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9/11/2008
The University of South Carolina has upgraded its server and storage technologies to support research in bioinformatics and processing of medical images. The university adopted server and storage solutions for SGI, including the company's SGI Altix 4700 system and InfiniteStorage 4000.
The purchase was made using a grant from the National Science Foundation through James River Technical, an SGI higher education reseller. It includes 10 TB of storage, which, acording to U South Carolina, is "by far" the largest shared memory system in South Carolina in use at an academic institution. The system, installed back in April, is being used initially for five research projects: microbial genome research, an exploration of "phylogenetic reconstruction and multiple sequence alignment," a study of protein backbone structure data, a solution for medical image processing visualization problems, and "issecting gene regulatory networks to develop large-scale microarray data analysis incorporating comparative genomics information."
"For the data intensive needs of this research we needed a shared memory system, and there aren't many out there that are true shared memory--that was the primary reason we selected SGI Altix," said Duncan Buell, chair of the U South Carolina Department of Computer Science and Engineering, in a statement released this week. "The Altix met our specifications while delivering superior price-performance. In addition to the bioinformatics research, another reason we needed a shared memory machine is for medical image processing. If you're going to track a part of an image that you have identified, from one frame to the next--because people move from one frame to the next and the heartbeat causes registration problems in either video or MRIs--then you need to hold the frames in memory simultaneously. And you need to have space to store high-resolution images, which is why we bought as much storage as we could."
U South Carolina researchers will aso be developing code for the system to test new algorithms related to open-source phylogenetics program GRAPPA, originally developed out of the University of New Mexico and the University of Texas at Austin. U South Carolina said it intends to share the SGI system with other institutions in the state.
The Georgia Tech College of Computing, working in partnership with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, has developed a Web-based tool for tracking blood safety. The program is expected to help developing countries improve the adequacy and safety of their national blood supplies through better monitoring and evaluation.
Mississippi State University has implemented Reflex VMC (Virtual Management Center) from Reflex Systems. The application allows IT administrators to monitor a virtual infrastructure and enforce business and IT policies.
The Law, Science & Technology Program at Stanford Law School has launched the Intellectual Property Litigation Clearinghouse (IPLC), an online database that offers comprehensive information about intellectual property (IP) disputes within the United States.
The Texas A&M Health Science Center has selected the Banner Unified Digital Campus (UDC) from Sungard Higher Education to help unify its geographically-dispersed community and to enhance and expand services and communications to its growing student enrollment.
Community colleges are in a good spot in some ways during the economic downturn, as tight family budgets drive up the appeal of the community college option. But along with the rest of higher education, most community colleges also face shrinking IT budgets and tighter resources. That makes it that much harder to handle the growing enrollment numbers that some community colleges are seeing.
Security vendor Finjan predicts that the current economic downturn could herald a sharp rise in cybercrime during 2009--driven by the rise in the number of IT people being laid off. According to a report from the company's Malicious Code Research Center (MCRC), more unemployed IT personnel will be tempted to seek "new and easy income by purchasing and using crimeware toolkits that are sold by professional hackers."