Supermicro HPC Job Bank
HPC in the Cloud


Dedicated to covering high-end cloud computing
in science, industry and the datacenter

Language Flags

Datanami
Digital Manufacturing Report
HPCwire

CEI Releases EnSight 10


Intuitive GUI makes EnSight 10 more powerful and efficient for everyday use

APEX, N.C. and NASHVILLE, Tenn., Jan. 17 — CEI Inc., maker of EnSight visualization software for computer aided engineering (CAE) and computational fluid dynamics (CFD), today announced the debut of EnSight 10, the latest version of its powerful 3D visualization software for post-processing of CAE/CFD data and analysis. EnSight 10 features an all new, structured volume rendering capability and a streamlined user interface for analyzing and communicating complex simulation results. CEI unveiled EnSight 10 during the 50th Annual Aerospace Sciences Meeting of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics that runs January 9-12 at the Gaylord Opryland Resort & Convention Center in Nashville, Tenn.

“Since its original debut in 1994, EnSight has become the gold standard for visualization and analysis for the CAE/CFD market around the world,” said Anders Grimsrud, founder and president of CEI. “Today, EnSight 10 represents a quantum leap in ease of use and efficiency that our loyal EnSight users will definitely appreciate, and will make it much easier for new users to learn and get up to speed.”

Exclusive “Practical” Volume Rendering

The hallmark of EnSight 10 is its exclusive new structured volume rendering capability, a major upgrade in speed and practical usability from its original debut in version 9.2. By using a structured, uniform mesh to render complex data sets, EnSight 10 offers better interactivity and eliminates the huge memory requirements that often result from unstructured volume rendering. The result is a smoother and faster rendering of large, complex data volumes. With the ability to run parallel rendering across multiple graphics cards and visualize volume datasets. The EnSight user can specify the structured volume’s resolution, allowing them to balance resolution versus graphics memory requirements.

EnSight 10 further enhances volume rendering by taking what was previously a multi-step process that required a tutorial or training and streamlining it into a single dialog with the critical steps all pulled into that dialog. “It's the tightest we’ve ever integrated a feature in EnSight,” said Grimsrud. Future versions of EnSight 10 will also support distributed parallel volume rendering in the EnSight DR version.

“This is by far the most sophisticated version of EnSight yet,” said Robert J. Kares, Ph.D., Senior Technical Staff Member in the Applied Computational Physics Division at Los Alamos National Laboratory and a long-time user of the EnSight product line. “The ability to combine the new volume visualization feature with clips, isosurfaces and any of EnSight’s many other visualization tools has proven to be a tremendously powerful method for understanding the results from our petascale fluid flow simulations in 3D. This new capability has revealed an enormous wealth of important detail in our big         3D flow simulations that had long been hidden to us.”

New GUI, Customizable Toolbar

The all new EnSight 10 user interface offers exceptional customization options and ease of use with intuitive drag-and-drop and right-click capabilities. Now, EnSight 10 users can quickly color each part in the scene instantly by dragging and dropping calculated variables from new variables list. EnSight’s unique style manager allows the user to create customized graph styles with specific colors, font and other specifications, then apply this pre-built style onto other data graphs. This eliminates the need to configure each specific property of new plots one at a time, saving dozens of clicks, improving productivity and allowing the user more time to study the data rather than fuss with the appearance to get it just right. The drag-and-drop and right-click capabilities in EnSight 10 also make it easy to manipulate and modify various parts, viewports and other objects without having to manually switch viewing modes.

EnSight 10 even allows users to build custom GUI toolbars, similar to the Windows Ribbon, based on the options, features and functionality needed. For example, for jet engine analysis, place only the tools required for this work on the toolbar and eliminate the distraction and need to search through all the other functionality to find the tools required. If EnSight customers or developers build new features using the Python scripting language, those features can be added to the GUI toolbar as if the feature was included in standard EnSight. 

Broader File and Language Compatibility

The new EnSight 10 is also more compatible with a wider range of data files and languages. Support for additional data readers includes the ability to read FLD files, a common Japanese format, as well as newer CGNS file versions, with both 2D and 3D parts in CGNS files now supported. EnSight 10’s GUI menu and dialogues can also be translated to other languages such as Japanese or Chinese.

“EnSight remains an enormously deep package and organizing this complexity is a big challenge,” Kares said. “This latest release proves that CEI continues to take usability seriously and demonstrates steady improvement in the evolution of organizing this complexity. This new version is very intuitive and easy to use and to learn, which are just as important as the analysis capabilities it provides.”

For more information about CEI’s new EnSight 10, visit www.ceisoftware.com/ensight10.

About CEI Inc.

Computational Engineering International, Inc.is a privately-held software company specializing in scientific and engineering visualization and plotting software for industrial and scientific applications worldwide. CEI has offices for EnSight sales and support in Germany, Japan, India and China and distributors elsewhere around the world. CEI’s headquarters are located in Apex, North Carolina. CEI can be found on the Internet at www.ceisoftware.com.

-----

Source: CEI

May 16, 2012

May 15, 2012

May 14, 2012

May 11, 2012

May 10, 2012

May 09, 2012

May 08, 2012

May 07, 2012

May 04, 2012


Most Read Blogs


Feature Articles

Cloud Services Satisfy a Higher Calling

Higher education involves many collaborative projects that lend themselves to cloud services, however often those services are not tailored to the uniqueness of an academic environment. That's where the Internet2 NET+ project comes in. By partnering with 16 major cloud providers, the networking consortium is seeking to expedite the delivery of cloud services and by doing so advance research and innovation in the United States.
Read more...

Univa CEO Gary Tyreman on the Evolution of HPC, Big Data and Cloud

It's been a little over a year since Univa took over stewardship of the open source workload manager and acquired the founding Sun Grid Engine team from Oracle, and the company just announced its third production release. CEO Gary Tyreman discusses the latest enhancements as well as the company's plans around cloud, big data and the enterprise.
Read more...

Around the Web

Breaking the Cloud Barrier

May 15, 2012 | New Microsoft report shows that beyond the expected financial benefits, cloud services may offer more comprehensive security features compared to in-house IT operations.
Read more...

Vendors Demo Next-Gen Sequencing Platforms for Pharma

May 14, 2012 | During the second annual Pistoia Alliance conference, three teams demonstrated their newly-implemented cloud-based next-generation sequencing platforms.
Read more...

Zunicore Offers Bare Metal by the Hour

May 10, 2012 | PEER1's cloud division, Zunicore, will soon be offering GPU-equipped servers on-demand.
Read more...

US Cloud Providers Struggle With Data Privacy Laws

May 08, 2012 | The Patriot Act leads foreign governments to question the security of US cloud services.
Read more...

Genomic Data Gets Comfy in the Cloud

May 07, 2012 | Startup DNANexus is helping to bring personalized medicine to the masses with its cloud-based next-gen sequencing platform.
Read more...

Sponsored Whitepapers

Appro White Paper: Enabling Performance-per-Watt Gains in HPC

04/05/2012 | Appro | Designed to meet the growing global demand for HPC solutions, Appro's Xtreme-X™ Supercomputer delivers superior performance-per-watt and reduced I/O latency while bringing significant flexibility to HPC workload configurations including capacity, hybrid, data intensive and capability computing.

Exploring the Potential of Heterogeneous Computing

04/02/2012 | AMD | Developers today are just beginning to explore the potential of heterogeneous computing, but the potential for this new paradigm is huge. This brief article reviews how the technology might impact a range of application development areas, including client experiences and cloud-based data management. As platforms like OpenCL continue to evolve, the benefits of heterogeneous computing will become even more accessible. Use this quick article to jump-start your own thinking on heterogeneous computing.

Sponsored Multimedia

Newsletters

Intersect360 HPC500

HPC Job Bank


Featured Events









HPC in the Cloud Conferences & Events