January 10, 2012
Jan. 10 — Researchers at colleges and universities statewide can engage in greater data-intensive research with better speed, efficiency and reliability due to a $1.17 million cyber connectivity upgrade completed today.
Funded by a National Science Foundation grant, the Oklahoma Optical Initiative will benefit the University of Oklahoma, Oklahoma State University, the state's OneNet, the University of Tulsa, Langston University, the Samuel Roberts Noble Foundation and a variety of other institutions across the state. The initiative is designed to deliver improved network reliability, robustness, availability and potentially bandwidth to Oklahoma's researchers.
"At its core, this initiative will facilitate greater collaboration among institutions statewide," said Loretta Early, OU Vice President for Information Technology. "It will position the University of Oklahoma and our state to successfully compete for grant funding and will provide educational and career advancement opportunities for Oklahomans."
The network connectivity for supercomputers at OU and OSU has been upgraded to as much as 10 Gigabits per second (Gbps), a tenfold increase. For OU researchers, this change translates to greater collaboration and analysis in the areas of weather forecasting, high-energy physics, ecology, bioenergy and alternative fuels, and many others.
Horst Severini of OU's High Energy Physics group oversees the US ATLAS Tier2 Computing facility at OU. Among Oklahoma institutions, OU's most active collaborator in the Tier2 consortium is Langston University. Currently, sharing large amounts of data can take upward of several hours, slowing down the consortium's research.
"The increase in connectivity for Langston's High Energy Physics research, from 100 Mbps to 10 Gbps, willenable our consortium to become far more productive in the worldwide quest to find the Higgs boson, an elusive subatomic particle long theorized but not yet observed," said Severini. "Sharing research data and findings with Langston will be easier than ever, increasing our chances of securing additional funding."
The Oklahoma Optical Initiative is part of a larger project undertaken by OU Information Technology, especially the OU Supercomputing Center for Education and Research, to improve the state's ability to transmit, store and access research data. The first phase of this initiative, a massive research data archive called the Oklahoma PetaStore, also was funded by a NSF grant. Now that both projects are underway, 23 Oklahoma institutions are expected to experience improved network connectivity to the largest research data archive in the state.
"These development projects are a huge step forward for Oklahoma that will encourage increased federal research funding and foster statewide research collaboration and success," said Henry Neeman, OU Director of Research IT and the Principal Investigator on both projects, said of the initiatives.
About OSCER
The OU Supercomputing Center for Education and Research, a division of OU Information Technology, helps undergraduates, graduate students, faculty and staff learn and use supercomputing in their science and engineering. The center provides the OU community with a High Performance Computing infrastructure in education and research facilitation, and furnishes hardware and software resources and outreach support. The center's primary focus is on education and research, with all other activities directed toward supporting these goals.
About the University of Oklahoma
Created by the Oklahoma Territorial Legislature in 1890, the University of Oklahoma is a doctoral degree-granting research university serving the educational, cultural, economic and health-care needs of the state, region and nation. OU enrolls more than 30,000 students, has more than 2,400 full-time faculty members, and has 21 colleges offering 163majors at the baccalaureate level, 166 majors at the master's level, 81 majors at the doctoral level, 27 majors at the doctoral professional level, and 26graduate certificates.
-----
Source: University of Oklahoma
There are 0 discussion items posted.
|
Join the Discussion |
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...
May 17, 2012 |
NVIDIA GeForce GRID, a cloud gaming platform announced at the 2012 GPU Technology Conference (GTC), seeks to reduce the the latency associated with cloud gaming.
Read more...
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...
May 14, 2012 |
During the second annual Pistoia Alliance conference, three teams demonstrated their newly-implemented cloud-based next-generation sequencing platforms.
Read more...
May 10, 2012 |
PEER1's cloud division, Zunicore, will soon be offering GPU-equipped servers on-demand.
Read more...
May 08, 2012 |
The Patriot Act leads foreign governments to question the security of US cloud services.
Read more...
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.
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.