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Technology Stocks : Ascend Communications (ASND)
ASND 202.23-4.2%Dec 2 3:59 PM EST

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To: Jeff Jordan who wrote (18654)10/22/1997 1:13:00 PM
From: Glenn D. Rudolph  Read Replies (1) of 61433
 
World's Most Powerful Commercially Available Supercomputer Achieves Crucial Results in Weather, Chemistry, Materials Science At Cray Research's Facilities PR Newswire - October 22, 1997 11:46 SGI %CPR %PDT V%PRN P%PRN EAGAN, Minn., Oct. 22 /PRNewswire/ -- Cray Research, the supercomputing subsidiary of Silicon Graphics, today announced that the world's most powerful commercially available supercomputer ever delivered, a CRAY T3E-900(TM) system, recently achieved milestone results on critical real-world applications in weather, materials science and chemistry research, dramatically extending the upper limits of applications performance. Scientists representing a wide range of disciplines used the 1,328- processor CRAY T3E-900 system for a three-week period before the system was shipped to an undisclosed customer site last month. Researchers using the system each ran codes that could achieve significant advancements in their fields of science and research. The codes were ported quickly and achieved crucial results in little time. "The CRAY T3E(TM) line of supercomputers gives our customers access to unprecedented levels of scalability," said Irene Qualters, president of Cray Research and senior vice president of Silicon Graphics. "By providing time on this enormous CRAY T3E-900 system to researchers, we are not only giving scientists the chance to achieve significant results, we're also demonstrating the practical, real-world uses of parallel systems with more than a thousand processors." Researchers used the system to run real-world applications at unmatched levels of performance. Performance data for several specific applications will be released during the next couple of weeks. For Dr. Kelvin Droegemeier, director of the Center for Analysis and Prediction of Storms (CAPS) at the University of Oklahoma, the CRAY T3E-900 supercomputer enabled improvements in work with the Advanced Regional Prediction System (ARPS), the state-of-the-art storm prediction computer model. The work was an extension of research previously pursued at the Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center on another Cray(R) system. "In meteorology, getting fast results is critical," Droegemeier said. "The time we spent on this huge CRAY T3E-900 system gave us valuable insight into how we can extend our predictions from 30 minutes to up to six hours. That advanced warning time will save countless lives and billions of dollars." Other organizations that used the CRAY T3E-900 system include: -- Center for Non-Linear Dynamics, University of Texas, used MGFlow to advance the study of thin films in low orbit. -- The Space Research Department, University of Michigan, used the CRAY T3E-900 system to develop the first 3-D, multi-scale model of the heliosphere. -- High Resolution Limited Area Model Consortium used HIRLAM in the creation of a numerical short-range weather forecasting system in Northern Europe. -- Los Alamos National Laboratory used the Los Alamos Terra Code in its Earth modeling research. -- Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne (EPFL) used LAUTREC to conduct molecular dynamics solutions used in medical research. -- Pacific Northwest National Labs used NWChem for its research on more scalable Gaussian chemistry. The CRAY T3E-900 system enables Cray customers to achieve results not possible with any other system. "The CRAY T3E-900 supercomputer provides an environment for very easy applications scaling, creating enormous implications for a number of industries," said Qualters. "As we move toward the future, we are going to see a number of industries, including energy and petroleum, university research and government, deploy computers of this size." Cray Research, the supercomputing subsidiary of Silicon Graphics, Inc. (NYSE: SGI), provides the leading supercomputing tools and services to help solve customers' most challenging problems. Cray is a registered trademark, and CRAY T3E and CRAY T3E-900 are trademarks, of Cray Research. Silicon Graphics is a registered trademark of Silicon Graphics, Inc. All other trademarks mentioned herein are the property of their respective owners. All Cray Research Press Materials are available on the World Wide Web via cray.com Facts on the 1,328-Processor CRAY T3E-900 System Total Number of PEs in the System 1,328 Memory Size per PE 128 MB per dedicated PE Peak System FLOPS Rate 1.195 Teraflops Cooling Technology Liquid Cooling (LC) Total Number of Cabinets 5 LC Cabinets Weight of Full LC Cabinet 4,500 pounds Total 5 Cabinet System Weight 22,500 pounds Footprint of Single LC Cabinet 40" x 83" Height of LC Cabinet 79" SOURCE Cray Research, Inc. /CONTACT: Erik Huseby, Media 612-841-6136, of Shandwick for Cray Research, Inc./ /NOTE TO EDITORS: This release, along with past Cray Research releases beginning April 19, 1995 is available by fax at no charge by calling Company News on Call at 800-758-5804 and entering the code 211550/ /Company News On-Call: prnewswire.com or fax, 800-758-5804, ext. 211550/ /Web site: cray.com (SGI)
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