Published:
IBM Offers High Performance Computing Outside the Lab
New BladeCenter QS22 Delivers Supercomputing Power for Everything From Financial Trading to Oil-Field Discovery

Driven by growing commercial need in areas such
as financial services, digital media creation and medical imaging, IBM
(NYSE: IBM) today expanded its High Performance Computing (HPC)
capabilities for businesses with the introduction of the IBM®
BladeCenter® QS22 -- a new, economical supercomputing technology inspired
by advanced scientific research facilities.
The heart of the QS22 is a new processor compliant with the Cell Broadband
Engine(TM) (Cell/B.E.) Architecture, originally developed by IBM, Sony and
Toshiba to provide the computing power for cutting-edge gaming
applications. And for the most challenging arithmetic operations, this new
processor, the IBM PowerXCell(TM) 8i, offers five-times the speed of the
original Cell/B.E. processor.
Coupled with additions like 16-times more memory (up to 32GB) than its
predecessors, the QS22 can handle workloads that previously required dozens
of servers. As an example, for a physician, that could mean finding and
diagnosing a tumor in seconds instead of hours.
IBM has built a strong ecosystem around the new QS22 to address critical
real-time analytic and imaging projects, with over 20 IBM business partners
to enable key solutions for the Cell/B.E. technology and 35 universities to
provide in-depth curriculum and resources. In total, these investments
create an environment where HPC innovations can easily be introduced into
the market, and a wider spectrum of businesses can take advantage of its
unique capabilities and potential. Already, more than 50 customers
worldwide are moving significant workloads to the QS22. For example:
-- Threshold Animation Studios, with the help of IBM, plans on changing
the way animated movies and visual effects are made... forever. Today,
creating visual effects and animation is a long and labor-intensive process
where key creative decisions are often being made without a complete
visualization of the final result. This in turn leads to multiple versions
of a shot until a suitable result is achieved. Using the QS22 technology,
Threshold's goal is to create a real-time visualization system that will
show producers and directors a close approximation of the final product at
nearly any stage of the production -- enabling efficiencies in the
production pipeline that were once thought impossible.
-- Platform Computing's 'Symphony' offers a reliable and scalable HPC
infrastructure for performing lightning-fast, pre- and post-trade
analytics. Coupled with the new QS22, traders can run portfolio simulations
much faster -- reducing time-to-results by up to 80 percent. In addition,
this tightly integrated solution facilitates rapid and easy deployment of
sophisticated analytical applications to mission-critical trading
environments.
-- The ultra-high-speed communications capabilities of the new QS22 means
Simudyne can create and run vastly improved visual, immersive, real-time
simulations. These simulations offer significant potential benefits to
companies in petroleum exploration and many other industries. Simudyne's
simulation platform is specifically designed to assist in hydrocarbon
exploration by growing algorithms that help speed up seismic surveys,
optimize complex logistics networks and create software that improves
according to the same principles that drive adaptation in natural systems.
The New Enterprise Data Center
According to technology analyst firm Gartner, more than 70 percent of
Global 1000 companies will need to dramatically change their data centers
in the next five years -- as they are running out of power and space, while
managing skyrocketing energy and cooling costs. In response, IBM is
helping clients develop a new enterprise data center, which offers dramatic
improvements in IT efficiency and provides for rapid deployment of new IT
services to support future business growth. IBM is helping clients move to
new enterprise data centers by focusing on best practice around
virtualization, highly efficient IT, service management and cloud
computing.
The QS22 was designed from the ground-up as a key element of this new
enterprise data center initiative. For development, the QS22 boasts an open
environment, utilizing the flexibility of Red Hat Enterprise Linux as the
primary operating system and the open development environment of Eclipse.
For energy efficiency, it increases the performance-per-watt and better
manages power draw from the overall server chassis from previous
generations, thanks to some key built-in features:
-- The IBM Power Configurator helps systems managers understand the
overall power requirements for operation.
-- The IBM Systems Director Active Energy Manager helps monitor, control
and virtualize the system's power.
-- The IBM Rear Door Heat eXchanger reduces data center hot spots.
-- The IBM Data Center Energy Efficiency services optimize and future-
proof a data center for maximum performance.
In addition, IBM has made available thousands of pages of technical
documentation on the Cell/B.E. Architecture to the public, including a
free, full-system simulator. IBM has released an upgrade to its Software
Development Kit (SDK) for Multicore Acceleration v3, providing enhancements
and templates to enable clients to utilize the new features of QS22.
The new QS22 complements all other IBM BladeCenter offerings, such as those
based on Intel® Xeon®, AMD Opteron(TM) and IBM Power(TM) processors.
IBM BladeCenter is the broadest portfolio of blade offerings in the
industry, designed to address a range of client environments like those for
small and medium business, telecommunications and -- with the QS22 in
particular -- high performance computing. By utilizing the PowerXCell 8i
processor, the QS22 also allows IT managers to evaluate how much of an
application would need the supercomputing power of the Cell/B.E.
Architecture and how much could remain on a traditional system, providing
the full range of options in the midst of other system priorities.
"The QS22 is a technological leap over the physical limitations of
traditional processors that often dampen the ability of organizations to
reach their goals," said Jim Comfort, vice president, IBM Systems &
Technology Group. "IBM has delivered on the promise of integrating HPC into
the business world in a way that allows developers, clients and IT
departments to ramp up quickly and get results without delay."
All in the HPC Family
The QS22 is part of a robust family of HPC products at IBM, all designed to
deliver a holistic approach to computing that involves designing and
delivering the fastest, highly efficient, easily accessible technical
solutions to clients. From the Cell Broadband Engine Architecture-based
BladeCenter QS22 to the Blue Gene supercomputer, to products like IBM's
Power Systems, industry standard clusters and high-performance System
Storage, the HPC family at IBM is the result of a rich history of discovery
and award-winning innovation.
The QS22 will be available in early June, while the SDK for Multicore
Acceleration v3 is available now.
About IBM
For more information on the BladeCenter QS22, visit
http://www-03.ibm.com/systems/info/bladecenter/qs22/index.html.
For more information on the Cell Broadband Engine, visit
http://www.ibm.com/technology/cell.
For more information on IBM's High Performance Computing portfolio, visit
http://www.ibm.com/deepcomputing.
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IBM, BladeCenter, PowerXCell 8i, Blue Gene and Power Systems are trademarks
of International Business Machines Corp. in the United States, other
countries or both.
Cell Broadband Engine is a trademark of Sony Computer Entertainment Inc.,
in the United States, other countries, or both, and is used under license
there from.
Other company, product or service names may be trademarks or service marks
of others.
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