
Features:
NAT'L CANCER INSTITUTE PURCHASES STARBRIDGE HYPERCOMPUTER
Starbridge Systems announced that the National Cancer Institute's Advanced
Biomedical Computing Center (ABCC) in Frederick, MD, recently purchased a
Starbridge Hypercomputer, the first high-end reconfigurable computer acquired
for bioscience research. The Starbridge Hypercomputer will serve as an
important scientific computational resource and represents a revolutionary
leap in high performance computing capabilities.
Starbridge consulted with Dr. Jack Collins of the National Cancer Institute to
assess NCI's research needs, and produced a massively parallel and scalable
implementation of the Smith Waterman algorithm, which is used to compare sets
of genetic data, on the Starbridge Hypercomputer. Starbridge's implementation
of the Smith Waterman algorithm enables NCI to compare genetic data sets of
virtually any size in record-breaking time. As part of the final acceptance
criteria, Starbridge demonstrated a Smith Waterman comparison of the human X
to Y chromosomes. This comparison, which typically requires months of
computation time on a cluster, was completed in approximately five days on the
Hypercomputer.
"NCI's purchase illustrates the potential for Hypercomputing to accelerate
research in the Life Sciences," said Daniel Oswald, President and CEO of
Starbridge Systems. "We expect this to be the first of many grand challenge
problems solved by Starbridge Hypercomputers."
|