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Dell Clusters Aid the University of Utah In Researching
The university's Center for the Simulation of Accidental Fires and Explosions (C-SAFE) will use the cluster to provide government and corporations with insights into the safety of storing and handling chemicals and hazardous materials. C-SAFE is a program created by the Department of Energy's (DOE) Accelerated Strategic Computing Initiative (ASCI) to integrate large, complex computer models for solving the nation's critical scientific and engineering problems. According to new research by industry analyst firm International Data Corp., deployments like those at the University of Utah add to the growing number of organizations buying standards-based supercomputing clusters from Dell. The firm recently recognized Dell as the leading provider of Intel-based Linux technical clusters in the first and second quarters of 2002 with approximately 40 percent of the worldwide market. (1) "Before we deployed the Dell HPCC solution we executed almost all of our simulations on proprietary supercomputers, primarily those provided by the DOE ASCI program," said Steve Parker, research assistant professor, The University of Utah. "The price and performance of the Dell cluster enables us to bring more of our research onsite for development before performing even larger simulations on the ASCI framework." Russ Holt, vice president and general manager of Dell's Enterprise Systems Group, said the tens of thousands of systems that Dell has deployed to date is evidence of the steady growth in the use of high-performance clusters to replace traditional supercomputers. "Accidental fire and explosion prevention is yet another example of beneficial research that can be accomplished through Dell HPCC solutions," he said. The cluster consists of 128 Dell PowerEdge 2650 servers with dual Intel Xeon processors running Red Hat Linux. The University of Utah will use the PowerEdge servers to process up to nine terabytes of data involved in a range of accident scenarios, such as those resulting from jet-fuel fire after an airplane crash or the ignition of chemicals in a containment building. (1) According to IDC's Worldwide MidRange and High Performance Server Overview report, the Intel/Linux technical cluster market reached $86 million in Q102 and $116 million in Q202.
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