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Bio-IT World February 18, 2004 |
A Preventable Informatics Crime If informatics computing on loosely coupled dedicated servers (clusters or compute farms) is such an attractive solution, why are life science IT shops still blowing big bucks on refrigerator-look-alike symmetric multiprocessor machines?  |
Bio-IT World November 2005 Michael Athanas |
A New Window on HPC Clusters In recent years, scalable clusters have become commodity and are often encapsulated as single items in vendor catalogs to be issued as part of the greater data center solution.  |
Linux Journal May 1, 2002 Glen Otero |
The Beowulf State of Mind Beowulf has grown into the poster child for open-source, clustered computing. The Beowulf concept is all about using standard vanilla boxes and open-source software to cluster a group of computers together into a virtual supercomputer...  |
Bio-IT World February 11, 2005 Salvatore Salamone |
Strategic Insights: No Researcher Left Behind Many open-source and commercial diagnostic tools can probe a cluster's performance, but virtually all of these tools are designed for use by the experienced software developer. Now, a new crop of user-friendly cluster productivity tools targets the scientist/engineer.  |
Bio-IT World July 11, 2002 Judith N. Mottl |
Learning to Love Linux Hungry for computing power, life science companies are turning toward Linux clusters as the preferred high performance solution.  |
Bio-IT World February 11, 2005 Judith N. Mottl |
Strategic Insights: Driving Linux Cluster Performance Planning early and choosing the right tools can boost run-time performance as much as 30 percent.  |
Linux Journal December 2000 Glen Otero |
Book Review Building Linux Clusters by David H. M. Spector  |
Bio-IT World December 15, 2004 Bill Van Etten |
XXX-Rated Apple's new Xserve G5, Xserve RAID, and Xsan which are server, storage, and software products may solve bioscientists' data storage problems.  |