Cray heeft een persbericht de wereld in gestuurd waarin ze een de beschikbaarheid van een supersnelle 'hardeschijf' aankondigen. Het nieuwe systeem is compatible met de Cray SV1e en de Cray SV1ex supercomputers en gebaseerd rond een 224GB grote Solid State Disk (SSD). De snelheid van de SSD is maar liefst 80GB per seconde wat betekend dat hij 800 maal sneller is dan normale disk servers die slechts snelheden van rond de 100MB/sec halen. Door het gebruik van de SSD kan veel sneller met data-intensieve programma's gewerkt worden. Het in de autowereld bekende programma MSC/Nastran liep bijvoorbeeld 2,5 keer zo snel dankzij de SSD:
"With the new SSD system, Cray SV1 series supercomputers can handle extremely large, data-intensive problems with unprecedented speed, convenience and cost-effectiveness," said Jerry Loe, Cray vice president of worldwide sales and service. "This will be particularly useful in bioinformatics, and for complex automotive and aerospace applications." The Cray SV1 series, named "Best Supercomputer" in 2001 by the readers of Scientific Computing & Instrumentation magazine, includes special hardware features for bioinformatics.
"With the new SSD, bioinformaticists will be able to work with several copies of the Human Genome at a time, or perform whole genome comparisons, or pursue drug design and discovery, without wasting valuable compute time waiting for standard disk data transfers," said Jef Dawson, Cray's manager of bioinformatics development and marketing. "The SSD can keep up with the Cray SV1 parallel supercomputers' processors, which perform up to 12 operations per clock cycle."
Dawson said the SSD will benefit virtually any application requiring large data sets. "The popular automotive application MSC/Nastran ran 2.5 times faster using the new SSD capability. Applications that run 'out of core,' including the popular GAUSSIAN chemistry codes, are also well suited to the SSD. You can think of the SSD as the world's biggest cache memory, or the world's biggest I/O buffer. Either way, it offers the world a new capability."