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Sun Solaris Compute Grid Powers Next Generation Nuclear Reactor Design From the Department of Energy

Posted on: Thursday, 12 August 2004, 06:00 CDT

IDAHO FALLS, Idaho, Aug. 12 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- The Department of Energy and Sun Microsystems, Inc. today announced the development of a high performance computer cluster at the Idaho National Engineering and Environmental Laboratory (INEEL) in Idaho Falls, Idaho.

The solution includes more than 230 Sun Fire(TM) V20z servers powered by AMD Opteron processors, and more than 12 Terabytes of Sun StorEdge(TM) 6320 storage, the Solaris(TM) 9 Operating System, Sun Java(TM) Enterprise System and Java development software, Sun(TM) Grid Engine Enterprise Edition, Sun's StarOffice 7.0 office productivity platform, as well as advanced on-site training and support from Sun's Services division. The cluster's full-throttle computing power ranks the INEEL datacenter as one of the world's top 150 supercomputing sites.

"This agreement will vault INEEL into a position among the world's top high performance computing sites and offers the ability to complete two trillion floating-point operations in a one-second heartbeat," said Bill Magwood, Director of Nuclear Energy, Department of Energy. "Sun's grid computing cluster will provide our professionals the computing resources they need for next-generation nuclear reactor design."

Sun's Solaris-based grid computing cluster solution dramatically advances the compute power for Idaho's national laboratory and will enable INEEL professionals to directly support the engineering resources needed on a very large scale for the design of the Department of Energy's Generation IV nuclear reactors. This capability is essential in the demanding collaboration environment required among the 11 partners contributing to Generation IV design efforts.

"The days of expensive mainframes spread across acres of facilities are behind us, as leading labs like INEEL show the way to supercomputing prowess built on ready-to-deploy, industry-standard Sun Fire servers running the Solaris OS," said Clark Masters, Executive Vice President, Global Government Office, Sun Microsystems. "Sun's leadership in high performance computing is rooted in a long history of innovative designs and technologies aimed squarely as this market. Our military-grade Solaris operating system running on industry standard platforms, combined with Sun's market-leading grid computing management tools, provide an open, unbeatable platform for price and flexibility."

INEEL Laboratory Director Paul Kearns said, "This computer enhancement is part of our longer-term plan of increasing the Laboratory's computer capabilities to support the collaboration with our Generation IV partners. We are combining this lease with $543,000 of funding from Bechtel's Corporate Funded Research and Development program to develop a collaborative engineering and research model as a key part of the Generation IV research. It also will support research and development efforts in all areas of our multi-program national laboratory, including energy, national security, environment and other key technologies."

The Solaris-based grid computing cluster solution was financed through the General Services Administration (GSA) schedule provided through Sun Microsystems Finance. The GSA allows government customers such as the DOE and INEEL to finance Sun solutions with a convenient monthly payment plan that requires no negotiation. The total value of the INEEL solution is $1.97 million over 3-years.

The Generation IV nuclear energy systems initiative was started by the U.S. Department of Energy's Office of Nuclear Energy, Science and Technology which engaged governments, industry, and research communities worldwide to develop the Generation IV International Forum (GIF), a group whose member countries-Argentina, Brazil, Canada, Euratom, France, Japan, Republic of South Africa, Republic of Korea, Switzerland, United Kingdom, United States-are interested in jointly defining the future of nuclear energy research and development.

About INEEL

In operation since 1949, the INEEL is a science-based, applied engineering national laboratory dedicated to supporting the U.S. Department of Energy's missions in energy, environment, science and national security. It is operated by Bechtel BWXT for the Department of Energy and for more information visit http://www.inel.gov/.

About Sun Microsystems, Inc.

Since its inception in 1982, a singular vision -- "The Network Is The Computer" -- has propelled Sun Microsystems, Inc. to its position as a leading provider of industrial-strength hardware, software and services that make the Net work. Sun can be found in more than 100 countries and on the World Wide Web at http://sun.com/

NOTE: Sun, Sun Microsystems, the Sun logo, The Network is the Computer, Java, Java Enterprise System, Solaris, StorEdge and Sun Fire are trademarks or registered trademarks of Sun Microsystems, Inc. in the United States and other countries.

For more information:

Larkin Kay

Ogilvy Public Relations for Sun Microsystems, Inc.

303-634-2658

larkin.kay@ogilvypr.com

Keith Arterburn

Idaho National Engineering and Environmental Laboratory

208-526-4845

artegk@inel.gov

Sun Microsystems, Inc.

CONTACT: Larkin Kay of Ogilvy Public Relations, +1-303-634-2658, orlarkin.kay@ogilvypr.com, for Sun Microsystems, Inc.; or Keith Arterburn ofIdaho National Engineering and Environmental Laboratory, +1-208-526-4845, orartegk@inel.gov

Web site: http://www.inel.gov/

Web site: http://sun.com/

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