SGI Announces Highlights and Key Customer Wins for Third Quarter
MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif., April 19 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Silicon
Graphics (NYSE:SGI) recently completed the third quarter of its
fiscal year 2005, which included key global sales wins across
target markets, expanded alliances with important partners, and
several strategic product introductions. High Performance Systems
-- Servers and Storage During the quarter, SGI introduced three
significant high performance computing (HPC) products including two
new midrange cluster solutions based on the SGI(R) Altix(R) 350:
the factory-integrated SGI(R) Altix(R) 1350 Cluster, and the SGI(R)
Altix(R) Hybrid Cluster solution; as well as the SGI(R)
InfiniteStorage TP9700, the industry's first 4 gigabits per second
Fibre Channel storage array. In addition, SGI announced that 12 new
storage-centric resellers around the globe had joined the SGI
channel program to offer customers the benefits of highly scalable
storage solutions. Among the SGI Altix and SGI(R) InfiniteStorage
customer wins this quarter were: -- Pharmaceutical giant
AstraZeneca International's research team in Molndal, Sweden, is
focused on developing new drugs and treatments for gastrointestinal
and cardiovascular diseases and conditions. To accelerate its
R&D efforts, AstraZeneca purchased a 32-processor SGI(R)
Altix(R) system outfitted with 64GB of memory to drive such HPC
applications as Gaussian, AMBER and Gamess. The Altix system's
global shared-memory architecture will make it easier for
AstraZeneca researchers to work with increasingly large models and
data sets. -- German car manufacturer AUDI AG in Ingolstadt,
Germany, will intensify its efforts to numerically simulate the
cooling effects of engine compartment air flow by using a CAE
solution environment based on SGI Altix 350 systems and SGI
InfiniteStorage technology. To optimize aerodynamics between the
increasingly dense packaged components under a car's front hood,
the company ordered an Altix 350 cluster with 32 Intel(R)
Itanium(R) 2 processors and 64GB of memory for running their
computational fluid dynamics (CFD) codes Star-CD and MLET, as well
as a four-processor Altix 350 with 48GB memory for simulation pre-
and post- processing. Audi also purchased two SGI(R) TP9100
systems. The storage solution gives Audi a redundant, highly
available repository for model input data and simulation results.
With the Altix cluster, Audi engineers will be able to run 32
processors in a Linux(R) OS-based single system image
configuration, giving large problems complete access to the entire
available memory, or allowing engineers to run several smaller jobs
in parallel. SGI won the Audi bid against Opteron processor-based
cluster systems. -- The Australian Partnership for Advanced
Computing (APAC) is responsible for the national HPC facility in
Australia that supports complex scientific analysis and computation
applications for a broad range of research. To remain on the
cutting edge of HPC technology, APAC purchased a 1,536-processor
SGI(R) Altix(R) 3000 supercluster with 3TB of memory, a
128-processor SGI Altix 3000 system with 512GB of memory, and
another 16-processor Altix 3000 server with 32GB of memory. SGI(R)
InfiniteStorage Shared Filesystem CXFS(TM), a total of 120TB of
Fibre Channel JBOD local storage, and SGI(R) TP9500 completed the
installation. Key features of SGI's successful proposal were the
ability to provide large-node systems running SUSE(R) LINUX
Enterprise Server 9 operating environment, the performance of
Itanium 2 processors, and the ability of SGI to deliver a high
performance shared filesystem capable of supporting large
cross-partition applications and efficient access to information.
-- To run a variety of scientific applications, mainly in
theoretical chemistry and physics, Centre for Scientific Computing,
University of Aarhus, Denmark (CSCAA), acquired a 64-processor SGI
Altix system. CSCAA selected the SGI system because of the best
price/performance and the Altix system's powerful global
shared-memory architecture, along with the CSCAA's successful
working relationship with SGI. -- To provide additional news and
sports channels and more features for its new 24-hour news channel,
Czech Television (CT) public service television in the Czech
Republic has purchased additional SGI InfiniteStorage systems,
third-party hardware and software, and integration services from
SGI Professional Services for completion of the second phase of its
SGI server-based newsroom. On air since January 2004, the Digital
News Production System (DNPS) will soon include a file serving
solution based on an SGI TP9500 system, SGI(R) InfiniteStorage
RM610 system, SGI InfiniteStorage TP900, and an SGI(R) Origin(R)
350. This phase is expected to be completed in May 2005. SGI
designed the overall digital architecture and is integrating key
multi- vendor technologies including Ardendo LowRes transcode and
browse and desktop editing systems, Aveco Master Control, Media
Management and Clip Contribution Manager system (for clip exchange
over IP between 16 Czech TV regional offices), 11 Pinnacle(R)
Liquid(TM) blue editors in Prague, and 16 Liquid purple editors for
regional stations. The additional just-purchased storage will
enable faster search and reuse of content and provide a robust
central storage with easy, scalable growth and increased bandwidth
for the all-digital workflow. -- Seeking to expand one of the
world's most advanced, workflow-efficient news and sports broadcast
facilities to include television program production, Danish
Broadcasting Corporation (DR) again turned to SGI compute power and
integration expertise, as it has done since the SGI and DR digital
conversion pilot program began in 1999. For this new stage, SGI, as
prime contractor, is currently halfway through the process of
enabling DR's asset management and archive system (co- developed by
SGI, Ardendo and DR) to handle workflow for program production
which includes SGI integration of 300 Avid DNA-based editing
systems. The purchase also includes integrating a third SGI TP9500
system, doubling the central SGI server system to 24 and 48
processor systems, doubling network and Fibre Channel connections,
delivering and integrating 15 Ardendo Ardcap dual-channel SDI/SDTI
ingest systems and SGI video servers for studio productions, and
developing ingest applications that support Panasonic P2 cameras.
-- EarthData International, LLC (EarthData), a remote sensing,
mapping, and GIS services organization based in Frederick,
Maryland, purchased an SGI InfiniteStorage highly available storage
area network (SAN) solution with almost 50TB of Serial ATA storage.
EarthData chose SGI because of their proven performance and
scalability in data-intensive applications. The SAN solution will
be used to increase the efficiency and cost effectiveness of
collecting and transforming information about the earth's surface
into spatially accurate mapping and GIS products for use in either
GIS or design and engineering environments. -- To speed up MPEG-2
ingest capabilities and handle greater amounts of data, France
Televisions Publicite (FTP), the advertising-production subsidiary
of national broadcaster France Televisions, purchased an additional
SGI Media Server(TM) broadcast system for its central facility in
Paris. FTP delivers advertising content to three main channels --
France 2, France 3 and France 5 -- in addition to sixteen thematic
channels and twenty two regional channels. Overwhelmed by the
amount of videotape and the inherent problems of physically
shipping it and storing it, FTP chose SGI two years ago to
transform its production to an all-digital environment. Its
IT-based workflow -- digitally ingesting commercial spot content,
editing specific commercial break sequences, and delivering content
directly from the central location to the transmission servers --
was specifically designed to allow for last-minute schedule changes
that are impossible with a tape-based system. From ingest, video
content is distributed as data files to smaller SGI Media Server
systems, which provide playout services for the spots at the local
transmission facilities. FTP uses an all- digital, disk-based
architecture for commercial playout. It runs on SGI Origin servers
with two Sony(R) PetaSite(R) systems, SGI Media Server for
broadcast systems, SGI CXFS shared filesystem, SGI data migration
facility (DMF) and other support equipment. -- Frazer-Nash, a
leading systems and engineering technology consultancy for the
defense, transport, industrial and energy sectors, conducts
advanced analysis to confirm product designs and to shorten product
development cycles. The UK-based company purchased an
eight-processor, 16GB Altix 350 server over a "white box" PC
cluster after recognizing the Altix system's price/performance
advantages and capabilities of SGI's global shared-memory
architecture. -- The French Ministry of Defense (DGA/CTSN),
requiring a solution capable of computing and managing large-scale,
memory-intensive problems, selected SGI server and storage
solutions for a variety of classified projects. DGA/CTSN purchased
a 32-processor SGI Altix 3000 system with 128GB of memory
integrated with a SGI(R) TP9300 array. DGA/CTSN selected SGI over
competing systems after benchmark tests revealed SGI's leading
price/performance advantages. -- To handle growing chemistry data
sets and further expand its HPC resources available to more than
800 researchers throughout Mississippi, the Mississippi Center for
Supercomputing Research extended its SGI Altix installation with an
additional 128 Itanium 2 processors and 128GB of memory, as well as
5.8TB of storage. The new additions build on the center's existing
64-processor SGI Altix system with 64GB of memory. -- Pirelli Labs,
the excellence research and development center of Italy's Pirelli
& C. S.p.A. will use SGI server and storage technologies as
tools for its advanced activities in the field of photonics and new
materials. Pirelli, one of the world's leading makers of tires and
advanced solutions for telecommunications, will drive its
leading-edge design and analysis efforts with a milestone system:
the 1,500th SGI Altix server sold worldwide. The Milan, Italy-based
facility purchased a 16-processor Altix 350 server with 32GB of
memory, along with a SGI TP9300 solution to provide efficient
management and access to design and analysis data. Together the SGI
solutions will help Pirelli engineers conduct computational fluid
dynamics and finite element analysis on new products and materials.
(see today's related announcement
http://www.sgi.com/company_info/newsroom/press_releases/2005/april/sgi_pirelli
.html) -- Israel's SemiConductor Devices (SCD), a manufacturer of
infrared detectors and high-power laser diodes, requires HPC
solutions to drive complex finite element modeling applications
such as ANSYS. SCD selected a six-processor SGI Altix 350 server
with 32GB of memory over competing solutions from HP. Leading
performance, along with the Altix system's global shared-memory
architecture and support for industry- standard technologies such
as Linux and Itanium 2 processors, were key criteria in the sale.
-- To meet explosive data growth and performance demands, SonyDADC,
a manufacturer of CD and DVDs for Sony and other content
distributors, purchased a highly-available, shared filesystem,
storage area network (SAN) configuration with tiered storage and
data lifecycle management capabilities. This Fibre Channel RAID,
Serial ATA and tape environment of over 100TB is forecast to be
500TB within 3 years, and all data is instantly available to all
systems without copies thanks to the CXFS shared filesystem.
SonyDADC chose the SGI InfiniteStorage solution because it
cost-effectively met their current and future requirements for
performance, scalability, openness and flexibility for growth. --
To speed the design and analysis of new and safer automobiles, Tata
Motors Limited, India's number one automobile manufacturer,
purchased an array of SGI servers, storage and visualization
systems. Tata plans to design complete car parts and assemblies by
leveraging the power and high-bandwidth system architecture of
several Silicon Graphics Fuel(R) workstations and dual-processor
Silicon Graphics(R) Tezro(R) systems. It will continue running its
Product Lifecycle Management solution on the newly acquired
12-processor SGI(R) Onyx(R) visualization system and
eight-processor Altix 3000 system with 16GB of memory and SGI
TP9100 solution. Tata also purchased a high-density 64-processor
Altix 3000 system with 512GB of memory and a TP9100 solution to
enable more detailed virtual crash tests and other analyses to
speed time to market and minimize operational costs. A longtime SGI
customer, Tata selected the SGI solutions over competing products
and will integrate them with its existing SGI installation at its
R&D facility. Among the key determinants in the sale were SGI's
NUMAflex(TM) shared-memory system architecture, a broadly scalable
64-bit Linux operating environment, and the powerful Itanium 2
processor architecture. -- The University of Minnesota
Supercomputing Institute pursues some of the most complex computing
challenges in the world, with researchers aggressively working to
break new ground in a broad range of disciplines, from
computational genetics and biology to atmospheric sciences. To
further those efforts and to accommodate single problems large
enough to require up to 128 processors at once, the institute
acquired a high-density, 256-processor Altix 3000 system with 512GB
of memory, which has been integrated via InfiniBand(TM) with the
facility's existing 128-processor Altix 350 installation and 48-
processor Altix 3000 system. The new system was made available to
users less than three days after it arrived. -- The Bioinformatics
Research Group at the University of Ulster in Coleraine, Northern
Ireland, applies the latest technology to a broad range of study
disciplines, including post-genomics and systems biology analyses,
gene regulation modeling, molecular science and engineering,
analysis of gene expression and protein unfolding simulation data,
and projects with local impact, such as investigations into the
prevalence of Vitamin D deficiency in Ireland. To further power its
research efforts, the University purchased a 64-processor SGI Altix
3000 system. Visualization Systems Since its release last October,
the Silicon Graphics Prism(TM) visualization system has been
eagerly adopted by leaders in technical and scientific
visualization. Growing acceptance by the manufacturing, sciences,
energy, and government and defense industries continued during the
third quarter and has set the stage for existing SGI application
developer-partners to optimize their industry-leading software for
the Silicon Graphics Prism visualization system. Also during the
third quarter, SGI and Northrop Grumman Corporation announced a
cooperative agreement to provide visualization solutions for
customers in the U.S. Department of Defense, the U.S. Intelligence
community, the U.S. Missile Defense Agency and the U.S. Department
of Homeland Security. Among the Prism and visualization technology
customer orders this quarter were: -- Beijing Union Technology Co.
Ltd., to boost its visualization and data storage and management
capabilities for security surveillance applications, purchased an
SGI(R) Onyx(R) 350 visualization system with 12 processors and
three graphics pipes, and integrated with a 10TB SGI
InfiniteStorage SAN featuring the SGI CFXS shared filesystem. By
implementing CXFS, the company can efficiently share data across
all of its computing platforms, including Sun and Windows NT
systems. -- The Louisiana Immersive Technologies Enterprise (LITE)
is a joint project by the State of Louisiana, the Lafayette
Economic Development Authority, and the University of Louisiana at
Lafayette. When it opens in February of 2006, LITE will give
Louisiana businesses and research universities a chance to use SGI
compute, storage and visualization systems that will provide LITE
users with multiple immersive environments capable of engaging
workgroups of one to hundreds of participants. Located on the
campus of the University of Louisiana at Lafayette, the $20
million, 70,000-square-foot LITE complex will be co- named the SGI
Center for Innovative Research and Advanced Visualization. The
facility will feature one of the most comprehensive and tightly
integrated installations of SGI technology ever assembled,
including: a 10-by-10-by-10-foot immersive visualization cube
driven by a Silicon Graphics Prism(TM) visualization system with 16
Itanium(R) 2 processors and six ATI(R) graphics pipes; one of the
world's largest SGI(R) Reality Center(R) installations driven by a
second 16-processor Silicon Graphics Prism visualization system
with six graphics pipes; a compact lecture theater featuring
interactive dual DLP(TM) projectors driven by one of the two
Silicon Graphics Prism systems; a conference room with a
transportable SGI Reality Center fed by the facility's two SGI
visualization systems; 22 Altix 350 servers, each powered by 16
Itanium 2 processors; and a SAN with the CXFS shared file system
built on 8TB of SGI TP9500 Fibre Channel RAID (see today's related
announcement
http://www.sgi.com/company_info/newsroom/press_releases/2005/april/leda.html).
-- To meet the computational demands of ever-larger data sets for
seismic processing and interpretation, Marathon Oil Company, a
long-time SGI customer, selected SGI HPC and visualization
technology in support of its worldwide exploration activities.
Marathon purchased a 64-processor upgrade to an existing SGI Altix
192-processor SGI Altix 3000 system (for a total of 256 processors)
and an SGI Visual Area Networking (VAN) solution comprised of an
eight-processor Silicon Graphics Prism system with 96GB memory and
four ATI graphics pipes, an SGI Onyx system as well as four SGI
Vizserver(TM) licenses for a VAN implementation. To provide the
necessary storage of all technical computing data and make it
instantly available on a SAN, Marathon also purchased CXFS shared
filesystem licenses, 12.5TB of additional storage and additional
SAN infrastructure. Marathon chose the CXFS filesystem because it
allows for shared storage across a heterogeneous file system.
Although clusters were considered, the Silicon Graphics Prism
system's Itanium 2 processors running the Linux OS offered the
performance needed for large memory and fast processing. SGI's
global shared-memory architecture proved very important to
Marathon's decision for the solution's ease of use, scalable
upgrade capabilities and ability to visualize large 3D datasets for
more accurate well drilling. -- The Norwegian Defence Research
Establishment (FFI), the main research institute for Norwegian
defense, acquired a Silicon Graphics Prism visualization system
with two graphics pipes, four Itanium 2 processors and 4GB of
memory for development of visualization solutions that enable
concept studies and virtual tests of new prototypes. Vital to the
selection of SGI over standard PC-based graphics solutions were the
Silicon Graphics Prism system's leading performance, shared-memory
architecture, high internal bandwidth, and support for a standard
64- bit Linux environment. -- To meet growing capacity and
performance demands caused by the explosion in 2K and 4K film data
-- and to keep that data always available in real-time for
producers and artists -- Pacific Title & Art Studio installed
the SGI InfiniteStorage TP9700 Fibre Channel array from SGI and
Engenio Information Technologies. Since implementing the industry's
first storage array equipped with a 4Gb/second Fibre Channel
interface, Pacific Title's SAN infrastructure sees performance
results that are 1.5 times faster. In addition, the SGI TP9700
provides 1.6GB/s of sustained throughput to meet the scanning
demands of 4K film, which requires 1.3GB/s. Data throughput and
storage demands of scanning negatives into digital format, creating
visual effects, performing film restoration and archiving have
grown rapidly, leading Pacific Title to this new cutting-edge
expansion of their existing SGI heterogeneous SAN infrastructure,
which incorporates SGI TP9500 2Gb/s Fibre Channel arrays from SGI
and Engenio, SGI Onyx visualization systems and SGI Origin servers
for Linux and Windows clients. With the addition of SGI TP9700
4Gb/s technology, Pacific Title is able store and move data without
bottlenecks, allowing the studio to deliver 2005 blockbuster
projects such as the Fantastic Four, Elektra and War of the Worlds
ahead of schedule, avoid overtime costs which occur when producers
and artists cannot access data, and meet the future demands of the
film industry. -- For its work on experimental fusion devices,
Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL) turned to SGI technology
for the computational capabilities to support huge simulations and
the graphics power to visualize and analyze those simulations on
its 12-ft. display wall. PPPL, a collaborative national center for
plasma and fusion science managed by Princeton University for the
U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, needed the
interactivity and high-performance visualization that few in the
visual systems industry could support. Because its cluster was
inadequate for scientists to explore their data, PPPL was attracted
to the Silicon Graphics Prism system's shared memory capability and
scalability. PPPL needs the power to visualize terabytes of data,
and soon 10TB and beyond, generated from SIDAC (Scientific
Discovery through Advanced Computing) codes, which have the
potential to produce terabytes to petabytes of data per simulation.
PPPL's initial SGI configuration includes a 16-processor SGI 350
system used for HPC and a 6-processor Silicon Graphics Prism system
with four graphics pipes feeding the visualization wall's eight
projectors. The Prism system is delivering immediate interactivity
and greatly increased power using industry-standard components.
SILICON GRAPHICS | The Source of Innovation and Discovery(TM) SGI,
also known as Silicon Graphics, Inc., is the world's leader in
high- performance computing, visualization and storage. SGI's
vision is to provide technology that enables the most significant
scientific and creative breakthroughs of the 21st century. Whether
it's sharing images to aid in brain surgery, finding oil more
efficiently, studying global climate, providing technologies for
homeland security and government defense, or enabling the
transition from analog to digital broadcasting, SGI is dedicated to
addressing the next class of challenges for scientific, engineering
and creative users. With offices worldwide, the company is
headquartered in Mountain View, Calif., and can be found on the Web
at http://www.sgi.com/. This news release contains forward-looking
statements regarding the sale of products, SGI technologies and
third-party technologies that are subject to risks and
uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially
from those described in such statements. The reader is cautioned
not to rely unduly on these forward-looking statements, which are
not a guarantee of future performance. Such risks and uncertainties
include financial and contractual commitments, timely delivery of
hardware and software, the installation and performance of hardware
and software, reliance on performance of third-party partners, the
sustained performance of current and future products, the ability
to integrate and support a complex technology solution involving
multiple providers, acceptance of the system by the customer, and
other risks detailed from time to time in the company's most recent
SEC reports. Silicon Graphics, SGI, Altix, Onyx, Origin, Reality
Center, XFS, the SGI cube and the SGI logo are registered
trademarks and CXFS, NUMAflex, Vizserver, InfiniteStorage, Media
Server, Silicon Graphics Fuel, Silicon Graphics Prism and The
Source of Innovation and Discovery are trademarks of Silicon
Graphics, Inc., in the United States and/or other countries
worldwide. Intel and Itanium are trademarks or registered
trademarks of Intel Corporation or its subsidiaries in the United
States and other countries. Linux is a registered trademark of
Linus Torvalds in several countries. All other trademarks mentioned
herein are the property of their respective owners. MEDIA CONTACT
Caroline Japic 650-933-7777 SGI PR HOTLINE 650.933.7777 SGI PR
FACSIMILE 650.933.0283 DATASOURCE: Silicon Graphics CONTACT:
Caroline Japic of Silicon Graphics, +1-650-933-7777 or ; SGI PR
HOTLINE, +1-650-933-7777, or SGI PR FACSIMILE, +1-650-933-0283 Web
site: http://www.sgi.com/
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