SGI Announces Product and Customer Highlights for Fourth Quarter
MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif., July 28 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Silicon
Graphics (NYSE:SGI) recently completed the fourth quarter of its
fiscal year 2005, which included industry recognition and accolades
for SGI visualization, server, and storage solutions and key global
sales wins across target markets. Products and Solutions SGI
extended its family of Silicon Graphics Prism(TM) visualization
systems with a new deskside model-starting under $8,500, thus
answering the growing demand for more visualization capability in
the hands of scientists and engineers using Linux to solve problems
personal computers (PCs) can't handle. In addition, at National
Association of Broadcasters (NAB) conference in April, Silicon
Graphics Prism was named one of the Top 10 products of NAB by
Digital Cinema Report. In the high-performance computing sector,
the famed Top500 list of the world's most powerful computers, which
is complied by the University of Mannheim, University of Tennessee
and NERSC/LBNL, ranked an SGI(R) Altix(R) system as the third
fastest system on the planet, while five SGI systems ranked in the
list's top 10 percent. Also in the quarter, SGI and ESI Group
pushed scalability to new extremes, enabling users to run a crash
simulation model eight times larger than today's standard industry
practice. Once again on the leading edge of storage technology, SGI
installed the industry's first 4Gbit per second fibre channel
storage arrays, which offers two times the storage performance of
industry standard solutions. In addition, to improve data access
and workflow for manufacturing companies, SGI and MSC Software
Corporation unveiled a powerful, integrated storage solution to
streamline and accelerate virtual product development reducing the
time spend waiting for data by 27x. Customers Among the customer
highlights this quarter were: * ALSTOM, a global leader in power
generation and rail transport infrastructure, selected SGI
solutions for upgrades to its server and storage environment.
ALSTOM's facility in Vaxjo, Sweden runs complex fluid analysis
codes in the development of new gas turbine and power systems.
ALSTOM chose a 12-processor SGI(R) Altix(R) 350 server with 24GB of
memory and an SGI(R) InfiniteStorage TP900 scratch disk array over
a white box cluster based on AMD Opteron processors. * To help
Department of Defense users with their big data requirements, the
Aeronautical Systems Center Major Shared Resource Center at Wright-
Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, has enhanced its computing and
storage power with the installation of a 2.048-processor SGI Altix
supercomputer and a 130TB SGI InfiniteStorage TP9700 storage array,
the first RAID array available on the market. ASC MSRC will use the
new system to aid weapon systems design of innovative materials;
advance design concepts, improve and speed modification programs,
increase high fidelity simulations and enable more efficient tests
and evaluations. * Capital FX, one of the UK's leading
post-production companies, selected SGI InfiniteStorage as the
solution for their new digital intermediate facility, based in
London. The facility will enable the ability to complete the film
making process from the digitization of raw shot rushes, through
color grading, dust busting, editing, compositing and film write
out. Installing SGI's InfiniteStorage RM SAN with CXFS(TM), means
that Capital FX are able to centralize their digital workflow,
whilst allowing multiple operations to happen at the same time and
reducing the requirement to copy data -- critical in this market,
where a 90 minute feature film in 4k resolution generates 16TB of
data. * As part of its implementation of a digital storage and
production environment, Netherlands post-production facility CIRIS
acquired SGI storage and server solutions to enable CIRIS customers
to store, search, browse and access broadcast and other content
remotely. To provide a foundation for its Dynamic Platform project
-- the first phases focused on implementing the server and storage
infrastructure and an asset management system -- CIRIS purchased a
30TB SGI InfiniteStorage TP9300S storage array with a four-
processor, 6GB SGI Altix server, and a six-channel SGI Media
Server(TM) for broadcast solution with an InfiniteStorage array.
SGI partner Ardendo will provide media asset management components,
and will work with SGI Professional Services on custom integration
and development. * To drive seismic analysis and geophysical depth
studies at the Eni Exploration and Production Division of the
Italian energy company Eni S.p.A, SGI sold a 64-processor SGI(R)
Altix(R) 3700 supercomputer with 128GB of memory. The Altix system
offers a global shared-memory solution with support for an
industry-standard 64-bit Linux(R) operating environment capable of
scaling as a large single system. * HPC requirements at the School
of Computational Sciences at George Mason University continue to
escalate as researchers run a broad range of applications, from
complex explosion analysis codes to earth system modeling studies.
To address these needs, the University purchased an SGI Altix 3700
Bx2 supercomputer, powered by 64 processors and 128GB of memory
supported by a 10TB SGI InfiniteStorage TP9300 RAID array. The SGI
purchase represents the start of a three-year initiative to build a
high-performance computing center designed to serve faculty and
researchers in a wide variety of disciplines. * The German Federal
Waterways Engineering and Research Institute (BAW) conducts
research and development on a broad array of engineering projects
relating to Germany's federal waterways. To drive an ever-more
complex array of custom and commercial computational fluid dynamics
applications, BAW purchased two SGI Altix supercomputers, one
driven by 256 Intel(R) Itanium(R) 2 processors and the other by 48
processors. The configuration totals 304GB of globally addressable
memory and 7TB of local disk storage and is integrated into BAW's
HPC environment via SGI InfiniteStorage Shared Filesystem CXFS. *
To meet the computing power needed for building ships to safely
deliver goods and products, including liquefied petroleum products,
Hyundai Heavy Industry (HHI), the number one ship building maker in
the world with a twelve percent industry market share, has deployed
an SGI(R) Altix(R) 350 server with eight Intel Itanium 2
processors. * To share high-definition video data for news
production, the Image Graphics Department at Korea Broadcasting
System (KBS), the No. 1 nationwide broadcasting system in Korea,
selected an SGI storage area network (SAN) solution. KBS purchased
a four-processor SGI Origin 350 server, SGI InfiniteStorage Shared
Filesystem CXFS, and 5TB of SGI InfiniteStorage RM660 storage. KBS
selected SGI technology because of the SGI RM660 system's high
bandwidth and stability and, most importantly because SGI CXFS
allows file sharing among multiple vendors' non-linear editors,
including Autodesk's Discreet, Apple and Quantel systems. A long
time SGI customer, KBS also uses SGI technology to make its
broadcasts publicly available, through KBS Life Information
Archiving System, to interactive media, including the Internet,
PDAs, DMB (Digital Multimedia Broadcasting), and mobile phones. *
To achieve 3D visualization of electron microscopy data from
molecular biology, Max-Planck-Institut fur Biochemie, in
Martinsried, Germany, purchased a Silicon Graphics Prism system
with 24 Intel Itanium 2 processors, eight graphics pipes, two
compositors, and 192GB memory in mid-May. Installed in late June,
it is direct-attached to SGI InfiniteStorage TP9300, with 14 146GB
FibreChannel drives. Because of the system's unique features,
including eight graphics processors, scalability and large shared
memory, long-time SGI customer Max-Plank-Institut only considered
SGI for a high-performance data processing and visualization system
running the 64-bit Linux OS environment, a requirement for their
in-house-developed software, based on amira visualization software.
The Silicon Graphics Prism visualization system will, for the first
time, enable 3D visualization of complete data sets obtained with a
state-of-the-art electron microscope in operation at the Institute.
* McLaren Racing, the company behind Team McLaren Mercedes, designs
race cars for one of the most successful Formula One teams in
history. To generate and analyze designs that help McLaren Formula
One cars run faster than ever before, McLaren purchased a
1,256-processor SGI Altix 3700 Bx2 supercomputer with 1TB of
memory; two Silicon Graphics Prism visualization systems, each
powered by 16 processors and four graphics pipes; and a 16TB SGI
InfiniteStorage storage area network with InfiniteStorage Shared
Filesystem CXFS and VizServer(TM) capabilities. * To provide a
platform for new and more powerful ways to analyze environmental
data NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center upgraded its computing and
data management capabilities with SGI server and storage solutions.
With the new SGI systems, Goddard engineers can leverage the latest
codes from NASA to achieve a faster time-to-solution. Among the
first projects scheduled for Goddard's new SGI resources is an
initiative to reanalyze 30 years of Earth weather and climate data
captured by satellites. The Maryland-based NASA facility acquired
an additional compute and storage solution incorporating three
SGI(R) Altix(R) 3000 systems with a total of 1,024 Intel Itanium 2
processors and 2TB of global shared-memory, and the ability to
store and manage another 200TB of data via an SGI InfiniteStorage
storage area network with the SGI InfiniteStorage shared filesystem
CXFS. * As researchers throughout Ireland struggle to analyze
rapidly growing data sets, the National University of Ireland,
Galway has added to its SGI computing resources with a 24-processor
SGI Altix server and a Silicon Graphics Prism deskside
visualization system with the help from funding agencies Science
Foundation Ireland and the HEA. Working together, the two systems
will be used on a wide variety of applications ranging from bio-
medical simulations of stents and other implants, through to
astrophysical plasmas. The Prism system will assist with
collaborative data-mining and visualization problems associated
with the National Seabed Survey, allowing researchers to visually
inspect and interpret data runs. The Silicon Graphics Prism system
will also aid in the University's pursuit of other collaborative
visualization projects. * NBA Entertainment engaged SGI as a vendor
partner to create the No. 1 high-tech powerhouse in the world of
sports. Key to the relationship is the acquisition of SGI
InfiniteStorage solutions to develop a data warehouse accommodating
50TB of content, allowing NBA Entertainment's broadcast production
facility to instantly capture every play, categorize it, and store
it for fast and easy retrieval. The SGI(R) InfiniteStorage NAS 2000
solution also incorporates the StorageTek SL8500 tape library. *
ORF, Austria's public service broadcaster, offers a wide range of
TV and radio programs to its audience and produces thousands of
hours of original TV and radio programming, and receives thousands
more via satellite. ORF also operates an extensive digital archive
and Internet site. Seeking to establish a standards-based, central
editing storage infrastructure for 15 Pinnacle Systems editing
stations, ORF purchased four SGI Altix 350 mid-range servers to act
as network-attached storage (NAS) servers for a 14TB SGI
InfiniteStorage RM660 solution. Connected via SGI InfiniteStorage
shared filesystem CXFS, the 15 non-linear editing (NLE) systems
will share the storage resources, with help from SGI networked
editing software and two Omneon video servers. Eventually, 30 NLEs
will share the media data store. * One of the world's leading
defense technology companies, Qinetiq recently acquired an SGI
server and storage solution to drive complex finite element
analysis applications for designing and testing new technologies
for use in military, homeland security and commercial applications.
After an exhaustive competitive benchmarking process, Qinetiq
selected a 64-processor SGI Altix system with 256GB of RAM and a
6TB InfiniteStorage TP9300 array backed by SGI InfiniteStorage Data
Migration Facility (DMF) solution. Qinetiq also appointed SGI as
official supplier for HPC. * For developing visualization solutions
that enable concept studies and virtual tests of new prototypes
Norwegian Defense Research Establishment (FFI), the main research
institute for the Norwegian defense, acquired recently a Silicon
Graphics Prism visualization system with four Intel Itanium 2
processors, two graphics pipes and 4GB of memory. 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 current storage requirements
for scanning of 4K film and ensure scalability for future needs,
Pacific Title installed into its SAN infrastructure a second SGI(R)
InfiniteStorage TP9700 Fibre Channel array. * Saarlaendischer
Rundfunk (SR), a public broadcaster in southwestern Germany, has
awarded SGI the contract for Phase One of its transition to a
complete, integrated digital workflow for TV programming production
and play- out and archiving of TV and radio material. In June, SR
ordered four SGI Media Server for Broadcast systems, a SGI
InfiniteStorage NAS system with 22TB total storage for
online/editing storage consisting of three SGI InfiniteStorage
TP9700 systems, 27TB of near-line and tape-based storage managed by
SGI Data Migration Facility (DMF), upgradeable to 65TB in Phase 2,
and SGI networked editing software for efficient video editing
workflows to shorten time-to-air. The SGI hardware and software
will integrate with SGT media management and automation software, a
Dalet OpenMedia newsroom computer system, and six Pinnacle liquid
non-linear editing systems (an additional six editors are planned
for the second phase). Trial operation is expected to commence in
July 2006. * To address the data access, storage and management
needs generated by users of its multiple SGI supercomputers, the
High Performance Computing group at SARA, the Dutch National HPC
and Networking Center, recently purchased a 50TB SGI
InfiniteStorage TP9300S solution. More than tripling HPC's SAN
based disk storage capacity, the new acquisition will be integrated
with SARA's existing storage environment. The acquisition is part
of SARA's goal of creating a host-independent storage environment
built around its SGI SAN with CXFS and DMF, allowing hosts to be
replaced without impacting the storage environment. * The
Scientifica Italiana's Unita' per l'Analisi del Crimine Violento
Polizia, the Italian state police renowned for its ability to solve
international murders, purchased an SGI(R) Reality Center(R) for
its forensics laboratory. Believed to be the most advanced virtual
reality theater dedicated to criminal analysis, this sophisticated
computer system, will help investigators reproduce in 3D crime
scenes, re-creating everything from the path of a bullet to the
movement of a corpse with startling realism. The Reality Center is
located at Rome's RiTriDEC (Ricostruzione Tridimensionale della
Dinamica dell'Evento Criminale) laboratory. At the heart of the
Reality Center is a six-processor SGI(R) Onyx(R) 350
InfiniteReality4(TM) graphics system computer, which manages three
Barco projectors, as well as the acoustic and stereoscopic systems.
Images are displayed on an 18 x 7-foot floor-level screen, large
enough to recreate the actual crime with startling realism. *
Seimens Industrial Turbomachinery AB (SIT), in an effort to drive
ever- more-complex finite element method structural analysis and
computational fluid dynamics (CFD) analysis applications, upgraded
its existing SGI Altix supercomputer. By adding another 12 Intel
Itanium 2 processors to its existing 48-processor Altix system, SIT
is able to run an even broader range of memory-intensive
applications, while efficiently accessing and managing its data via
a previously installed 2.3TB SGI InfiniteStorage solution. *
TBWA/France, part of the global advertising giant TBWA Worldwide,
acquired SGI storage solutions to serve as a foundation for their
XINET digital asset management and workflow environment. After
evaluating products from various storage vendors, TBWA/France
selected a 4TB SGI(R) InfiniteStorage TP9300 FibreChannel array, a
7TB TP9300 Serial ATA drive array, and an 11.2TB TP9300 Serial ATA
array. In its selection process, TBWA/France sought reliable,
expandable storage and data management solutions from a vendor
capable of providing expert technical support. * The U.S.
Department of Commerce's National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration installed two 512-processor SGI Altix supercomputers
as part of the agency's Mid-Life Upgrade at NOAA's Geophysical
Fluid Dynamics Laboratory (GFDL) in Princeton, N.J. This latest
installation follows delivery in earlier this year of two
256-processor and one 512-processor SGI Altix supercomputers at
GFDL, a federal research laboratory that performs comprehensive,
long-lead- time climate research that is fundamental to the mission
of NOAA. For over 40 years, GFDL has been one of the world's
leading laboratories in using supercomputers and advanced numerical
models to better understand the meteorology and oceanography of the
planet. Raytheon Company is the prime integrator at NOAA's GFDL. *
To harness the compute power of SGI shared memory architecture and
easily port scientific codes to the open systems 64-bit Linux OS,
the Department of Information Technology and the Research Division
at Virginia Tech, in Blacksburg, VA, selected SGI compute and
visualization technology for use as centralized resources available
to all faculty and researchers. In April 2005, Virginia Tech, which
consistently ranks among the top research institutions in the U.S.,
purchased a SGI Altix high performance computer with 64 Intel
Itanium 2 processors and 256GB of memory. The system is up and
running and already 100 percent booked by faculty researchers and
graduate students, primarily in applied mathematics, high-altitude
aerospace and mechanical engineering, and quantum chemistry, which
is aiding drug discovery. Virginia Tech also purchased, in the same
month, a Silicon Graphics Prism visualization system with four
Intel Itanium 2 processors running Linux OS, 4GB of memory and two
graphics pipes, to jump start a scientific visualization initiative
for a planned immersive theater environment, and possibly a cave as
well. * Wilfrid Laurier University (WLU), one of 11 Ontario
universities on the growing Shared Hierarchical Academic Research
Computing Network (SHARCNET) grid, has chosen an SGI Altix
high-performance system that will be used for mathematical modeling
(specifically, problems in computational science and financial
mathematics requiring a large amount of memory), a variety of
scientific research projects, and to share compute resources with
other SHARCNET members. Dr. Roderick Melnik, Canada Research Chair,
also acquired a Silicon Graphics Prism visualization system with
four Intel Itanium 2 processors and two graphics pipes for
visualizing large data sets at WLU. The University requested both
the Silicon Graphics Prism system and the SGI Altix computer, with
256 GB memory and 128 Intel Itanium 2 processors, through a grant
from Canada Foundation for Innovation. * To study complex geologic
problems that active-source seismologists have not been able to
study before, Wood's Hole Oceanographic Institute (WHOI) purchased
a Silicon Graphics Prism visualization system to complement a new
ocean vessel that will collect 3D seismic data in much the same way
oil companies do. The Silicon Graphics Prism system, with 16 Intel
Itanium 2 processors, 32 MB memory and an InfiniteStorage TP9100
storage array, will visualize the 3D data collected by the ship to
study numerous geological and biological earth processes, beginning
with the area of plate tectonics known as subduction zones, where
the earth fundamentally recycles itself and where the planet's
biggest earthquakes occur. * To research and forecast
life-threatening weather conditions, Yunnan University in Kunming,
Yunnan Province, China, purchased a Silicon Graphics Prism
visualization system with 16 Intel Itanium 2 processors and four
graphics pipes. The system will be installed at The School of
Resources Environment and Geoscience, Yunnan University, and will
run Middle Scale Model (MM5) and Weather Forecasting Research (WFR)
software. Professor Ju Jianhua will lead the research, relying on
the Silicon Graphics Prism system's superior visualization quality
to model and explore disaster weather in southwestern Yunnan
Province, as well as Atlantic circulation and altiplano (high
plateau) meteorology. Professor Jianhua also plans to use the
results obtained from the Silicon Graphics Prism system to publish
papers on climate, with topics such as the Asian Summer Monsoon and
ENSO (El Nino/Southern Oscillation). The HPC Center of Yunnan
University plans to leverage the high- performance computing and
graphics capabilities of the Silicon Graphics Prism system for
research throughout the university including material sciences,
life sciences, drug discovery, non-linear sciences, computer
graphics and computational fluid dynamics. The Center is also
planning to set up a Reality Center facility powered by a Silicon
Graphics Prism system within a year. 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. NOTE: Silicon Graphics, SGI, Altix, Onyx, Origin,
Reality Center, Silicon Graphics Tezro, XFS, the SGI cube and the
SGI logo are registered trademarks and CXFS, NUMAflex, Vizserver,
InfiniteReality4, SGI Media Server, 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 650.933.7210 SGI PR HOTLINE 650.933.7777 SGI PR
FACSIMILE 650.933.0283 DATASOURCE: SGI CONTACT: Caroline Japic of
SGI, +1-650-933-7210, or , 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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