According to Dennis Shasha, "the idea is that you want to set up an arithmetic expression to give you as many consecutive integers as possible using the digit 4 alone, at most four times. For example, you can get 1 by dividing 4 by itself and 2 by taking the square root of 4." You can use the standard arithmetic operators, parentheses, exponentiation, square root, concatenation, decimal, decimal repeat, and factorial.

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