DOE Genomes
Human Genome Project Information  Genomics:GTL  DOE Microbial Genomics  home
-
HGP Home
Human Genome News Archive Edition

Vol.11, No. 3-4   July 2001
Available in PDF
 
In this issue...

In the News
* Genomes to Life
* OASCR and GTL
* DOE Microbial Cell Project
* Human Genome Draft
* Genome Perspective
* Honor for DeLisi
* New NIH Institute
* Structural Genomics
* Imaging Structures
* Synchrotron Use
* Proteome Organisation
* Breast Cancer Research
* Gene Expressions Used
* Nuclear Medicine
* Nuclear Medicine Labs
* Toxicogenomics Center
* Kettering Prize
* Zeta Phi Beta Conference
* Microbial Genomes
* Sloan-DOE Fellowships
* Ribosomes Illuminated
* In Memoriam: Walter Goad


Comparative Genomics
* Model Organism Studies
* Sushi Delicacy
* Arabidopsis Sequence
* AAAS Prize
* Microbial Conference
*
Flyer; "Microbe Month"
*
VISTA Software
Mouse
* ORNL Mouse Program
*
MicroCAT Scanner Used
*
Draft Sequence Achieved
*
NCBI Mouse Resources
*
Human-Mouse Comparisons
*
MGI Allele Searching

Web, Publications, Resources
* Next-Generation Computing
* HGMIS Resources
* NSF QSB Report
* Structural Biology Basics
*
Minorities and the HGP
*
HGP Educational Kit
*
Testing, Counseling Resources
*
Biotech, ELSI Websites
*
Biotech Encyclopedia
*
ASM Report
*
Nature Yearbook
* Next Wave Publication
* High-School Curriculum
* Education CD-ROMs
* Exploring DNA in the Classroom


Funding
* US Genome Research Funding
*
UK Scholarships, PostDocs

Meeting Calendars & Acronyms
* Genome and Biotechnology Meetings
* Training Courses and Workshops
* Acronyms


* HGN archives and subscriptions

Human Genome Project Information home

Sandia, Celera, Compaq Work on Next-Generation Computing

In January, Sandia National Laboratories and Celera Genomics, Inc., signed a 4-year Cooperative Research and Development Agreement to begin work on the next generation of computer software and hardware for computational biology and a full range of applications in the life sciences. Under contract to Sandia, Compaq Computer Corporation will design the new machine, which is expected to achieve 100 trillion operations per second (100 TeraOps). By sharing some computing technologies developed by Sandia, Celera and Compaq ultimately may reach the "petacruncher" level (1000 TeraOps).

This level of cooperation is necessary to meet the dramatic demands of emerging genomics and proteomics applications at affordable prices by bringing together the capabilities of three leaders in bioinformatics, high-performance computing, and massively parallel systems. Using both public and private resources, the multimillion-dollar arrangement first was suggested by Sen. Pete V. Domenici (R-N.M.) and guided to completion by Ari Patrinos, Associate Director of the DOE Office of Biological and Environmental Research.

J. Craig Venter, Celera's president and chief scientific officer, said, "Just 3 years ago, the computational needs of biology were thought to be minor and irrelevant to the computing industry. Today, biologists are setting the pace of development in the industry."

Patrinos noted, "The most fertile ground for scientific discovery lies at the interface of disciplines, with the most important at the junction of biology and information science."

To accomplish the consortium's goal of creating a prototype by 2004, Compaq and Sandia will collaborate on system hardware and software. Celera and Sandia will focus on advanced algorithms and new visualization technologies for analyzing the massive amounts of data generated by high-throughput machines. All three groups will contribute to integrating system hardware and software and on optimizing performance.

The alliance will use Compaq Alpha processors connected in a massively parallel configuration with extremely high bandwidth and low-latency mesh interconnects. Sandia currently operates the most powerful Linux-based supercomputer in existence and is home to ASCI Red, the first TeraOp supercomputer, one of the fastest in the world.

next

The electronic form of the newsletter may be cited in the following style:
Human Genome Program, U.S. Department of Energy, Human Genome News (v11n3-4).

Send the url of this page to a friend


Last modified: Wednesday, October 29, 2003

Home * Contacts * Disclaimer

Base URL: www.ornl.gov/hgmis

Office of Science Site sponsored by the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science, Office of Biological and Environmental Research, Human Genome Program