S.H.O.D.A.N.
world
The Bureau of Meteorology and the ANU will each receive a supercomputing cluster, cumulatively worth $30 million dollars, to be fully online within the next 4 years.
The ANU one will be the fastest supercomputer in the southern hemisphere and in the top 30 in the world. Sun Microsystems (known for Java and Solaris) will be providing them, and they will operate on entirely Open Source software.
The BoM cluster will be used for increased modelling accuracy (including things like bush fires) as well as modelling parallelism (computing both climate and weather at once instead of one or the other), while the ANU cluster will be used for crunching data from the BoM computer as well as things like photonics, nanotech and molecular biology data (for e.g. Alzheimer's disease).
Score one Australia's scientific community.
Source (worth reading): Weather supercomputer announced for BOM and ANU | News | News.com.au
On a related note, IBM is about to buy Sun Microsystems. Even though Sun is miniscule compared to IBM, it has a host of patents, assets, and market niches which would be invaluable to IBM. Great news.
The ANU one will be the fastest supercomputer in the southern hemisphere and in the top 30 in the world. Sun Microsystems (known for Java and Solaris) will be providing them, and they will operate on entirely Open Source software.
The BoM cluster will be used for increased modelling accuracy (including things like bush fires) as well as modelling parallelism (computing both climate and weather at once instead of one or the other), while the ANU cluster will be used for crunching data from the BoM computer as well as things like photonics, nanotech and molecular biology data (for e.g. Alzheimer's disease).
Score one Australia's scientific community.
Source (worth reading): Weather supercomputer announced for BOM and ANU | News | News.com.au
On a related note, IBM is about to buy Sun Microsystems. Even though Sun is miniscule compared to IBM, it has a host of patents, assets, and market niches which would be invaluable to IBM. Great news.
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