Supercomputing centers acknowledge Amazon influence

November 19, 2009, 09:10 AM —  Computerworld — 

PORTLAND, Ore. - Amazon.com Inc. is to high performance computing what McDonald's is to food: fast, cheap but with a limited menu.

But while some HPC users may refer to Amazon's Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2) service as a "CPU farm" or a "CPU bin," there are aspects of the company's model and pricing scheme that may be having an impact on supercomputing centers that have been typically been the domain of researchers.

Amazon may be helping supercomputing centers indirectly by popularizing the pay-as-you-go model, which makes it easier for the centers to attract business users and clearly contrast their services against the online giant.

Access to supercomputing is increasingly seen as critical to U.S. competitiveness for its ability to test designs virtually and speed products to market. That has encouraged some states, including Ohio, New Mexico and Montana, to invest in supercomputing programs aimed at smaller businesses.

"You cannot just have the biggest of Fortune 100 companies using supercomputing to become more competitive - you really need to enable the whole supply chain to become more competitive," said Ashok Krishnamurthy, senior director, research and scientific development at the Ohio Supercomputer Center in Columbus.

OSC is working to make its model easier to use. This month, it announced that it had developed with Nimbis Services Inc., which provides access OSC's compute services through a Web portal. Users can pay for the service using using a credit card, like the EC2 model.

But for the most part, that's where the comparison to Amazon ends.

Nimbis also negotiates terms with HPC computing application providers to enable users to run those apps on OSC's platform. Nimbis is a for profit software company that can make agreements with vendors more readily than an academic supercomputing center can, said Krishnamurthy.

Supercomputing centers say they can provide expert help as well as ISV software, fast interconnects, large memory footprints, and other technologies not available though commercial cloud infrastructure providers. While Krishnamurthy said the broader familiarity with Amazon's model makes it easier to explain their process to customers, "our model is not Amazon's model."

The New Mexico Computing Applications Center in Albuquerque, which was funded by the state and operates as a nonprofit, offers customers a pricing sheet for compute cycles and monthly invoice. That keeps the cost management simple as the company goes "after specific industries that can help bring high paying jobs to the state," said Scott Collins, the center's CTO.

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