Business Services Industry

General Motors Selects IBM UNIX Servers for Global Operations

Business Wire, August 29, 2002

Business, High Tech and Automotive Editors

ARMONK, N.Y.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Aug. 29, 2002

IBM Infrastructure Will Increase GM's Supercomputing Muscle Fourfold,

Helping GM Meet its Aggressive Vehicle Development Cycle

IBM today announced that General Motors has selected a supercomputing infrastructure based on IBM pSeries 690 servers to power the company's vehicle design applications.

The infrastructure -- which will contain multiple systems, including the auto industry's most powerful supercomputer -- will increase GM's supercomputing muscle by a factor of four, helping the company further improve vehicle development processes.

With a combined processing power of 4 trillion calculations per second, the infrastructure is key to GM's goal of using technology to drive faster business processes and cost reductions within the product development environment.

"IBM p690 systems allow us to try scenarios on the computer that would be impossible to perform using traditional prototypes," said Kirk Gutmann, Global Develop Product Information Officer, General Motors. "Designing our next generation vehicles on IBM p690 helps us improve decision-making, speed cycle times, and ultimately, stay ahead of the competition."

Using IBM p690, researchers can gather data without setting up as many physical tests. The IBM infrastructure will run sophisticated crash simulations, the results of which provide valuable safety information. It will also run software that performs a variety of analyses to ensure a vehicle's structural integrity and quality. Using this software, researchers can design vehicles with reduced noise and vibration, providing customers with a more comfortable driving experience.

"General Motors is a proven leader in the use of technology to solve complex business and engineering challenges," said Jan Beauchamp, General Manager, IBM Automotive Industry. "IBM pSeries systems are uniquely designed to provide the scalability and performance required by General Motors' technical applications to improve design quality and reduce the time it takes to get their world-class automobiles to market."

IBM Infrastructure: Spanning Two Continents

General Motors selected IBM p690 systems for its facilities in Detroit, Michigan, Russelsheim, Germany, and Trollhattan, Sweden. The servers will be 32-way 1.3 GHz p690s with 2 GB memory per CPU.

The servers will be harnessed together in a single system with a total processing power of 2.3 teraflops, making it one of the ten largest supercomputers in the world(1) and the auto industry's most powerful supercomputer.

World's Most Powerful Server

The IBM eServer p690 is the world's most powerful server.(2) The p690 is based on IBM's innovative POWER4 microprocessor, a system on a chip containing two one-gigahertz-plus processors, a high-bandwidth system switch, a large memory cache and I/O.

The POWER4 chips are packaged in ultra-dense building blocks called multi-chip modules, which provides the equivalent processing power of much larger system boards in other high-end servers, while consuming less electricity.

About IBM

IBM is the number one server vendor in the world.(3) For more information, visit www.ibm.com.

IBM, the e-business logo, p690, and pSeries are trademarks of IBM Corporation in the United States and/or other countries.

UNIX is a registered trademark in the United States and other countries licensed exclusively through The Open Group.

All other company, product and service names are trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective companies.

(C) 2002 International Business Machines Corporation, all rights reserved.

(1) See http://www.top500.org for a list of the world's largest

supercomputers. Current as of August 28, 2002. (2) Based on SPECweb99 results posted on http://www.spec.org. Current

as of August 28, 2002. SPECweb99 is a trademark of Standard

Performance Evaluation Corporation (SPEC). Full results available

at http://www.specbench.org/osg/web99/. (3) According to 2001 IDC Worldwide Quarterly Server Tracker.

COPYRIGHT 2002 Business Wire
COPYRIGHT 2008 Gale, Cengage Learning
 

BNET TalkbackShare your ideas and expertise on this topic

Please add your comment:

  1. You are currently: a Guest |
  2.  

Basic HTML tags that work in comments are: bold (<b></b>), italic (<i></i>), underline (<u></u>), and hyperlink (<a href></a)

advertisement
advertisement
  • Click Here
  • Click Here
  • Click Here
advertisement
Click Here

Content provided in partnership with Thompson Gale