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Silicon Mechanics Announces Recipients of 5th Annual Research Cluster Grant

BOTHELL, WA--(Marketwired - Apr 6, 2016) - Silicon Mechanics, a leading provider of servers, storage and high-performance computing solutions to the world's most innovative organizations, today announced the recipients of its fifth annual Research Cluster Grant (RCG): the University of New Orleans and the University of California, Merced. Each grant awardee will receive a High-Performance Computing (HPC) cluster with the latest high-performance processing and GPU technologies, valued at over $100,000 for use in demonstrated research purposes going forward. This is the second year that Silicon Mechanics has made the award to two institutions.

Since 2012, when Silicon Mechanics initiated the RCG, the program has extended its reach considerably, providing over $500,000 worth of much needed technology advancements to universities and institutions where access to important research funding to acquire high-performance computing technology has become more difficult in recent years.

"Being part of a program which provides cluster technology to help positively impact research efforts is why we started this five years ago. Providing a solution to these universities where access to high-performance computing was either limited, outdated or was not previously available is ultimately what the RCG is all about," said Art Mann, Silicon Mechanics' Sr. Director, Life Sciences Practice. "Knowing we are helping to advance collaboration between university departments and researchers, and being able to look down the road at the advancements and findings these institutions are targeting is very exciting."

"We are happy to continue to support this program and provide the universities with leading EDR 100Gb/s InfiniBand interconnect technology," said Scot Schultz, director of HPC and technical computing at Mellanox Technologies. "The Research Cluster Grant supports HPC education with technologies that are state-of-the-art and also provides a spring-board for enhancing skills that are in high demand in the industry."

At the University of New Orleans, the HPC cluster will be used to build on the strengths of the medicinal chemistry, cyber security, advanced materials design, information assurance and computational biology programs featured at the university. The HPC equipment will improve research in: big data analytical methods for cyber security and digital forensic purposes, the development of GPU-accelerated tools for computational chemistry, cyber-security and bioinformatics and university resources using dockers and containers to solve scientific problems.