Posts Tagged ‘IBM’

IBM supercomputer to hit 20 petaflops, doubles fastest in TOP500

February 3rd, 2012

Last November IBM announced its next generation supercomputing project, Blue Gene/Q, a project undertaken by software application developers and other computer scientists to build an “ultra-scale” technical computing platform.

IBM has logically named its latest beast “Sequoia”, the tallest in the forest.

Blue Gene/Q is expected to predict the path of hurricanes, analyse the ocean floor to discover oil, simulate nuclear weapons performance and decode gene sequences.

The machine will also have practical software application development implementations.

Indeed, Rogue Wave Software has just announced a pre-release version of its TotalView massively parallel, interactive, and automated debugging tool optimised for IBM Blue Gene/Q-based Sequoia.

Partnering with the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and IBM, Rogue Wave has worked in parallel to define the debugging interfaces and port the TotalView debugger simultaneously alongside the development of the Blue Gene/Q hardware.

Due to be unveiled later in 2012, Sequoia is expected to deliver 20 petaflops at peak performance levels, double the speed of the fastest system currently on the TOP500 list.

According to Rogue Wave, LLNL plans to use Sequoia’s computational capability to advance the understanding of fundamental physics and engineering questions that arise in the National Nuclear Security Administration’s (NNSA) program to ensure the safety, security, and reliability of the United States’ nuclear deterrent without testing.

Source:http://www.computerweekly.com/blogs/cwdn/2012/02/ibm-supercomputer-to-hit-20-petaflops-doubles-fastest-in-top500.html

IBM developing new, tiny storage device of just 12 atoms

January 16th, 2012

Researchers at IBM have stored and retrieved digital 1s and 0s from an array of just 12 atoms, pushing the boundaries of the magnetic storage of information to the edge of what is possible.

The findings, being reported Thursday in the journal Science, could help lead to a new class of nanomaterials for a generation of memory chips and disk drives that will not only have greater capabilities than the current silicon-based computers but will also consume significantly less power. And it may offer a new direction for research in quantum computing.

“Magnetic materials are extremely useful and strategically important to many major economies, but there aren’t that many of them,” said Shan X. Wang, director of the Center for Magnetic Nanotechnology at Stanford University. “To make a brand new material is very intriguing and scientifically very important.”

Until now, the most advanced magnetic storage systems have needed about 1 million atoms to store a digital 1 or 0. The new achievement is the product of a heated international race between two elite physics laboratories to explore the properties of magnetic materials at a far smaller scale.

Last May, a group at the Institute of Applied Physics at the University of Hamburg in Germany reported on the ability to perform computer logic operations on an atomic level.

The group at IBM’s Almaden Research Center here, led by Andreas Heinrich, has now created the smallest possible unit of magnetic storage by painstakingly arranging two rows of six iron atoms on a surface of copper nitrite atoms. The cluster of atoms is described as anti-ferromagnetic – a rare quality in which each atom in the array has an opposed magnetic orientation. (In common ferromagnetic materials like iron, nickel and cobalt, the atoms are magnetically aligned.)

Under the laboratory’s founder, Don Eigler, IBM has explored the science of nanomaterials far smaller than the silicon chips used in today’s semiconductors. Eigler recently retired from the company but is a co-author of the Science paper.

The researchers now use a scanning tunneling microscope, which looks like a giant washing machine festooned with aluminum foil, not only to capture images of atoms but to reposition individual atoms – much the way a billiard ball might be moved by a pool cue with a sticky tip.

Although the research took place at temperatures near absolute zero, the scientists wrote that the same experiment could be done at room temperature with as few as 150 atoms.

As part of its demonstration of the anti-ferromagnetic storage effect, the researchers created a computer byte, or character, out of an individually placed array of 96 atoms. They then used the array to encode the IBM motto “Think”

by repeatedly programming the memory block to store representations of its five letters.

Moreover, Heinrich said, smaller groups of atoms begin to exhibit quantum mechanical behavior – simultaneously existing in both “spin” states, in effect 1 and 0 at the same time. In theory, such atoms could be assembled into Qbits – the basic unit of an experimental approach to computing that might one day push beyond the capabilities of today’s most powerful supercomputers.

“If you do this with two atoms, then they behave more like a quantum mechanical object,” Heinrich said. “This is why science is interested in this work more than the technology.”

In an interview in a small laboratory office here, he said he was planning to knock out a wall to create room for an expanded effort in exploring the quantum mechanical properties of the anti-ferromagnetic effect.

“This is really where we live,” he said. “If you step outside of the press release, we are trying to control the quantum mechanics of this spin behavior to coax them to do whatever we want them to do.”

Computer industry analysts said the IBM effort heralded a new direction for nanotechnology and that it might offer a route to new kinds of nanomaterials.

“Nanotechnology labs are going to begin asking, ‘What else is going on down there?”‘ said Richard Doherty of Envisioneering, an industry consulting firm based in Seaford, N.Y. “The information storage side of this is fantastic, but this truly changes our ideas of the behavior of materials at molecular levels.”

Currently, anti-ferromagnetic materials are instrumental in two different types of data storage products. They are essential for the manufacture of the phonograph-needle-like recording heads used in today’s hard-disk drives. They are also used in a new type of memory chip known as spin-transfer-torque RAM, or STT-RAM, which is viewed by some as a future competitor for both DRAM and Flash memory chips.

Heinrich said that the tiny devices built with scanning tunneling microscopes would never be more than laboratory experiments. However, he noted that many research groups are exploring different ways of designing novel materials using self-assembly methods ranging from mechanical to biological approaches.

Industry executives said that as the semiconductor industry draws closer to exhausting the ability to scale down today’s circuits using lithographic tools that etch patterns on the surface of silicon wafers, an intense international hunt is under way for a manufacturing technology beyond microelectronics.

“The nation that discovers the next logic switch will lead the nanoelectronics era and reap the economic rewards associated with it,” said Ian Steff, vice president for global policy and technology partnerships for the Semiconductor Industry Association.

Source:http://articles.economictimes.indiatimes.com/2012-01-13/news/30623828_1_atoms-scanning-tunneling-microscope-almaden-research-center

100 Years Later And IBM Is Still Going Strong

January 3rd, 2012

IBM turned 100 in 2011 and for a company that is that old is doing very well in this cutting edge technology world of today. For Big Blue, as it is fondly referred to, getting to where they are today has not been an easy journey and if there was ever a company that deserved to be where they are today, it is IBM. Over its 100-plus years of existence IBM has had to make a number of difficult decisions that have seen them acquire and divest off billion dollar companies while at the same time trying to fend off competition from the likes of HP and EMC, all angling for the same clients that IBM have been serving for years and years.
But in the midst of all this, IBM has risen to be the largest technology company by market capitalization with a share value of $217 billion dollars and annual revenues North of the $100 billion mark and all this with a work force of over 400,000 spread across the the globe. But how has IBM been able to pull this off and what recent decisions did they make to get them to where they are today? Here are a few things I believe IBM have done right and have got them to where they are today.
Consistent Leadership
Over the 100 years IBM has been in existence, they have had only 9 chief executives, the most recent being Virginia Rometty who took over from outgoing CEO Sam Palmisano. This is a marked departure from what we are used to seeing in all these other “hip” tech companies that change CEO’s as if by coming and going fads. This trend by IBM has seen the company preserve continuity and sustainability and as any expert in management and leadership change dynamics will tell you, a CEO needs at least 5 to 7 years in order to effect any significant change to an organization and IBM have nailed this spot on.
The other interesting thing about the IBM leadership and succession structure is that more often than not, the new CEO is picked from an existing pool of veteran IBM employees who have been at the company for decades (outgoing CEO Sam Palmisano started off at the company as a sales man back in 1973 while incoming CEO Virginia Rometty is also a 30 plus year IBM veteran). This shows an interesting leadership structure that favours internal experience over external skills and qualifications.
This may be compared to the high churn rate in top management in most technology companies such as Yahoo and Google. This choosing of insiders often means that the incoming CEO is not only well versed in the inner workings of the company but that they also have the full support of the whole organization and top management through familiarity and popular appeal.
Future Perspective
One of the biggest decisions IBM had to make in the recent past was walking away from what the company was initially known for, personal computers. When IBM decided to sell off its PC business, the dilemma was obvious. The PC business was bringing in $20 billion worth of revenues per year to the company and was delivering fairly good profit margins. The PC business also made IBM the largest computer technology company in the world with its competitors HP in a distant second.
But IBM have this way of trying to predict where the market will be in the next ten years and then trying to anticipate this market shift and so far, this has gone very well for them. Over ten years ago, IBM began talking about cloud computing, or as they called it back then, on-demand computing. This was a big reason why they decided to sell their PC business to Chinese giant Lenovo as they realized the market was shifting into a highly fragmented hardware market but a more unified cloud computing market and this pay gamble has paid off handsomely.
This critical insight and ultimate gamble is what has seen IBM become today one of the most established and influential cloud computing companies in the world while HP, who are the other computer behemoth are still struggling with the decision of whether to sell of its PC business or not while also caught up in smartphone and tablet wars. What’s more, IBM also realized that solving societal problems is always the entry point to business and this gave birth to their Smart Planet initiative that seeks to identify and create solutions for societal problems faced by governments and large organizations; the company currently supports over 2000 initiatives under its Smart Planet banner.
With these two critical aspects, it is easy to see how IBM has not only stayed profitable and on the upward curve, but has also beat HP to become the largest computer technology company in the world in a way that matters most, in stock valuation; investing guru Warren Buffet has also bit the bait, he recently raised his stake in IBM to over 5% or a $10 billion investment. HP and other technology companies such as Oracle and Microsoft have a lot to learn from Big Blue if they hope to remain around for the next 100 years and still retain a fresh pair of legs and excellent credibility in the global economic market place.

Source:http://theurbantwist.com/2012/01/03/100-years-later-and-ibm-is-still-going-strong/

Solving IBM’s IT Conundrums: ‘Integration’ Is the Word

December 21st, 2011

There are inherent dangers in fighting the marketplace’s gravitational forces. … Despite the “dictates of computer science,” over-amplifying the value of traditional mainframe technologies or attempting to inject System z into areas like cloud, where it has achieved minuscule success compared to commodity servers, can make IBM sound like a cranky geezer waxing poetic about the good old days.

If it’s late November or early December, I’m usually traveling to or from Westchester County, New York, home of IBM (NYSE: IBM) and its Software Group (SWG) and Systems and Technology Group’s (STG) annual IT analyst confabs. In practical ways, these events tend to mirror one another; past strategies and solutions are trotted out for a quick going-over, current efforts are polished and examined, and future plans are discussed at some length. In that sense, this year was very much like every one before. But 2011 also marked the third analyst conference since IBM formally integrated STG with SWG, placing the entire shebang in the hands of SVP and Group Executive Steve Mills.

The 2009 STG conference occurred just a few weeks after this realignment was announced, so if any analysts expected major changes, they came away empty-handed. Last year, signs of the reorganization were increasingly apparent, particularly in the company’s emphasis on new, highly integrated business analytics/intelligence solutions, including then-recently acquired Netezza, and the decision to place the Systems Software organization (which manages hardware-related software including IBM’s operating systems, system management and virtualization products) into STG.

At STG’s “Smarter Computing” analyst conference this year, the melding of STG and SWG was even more clearly apparent. While a few new hardware bells and whistles made their public debut, most were described and defined according to how they contributed to or enhanced the overall performance and business value of broader IBM offerings. Plus, this approach is fundamental to the three pillars of Smarter Computing discussed by IBM STG SVP Rod Adkins:

Tuned to the Task — IBM systems optimized for the characteristics of specific workloads

Designed for Data — IBM business analytics, business intelligence and big data solutions, which extend beyond traditional information sources

Managed With Cloud Technologies — IBM product and service offerings designed to evolve clients’ data centers while improving service delivery

In this way, the messaging at the STG event was quite similar to IBM SWG’s “Connect” analyst conference the week before. But at Connect, the emphasis was on system “capabilities” — how IBM finely tunes software and hardware for specific applications or processes. In comparison, the STG event’s thematic focus was “workloads” and the importance of supporting them with right combinations of hardware, middleware and systems software. This, in turn, cast a spotlight on IBM’s three distinct server platforms and the appropriate business problems they aim to solve. It also illuminated longer- term IBM Research projects and growth market development efforts.

Workloads as a Theme

During his keynote presentation and Q&A session, SVP Mills stressed the critical importance of workload optimization and system integration to IBM clients and the company itself, and for good reason: The Producer Price Index of compute products shows a 9X increase in overall performance during the past 15 years.

At the same time, enterprises’ server spending has remained essentially steady, while electrical power and systems/facilities management have gone through the roof. This places enormous pressure on businesses trying to hold the line on data center costs but it also, as Mills put so succinctly, “puts the squeeze on hardware-centric vendors. In fact, unless they institute software, management and efficiency improvements, hardware vendors are doomed.”

IBM has innovated in all these areas for years, but the next major step lies in further optimizing workload performance for systems for every kind, whether they are general purpose servers or specialized appliances. In IBM’s view, this process can happen most anywhere: in the customer’s data center (implemented by IT staff or with the help of IBM service professionals); in the factory (for both individual clients’ and special use cases); or by design (appliances developed/integrated for specific applications and processes, like Netezza’s Data Warehouse Solution).

Not surprisingly, Mills and other company executives expressed strong opinions about the appropriateness of particular server platforms for specific business applications and processes. IBM’s System z mainframe’s unparalleled online transaction processing (OLTP) and the company’s Power Systems’ muscular database performance were common (and regularly used) examples. However, I was happy to see that the company’s System x (x86) solutions had a much higher profile than they did at last year’s STG event, both for general purpose computing applications and as central parts of IBM workload-optimized system and appliance strategy.

The Workload Conundrum

At the same time, Mills’ impassioned comments drifted toward what might be called the ‘workload conundrum’ when he noted “the constant frustration of seeing buying decisions based on issues unrelated to the dictates of computer science,” and cited customers “continuing to drive toward x86 [solutions] despite the technical superiority of IBM’s mainframe systems.” Mills also noted the irony that so much or most cloud development — with its inherently shared design that should play to the mainframe’s strengths — centers instead on scale-out x86 technologies.

There are numerous good reasons for IBM and its executives to focus attention on System z, especially since competing vendors spend so much time lambasting the mainframe as an outdated/outmoded platform. While those opinions have had little impact on enterprise customers, you can’t be too vigilant when it comes to key products. Plus, there are strong commercial arguments for IBM to constantly talk up its scale-up System z and Power Systems.

However, there are also inherent dangers in fighting the marketplace’s gravitational forces. Yes, scale-up systems offer highly attractive margins. But x86 server volumes dominate virtually every major global computing market. Despite the “dictates of computer science,” over-amplifying the value of traditional mainframe technologies or attempting to inject System z into areas like cloud, where it has achieved minuscule success compared to commodity servers, can make IBM sound like a cranky geezer waxing poetic about the good old days.

Workloads and Growth/Future Markets

Focusing on scale-up systems may also affect IBM’s results in emerging growth markets, including Africa where the company has great hopes and is working hard on development efforts. During a fascinating presentation, IBM’s GM of Middle East and Africa, Takreem El Tohamy, noted that while clients want cutting-edge IT and are increasingly buying high-end systems (especially in communications, banking and government), low end x86 solutions are critical to IBM’s efforts.

That could be problematic. While IBM has a full complement of x86 products, many of the company’s best-known System x solutions focus on higher-end workloads. In fact, IBM defines its System x strategy as “defining next-generation x86.” Plus, the company appears to assume that customers will eventually and happily abandon their favored x86 vendors for higher-end IBM systems. That contradicts the commonly held belief among vendors that clients stick with the vendors that help them grow.

At the same time, IBM’s workload strategy is clearly apparent in future-focused efforts, including developing commercial Watson solutions and in cognitive computing research. For anyone who spent 2011 hiding in a bunker, Watson is an advanced question-answering system based on IBM’s Power 750 servers, which can respond to verbal/vocal queries. That remarkable ability was shown to great effect on the TV game show “Jeopardy!” when Watson thoroughly trounced two past grand champions. The STG Smarter Computing conference featured several sessions on workplace scenarios for these systems, including an ongoing project at Columbia University, where Watson is being used to aid medical diagnoses.

The last formal session of the STG event was a presentation by Dharmendra Mohda, who manages IBM Research’s cognitive computing project. While early efforts focused on creating computer simulations of increasingly complex animal brain activity, IBM recently created its first cognitive silicon — a CPU designed to replicate the activities of brain cells and synapses.

These should play a critical role in the development of systems that emulate the brain’s computing capabilities, efficiency and power usage without being traditionally programmed. Plus, while a fascinating project in its own rights, the efforts of Mohda and his team could eventually end up in numerous IBM commercial efforts, including its Smarter Planet solutions.

Final Analysis

I came away from IBM STG’s Smarter Computing IT analyst forum with a better understanding of why the company believes consolidating its hardware and software organizations was both practically and strategically crucial. Whether IBM’s go-to-market messaging focuses on “workloads” or “capabilities,” the aim is essentially the same — to develop and deliver optimized, efficient IT solutions that offer customers superb compute performance and provide them the means to transform their businesses for the better.

Source:http://www.ecommercetimes.com/story/Solving-IBMs-IT-Conundrums-Integration-Is-the-Word-74012.html

International Business Machines Corp (IBM): Today’s Featured Computer Hardware Loser

December 19th, 2011

International Business Machines (IBM) pushed the Computer Hardware industry lower today making it today’s featured Computer Hardware loser. The industry as a whole closed the day down 0.2%. By the end of trading, International Business Machines fell $3.91 (-2.1%) to $183.57 on heavy volume. Throughout the day, 11.4 million shares of International Business Machines exchanged hands as compared to its average daily volume of 5.8 million shares. The stock ranged in price between $181.91-$188.01 after having opened the day at $187.66 as compared to the previous trading day’s close of $187.48. Other company’s within the Computer Hardware industry that declined today were: Network Equipment Technologies (NWK), down 9.2%, Lantronix (LTRX), down 7.4%, Crossroads Systems Incorporated (CRDS), down 6.2%, and Overland Storage (OVRL), down 4.4%.

International Business Machines Corporation (IBM) provides information technology (IT) products and services worldwide. International Business Machines has a market cap of $222.43 billion and is part of the technology sector. The company has a P/E ratio of 15, equal to the average computer hardware industry P/E ratio and below the S&P 500 P/E ratio of 17.7. Shares are up 28.6% year to date as of the close of trading on Thursday. Currently there are 12 analysts that rate International Business Machines a buy, no analysts rate it a sell, and 10 rate it a hold.

TheStreet Ratings rates International Business Machines as a buy. The company’s strengths can be seen in multiple areas, such as its revenue growth, notable return on equity, solid stock price performance, growth in earnings per share and expanding profit margins. We feel these strengths outweigh the fact that the company has had generally poor debt management on most measures that we evaluated.

Source:http://www.thestreet.com/story/11348780/1/international-business-machines-corp-ibm-todays-featured-computer-hardware-loser.html

IBM Settles European Union Antitrust Dispute Over Mainframes

December 15th, 2011

International Business Machines Corp., the biggest computer services provider, settled a European Union antitrust probe into conduct that may have hindered rival mainframe-software makers.

The European Commission accepted IBM’s offer to supply spare parts and technical information to other manufacturers on reasonable and non-discriminatory terms for five years, the EU said in an e-mailed statement today.

“I am pleased that we could find a swift solution with IBM to our competition concerns,” said EU Competition Commissioner Joaquin Almunia in the statement. “Timely interventions are crucial in fast-moving technology markets.”

While IBM has shifted its focus away from hardware toward its more profitable software and services businesses, the mainframe operations have high gross margins and help pull in revenue for other IBM divisions. Armonk, New York-based IBM began developing mainframe computers in the 1940s and 1950s and is among the few companies selling the systems.

IBM’s offer ends a probe that started last year into what the EU said were “unreasonable” supply conditions that may have restricted or delayed rivals’ access to spare parts. IBM made the proposal in September. The Brussels-based regulator also closed a separate probe over IBM’s mainframe computers after three competitors dropped complaints.

“IBM welcomes this final resolution of the inquiry into certain IBM mainframe maintenance practices and is pleased that the commission’s investigation of the IBM mainframe is now concluded,” Joe Hanley, a spokesman for the company in London, said in an e-mail.

Source:http://www.businessweek.com/news/2011-12-14/ibm-settles-european-union-antitrust-dispute-over-mainframes.html

I.B.M. Using Bits of Watson for Drug Research

December 9th, 2011

When I.B.M.’s Watson computer beat two human “Jeopardy!” champions earlier this year, it was a triumphant demonstration of the company’s technology. It was great for Big Blue’s image, but it was not a moneymaker on its own.

Yet that process is under way. Watson was a bundle of advanced technologies, including speech recognition, machine learning, natural-language processing, data mining and ultrafast in-memory computer hardware. They have been under development at I.B.M. for years, and were pulled into Watson.

The ingredients that went into the Watson arsenal are steadily finding their way into I.B.M. products. For example, WellPoint, the big health insurer, is trying out a system that uses Watson-style software to reduce redundant medical tests.

The latest entry is being announced on Thursday, I.B.M.’s Strategic Intellectual Property Insight Platform. Clearly, the Watson branding team did not work on this name.

But then again, this is not for television, where Watson performed, it is for major corporate customers seeking competitive advantage. The technology, sold as a cloud-based service, is the result of several years of joint development between IBM Research and four companies — AstraZeneca, Bristol-Myers Squibb, DuPont and Pfizer.

The insight platform uses data mining, natural-language processing and analytics to pore through millions of patent filings and biomedical journals to look for chemical compounds used in drug discovery. It searches for the names of compounds, related words, drawings of the compounds, the names of companies working with specific chemicals and molecules, and the names of scientists who created the patented inventions. It does its work quickly, retrieving information on patents in as little as 24 hours after a filing.

“It provides a landscape that shows who is working with what chemicals and drugs,” said Chris Moore, head of business analytics and optimization in I.B.M.’s global services unit.

The technology, Mr. Moore said, can be applied to everything from product strategy to recruiting to patent enforcement.

As a byproduct of its research, I.B.M. is also adding to a vast, searchable chemical database housed by the National Institutes of Health.

The company is contributing more than 2.4 million chemical compounds extracted from 4.7 million patents and 11 million biomedical journal extracts from 1976 to 2000.

The information was all published, but often in costly scientific journals or buried in the mountains of patent filings. It was so difficult to access that it was, for all practical purposes, inaccessible.

“It’s a nice contribution to the field of open chemistry — and that’s a growing trend, inspired by and similar to open source software,” said Marc C. Nicklaus, head of the computer-aided drug discovery group at the National Cancer Institute, which is part of the National Institutes of Health.

I.B.M.’s data contribution, it seems, is both generous and calibrated. The chemical compound data from patents goes from 1976 to 2000. So most of the data will be on patents that have already expired, useful for scientific research but far less useful commercially. The latter, no doubt, will be of greatest interest to I.B.M.’s paying clients.

Source:http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/12/08/ibms-watson-technologies-looks-for-drugs/#h[]

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