Sun Microsystems Inc. announced Internet access of its Sun Grid Compute
Utility in the United States. Through a simple-to-use portal, users --
including developers, scientists and researchers -- will now have
access to Sun Grid, the world's first compute utility available at
$1/CPU/Hour. With low barriers to entry and exit, easy access and no
long-term contracts required, users in diverse industries -- including
finance, oil and gas, education and life sciences -- will now be able
to run complex computational tasks, technical applications and develop
applications on Sun Grid. Users in the United States can access the
pilot release of Sun Grid at
www.network.com.
"Sun
is the first and only vendor to make a credible utility grid offering
available via the Internet," said Jonathan Schwartz, president and COO
of Sun Microsystems. "By delivering computing as a service, Sun Grid
helps developers, academics and computing professionals optimize time
to results without investment in IT infrastructure. On-demand computing
is now truly on demand -- with a credit card and a Web connection, not
a complex outsourcing relationship."
"With the Sun Grid
offering, Sun is taking a leadership position in the emerging utility
computing market -- an IT market that has a sustainable growth
opportunity. The Sun Grid really is 'Infrastructure as a Service,'"
said Vernon Turner, group vice president and general manager at IDC.
"Oracle
is working closely with Sun to help ensure that Oracle's software and
On Demand offerings are optimized for the Sun Grid," said Juergen
Rottler, executive vice president of Oracle On Demand and Oracle
Support.
Over the past year, Sun has been working with customers
from numerous industries who have developed and deployed applications
on the Sun Grid. Industry successes include:
- Life
Sciences: With Sun Grid, Applied BioSystems was able to react to new
intelligence in the genomic field and perform compute-intensive data
research to develop millions of new genomic assays in a matter of days
rather than months.
"Understanding the genetic
basis of disease is going to become more and more important in the
search for new cures and novel drugs, so our goal is to make sure our
researchers and customers have access to the tools and reagents they
need to accelerate the science," said Francisco M. De La Vega,
scientific fellow and senior director of computational genetics at
Applied BioSystems. "Sun Grid helped us achieve this goal by helping
speed to market our pre-designed TaqMan assays and reducing our
computing time from three months to six days; we eliminated the need to
purchase additional hardware, saving the company several hundred
thousand dollars; and we simplified data management and delivery of
results."
- Finance: CDO2 is providing
innovative pricing and risk technology for organizations trading
structured credit products and is the first Software as a Service
Partner Solution on Sun Grid. Utilizing the Sun Grid Compute Utility to
power robust risk simulation services, CDO2 has enabled its customers
to run complex financial simulation spreadsheets to get critical
financial figures in minutes and make critical business decisions more
quickly.
- Oil and Gas: Virtual Compute Corp., a
high performance computing service provider, continues to use Sun Grid
to provide quick, easy access to CPU cycles to meet the growing
cyclical business demands of the oil and gas industries. VCC and Sun
Grid are successfully demonstrating to major oil and gas companies that
using Grid-based computing on a utility basis can increase service
while driving down cost.
"By using the Sun Grid
Compute Utility, we were able to save up to $3 million and ramp up to
production much more quickly than if we did it on our own," said Edward
Hawes, CEO Virtual Compute Corp.
- Education:
Princeton University is the first recipient of the Sun Grid Education
Grant program, awarded in December 2005. The donation of 100,000 CPU
hours on Sun Grid -- using the Solaris 10 Operating System -- has
helped Princeton to conduct its cutting-edge astrophysics research at
resolutions that previously were not possible due to the costs of
building the necessary computing power onsite. Sun also recently
announced it has donated 1 million CPU hours to a total of 10
universities, including Binghamton University, State University of New
York; Clemson University; Rutgers; Massachusetts Institute of
Technology (MIT); The State University of New Jersey; Southeastern
Universities Research Association; University of California, Santa
Cruz; University of Minnesota, Duluth; and University of Wisconsin-
Madison, who will each receive 100,000 CPU hours.
Sun
partners and independent software vendors (ISVs) are also seeing
opportunity on Sun Grid and are working to port and deploy applications
on Sun Grid. Over 60 partners -- including MSC (Nastran), LSTC
(LS-DYNA), Cepstral, Mathspec, Datasynapse, Platform, Turboworx,
Gigaspaces and Paremus -- have already signed up through the Sun Grid
Readiness Offer, Sun's partner offering that gives ISVs quick access to
the resources they need to help build solutions based on Sun's Grid
computing technologies.
With many of its partners, Sun is
currently engaged in proof-of-concept testing of third party software
on Sun Grid. A broad range of commercial applications are planned to be
made available on Sun Grid.
"Running GigaSpaces-based
applications on the Sun Grid provides our customers with benefits in
both the proof-of-concept and production stages," said Geva Perry,
executive vice president of business development at Gigaspaces.
"Because the Sun Grid is so easily accessible, our customers can
rapidly perform proof-of-concepts in a large distributed environment,
without the need to set-up such an environment in-house. Once in
production, a combined Sun Grid-GigaSpaces offering allows our
customers to significantly save costs by only paying for the hardware
and software resources they actually use, as opposed to
over-provisioning capacity for peak loads -- mostly unused capacity
which they would pay for with the traditional approach."
Sun is
offering a test drive of a text-to-speech application developed by
Cepstral. Users can render their text or selected blogs to mp3 ready
for podcast.
Callidus Software, a provider of Enterprise
Incentive Management and sales performance management solutions, has
selected the Sun Grid Compute Utility to host the Callidus On-Demand
Solutions. The Sun Grid enables Callidus to provide its customers with
a uniquely scalable and secure service that's also highly available --
the first solution of its kind in the EIM marketplace.
Since
initially being formed in October 2005, the Sun Grid Developer
Community has supported hundreds of developers and dozens of projects
supporting applications intended to be run on the Sun Grid. The Sun
Grid Developer Community is ideally suited for small-to-medium ISVs,
enterprise developers and researchers in academia who have
high-performance computing, batch or transactional applications that
they want to optimize to run on the Sun Grid.
Developers who
come to the Sun Grid Developer Community will find a wealth of content,
FAQs, documentation, sample applications, advanced tools and utilities
and self-help to assist in Sun Grid-enabling their applications. By
registering and joining with prequalified projects, developers will be
granted 100 free promotional hours on the Sun Grid to run, test and
debug their applications. They will also have access to a suite of
on-demand collaborative software development tools, using CollabNet
Enterprise Edition, including application lifecycle management and
source code control.
To learn more about the Sun Grid's first 24 hours, see GRIDtoday editor Derrick Harris' discussion with Sun's Aisling MacRunnels at
www.gridtoday.com/grid/604819.html.