Mathematica Heads for the Cloud

Wolfram Research announces partnership to provide cloud computing access for Mathematica users


November 05, 2008
URL:http://www.drdobbs.com/architecture-and-design/mathematica-heads-for-the-cloud/212000702


Wolfram Research has announced an initiative to develop a cloud computing service for Mathematica users. This project is a collaborative effort by Wolfram Research, Nimbis Services (a clearing-house for accessing third-party compute resources and commercial software), and R Systems (a provider of computing resources to the commercial and academic research community). The collaboration is intended to make the transition from desktop to HPC systems easier for Mathematica users by providing efficiently structured access to larger, more powerful computing systems.

Nimbis Services will enable the Mathematica cloud service to access many diverse HPC systems, including TOP500 supercomputers and the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud. According to Nimbis Services CEO Robert Graybill, the foundational principle of Nimbis Services is to focus on "ease of use" by providing experimental and periodic business users the choice of large-scale computing service alternatives, all in one "instant" computing storefront.

"Our partnership with Wolfram Research immensely benefits software users attempting to increase efficiency and capacity," adds R Systems founder Brian Kucic. "As Mathematica users seek to extend resource capacity, the exceptionally large memory of our multi-core HPC resources and the double-data rate and quad-data rate InfiniBand network will increase performance." HPC resources such as the R Smarr cluster by R Systems, which was recently named the 44th fastest system on the TOP500 list for supercomputing pioneers, are responsible for bringing HPC technology to the forefront.

The Mathematica cloud computing service will provide flexible and scalable access to HPC from within Mathematica, simplifying the transition from desktop technical computing to HPC. "The two largest challenges in using HPC are programming the HPC application itself and ensuring that you can get enough computing power to do the job," says Tom Wickham-Jones, Wolfram Research, Executive Director of Kernel Technology. "Mathematica answers the programming challenge by providing an integrated technical computing platform, enabling computation, visualization, and data access. Cloud computing offers consistent access to large-scale computing capabilities."

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