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Media Center & Events
Press Releases
Liquid Computing Introduces Industry’s First Interconnect Driven Server
Ottawa, Canada & Los Altos, CA – October 12th, 2005 – Liquid Computing
Corp., developer of a new class of scalable computing systems for high performance
computing, announced today the availability of the Alpha version of its LiquidIQ™ server, the industry’s first Interconnect Driven
Server.
Today’s computing systems are slowed down by system bottlenecks caused by
disaggregated communications equipment and system control software. Industry
users and government researchers have an increased demand for more processing
resources, higher bandwidth, lower latency, more memory and I/O channels, but
all at an optimized price and performance level. Liquid Computing has
recognized that organizations are faced with cluster configurations that cannot
cost effectively scale due to inefficiencies within the underlying
communications networks.
Liquid Computing has designed a server that far exceeds the performance and
scalability levels of legacy vector machines and today’s commodity clusters but
at a dramatically lower cost. LiquidIQ™ delivers a set
of managed computing and communications resources that can be configured with
software commands into one or several cluster configurations, shared memory or
cache coherent server regions.
Industry analysts have observed a dramatic increase in smaller cluster
configurations in the high performance computing (HPC) market. This deployment
model has proven to be ineffective as it raises a set of management challenges,
duplicates tasks and lowers the overall productivity of deployed processors
inside an organization. Liquid Computing is enabling users to experience the
benefits of high performance computing without compromise.
“The move to a consolidated server module is inevitable as the demand for
servers that enable cost-effective, faster, more responsive and customized
computing continues to increase. Other markets such as storage and voice have
already witnessed the benefits of consolidating redundant technologies,” said
Brian Hurley, CEO of Liquid Computing. “Liquid Computing is offering companies
the opportunity to achieve higher scalability, performance and productivity
levels that were previously not affordable to them. Our servers will change the
way computing systems are designed.”
This underlying convergence of computing and communications resources
requires several requisite technologies and services that form the basis of the
Interconnect Driven Server (IDS) architecture. These include:
• A fault tolerant interconnect;
• Virtualization & quality of service control;
• Autonomic control services;
• Policy driven resource management;
• Extensibility framework.
The sum of these requisite elements allows users to instantly marshal
computing, memory, IPC communications and I/O resources into highly available
and scalable servers that dynamically change to deliver any computing or
communications task at best economics.
The Alpha version of LiquidIQ™ is currently going
through a set of tests with several industry performance benchmarks and hands
on field-testing to be announced shortly.
“We anticipate Liquid Computing will provide us with a single system
platform to address our HPC and enterprise computing challenges,” said Mark
Hargrove, senior vice president of operations and CIO of DigitalGlobe.
“We are pleased with the progress we have already seen and look forward to
witnessing performance results under load early next year.”
High performance computing (HPC) systems are positioned for long-term growth
and the market is expected to grow 6.5% annually over the next five years
(IDC). The enterprise market is also expected to make a shift towards a
consolidated model. Liquid Computing is converging computing and communications
networks to introduce a disruptive change in the HPC and enterprise markets.
The company is addressing these markets’ key communications and control
challenges with a scalable computing solution.
Supercomputing 2005
Liquid Computing will be featuring the alpha Alpha
version of LiquidIQ™ at Supercomputing 2005 this
November in Seattle
http://sc05.supercomputing.org/. The demonstration unit will also feature third
party simulation software. Liquid Computing’s CTO
Mike Kemp will be giving a presentation entitled “HPC Developers Beware: Know
Thy Networks” on Tuesday November 15 at 10:30 a.m. in room 617.
About Liquid Computing
Liquid Computing Corporation is first to deliver a new class of computer system called LiquidIQ™ to meet the needs of scalable computing users within Enterprise High Performance Computing and Software as a Service markets. LiquidIQ™ is an Interconnect Driven Server that delivers a set of managed computing and communications resources. It can be configured with software commands into one or several cluster configurations, shared memory or cache coherent server regions at best lifecycle economics and uncompromising performance, scalability and availability. For more information, visit www.liquidcomputing.com.
All trademarks herein are property of their respective owners.
For more information:
Corporate
Robert Saric
Liquid Computing
613-592-2666 ext 307
robert.saric@liquidcomputing.com
Media
Cerys Goodall
High Road Communications
613-236-0909 ext 309
cgoodall@highroad.com
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