Sun Strikes Grid Computing Pact with Bank

Published: 30 September 2004 y., Thursday
One week after touting its grid computing and other technologies on Wall Street for financial services customers, Sun Microsystems agreed to provide a Paris-based bank with more than 100 servers to power its transactions. Under the deal, Sun will provide Equity and Derivatives BNP Paribas 116 Sun Fire V20z servers powered by AMD's Opteron chips to improve the performance of its risk management software, which runs on a compute grid. There is a no official word of the value of the contract, but V20z servers with one to two processors tend to run between $3,000 and $5,000 each, depending on configurations. Peter ffoulkes, group marketing manager of Sun's High Performance and Technical Computing division, said the bank has chosen to break free from an x86 cluster it had used from a competing vendor in favor of the V20z machines, running Red Hat Linux. Equity and Derivatives chose Sun's infrastructure to help it address Basle II, an international risk management regulation put in place to avoid some of the accounting improprieties if the late '90s, according to ffoulkes. "Those audit trails hopefully will be beneficial over time but they pose quite a headache for the banks who have to do all of their business within the same time frame but with the weight of a lot of regulatory compliance," ffoulkes said. "To do that, they need to enhance their computer systems." That means grid computing. Traditionally, grid computing is used to either harness a pool resources and fire a lot of jobs at them with great efficiency or complete tasks in a parallel mode and run things like crash tests. It can also be expensive for enterprises to offer. Just last week, for example, HP announced that it would change its Adaptive Enterprise (AE) product strategy, Gartner noted in a brief sent to customers. Instead of pursuing the "high-cost, low-volume UDC [Utility Data Center], HP "will move toward a more modular strategy, with more individual products and services."
Šaltinis: internetnews.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

Web Phones Take Wing

Now, cell phones can deliver nifty Net services fast, and Americans are signing up by the millions more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

The Best Internet Portal

Internet Portal Developed by Lithuanians Ranked Best in the USA more »

Europeans Show Strong Interest in 3G

A significant number of Europeans are interested in 3G wireless technology, and half are willing to pay for it more »

Out of Phone Numbers? Add Digits

Someday soon North American telephone numbers might add up to 12 digits, including area code, instead of the current 10 more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

White House Releases Cybersecurity Plan

The Bush administration released a scaled-back cybersecurity strategy outlining steps that the government, industry and citizens should take to protect computer systems from online attacks more »

Microsoft patch can lock users out of Web sites

A recent Microsoft Corp. security patch for Internet Explorer (IE) can lock users out of certain Web sites more »

E-hoard with Microsoft's life database

'Surrogate memory' stores your life on hard disk more »

The fastest market

Lithuania’s Payment Card Market is Growing Fastest in CEE more »