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Technology (Apple) Businesses Apple Science Technology

Apple to Award Workgroup Clusters to Scientists 199

Graff writes "Apple is giving away five Apple Workgroup Clusters for Bioinformatics (each worth approximately $40,000) to four higher education researchers and one non-education researcher. A panel of independent scientists and Apple will choose the lucky researchers."
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Apple to Award Workgroup Clusters to Scientists

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  • Nifty (Score:5, Funny)

    by Burgundy Advocate ( 313960 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @06:48PM (#9133515) Homepage
    For the mad scientist who has everything!
  • oh (Score:5, Funny)

    by Linwood ( 652814 ) * on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @06:48PM (#9133531) Journal
    must be a 1.8 ghz G5 with monitor to add up to that size of cash.
  • by Neil Blender ( 555885 ) <neilblender@gmail.com> on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @06:51PM (#9133559)
    Apple (as well as other computer companies like IBM) are getting very interested in bioinformatics. They have loaned us a ton of equipment for free even though our product is linux based. Of course, Apple has always had a stronghold in academics.
    • by harvardian ( 140312 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @07:17PM (#9133817)
      "Apple has always had a stronghold in academics"

      That's a bit broad. K-12 education, sure, but at the bioinformatics lab I worked with, we worked exclusively with IBM. The attractiveness of using consumer-level Macs in a grade school setting most certainly doesn't translate to a high-performance computing environment. That might change as Apple moves into this space, however...we'll see.
      • by Neil Blender ( 555885 ) <neilblender@gmail.com> on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @07:25PM (#9133892)
        That's a bit broad. K-12 education, sure,

        When I worked at the University of Washington doing life sciences research, my personal observation saw it to be about 50/50 pc vs mac. (And the UW is a giant in life sciences) When I left in 1999, linux was slowly creeping in but most of the unix based stuff was run by the computer center. The 50/50 number is certainly different than the 95/5 or whatever the worldwide average is/was. And my observations were only in the life-sciences. I have no idea what the ratios were in say, physics or chemistry.
        • Are you talking about day-to-day use, or high-performance use? If you use Apple in a high-performance setting, your lab may be more the norm than where I worked. And I did leave 9 months ago, so who knows what's changed since then...but knowing the speed of academia, probably not much.
        • by schwanerhill ( 135840 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @08:14PM (#9134323)
          Astrophysics is dominated by Suns (as workstations), with a significant Linux presence; very few astronomers use Windows. All the analysis software I've used (in five different institutions) is Unix-based, which effectively means Suns, Linux, and Macs.

          However, more and more astrophysicists are using Macs these days. Apple laptops are very popular, and people are also starting to use Macs as workstations and servers. It's hard to guess at numbers, so I'll note anecdotally that my (small) lab is in the process of replacing our 4 aging Suns with G5 towers. We're also considering an XServe cluster to run some moderately substantial simulations. I don't think we're unusual in those regards.
          • by wirelessbuzzers ( 552513 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @11:24PM (#9135656)
            Astrophysics is dominated by Suns...

            Somehow, this doesn't seem surprising...
          • I'm doing IT for a group of solar physicists, and we're running a rather high percentage of Macs. [I'd say over 50% of the physical systems, with Suns and Alphas coming in roughly tied for second, with Intel based systems a distant fourth].

            With 64bit macs, I'm guessing they're going to get an even stronger foothold, especially as we look at the G5 XServe [which if procurement ever gets right, might actually come in sometime this year].
        • In physics UNIX usage is much higher and Apple usage is slightly higher than normal. Alphas are almost not used anymore and now we are in a transition from Sun to Linux. (Historically it's gone Alpha, Sparc, and now Linux on x86)

          As far as clustering though, MS and Apple are insignificant. Though at least now there are Apple clusters. (The majority of Windows clusters I've seen are donated) And as far as desktops, UNIX and Apple are in the same league. Though the trend in grad students is an increasing numb
        • When I worked at the University of Washington doing life sciences research, my personal observation saw it to be about 50/50 pc vs mac.

          It depends on the branch of life sciences, and more importantly, the biases of the individual professor.

          In most computational labs, ALL of the computing is done on Unix, which nowadays means mostly Linux. In crystallography, people still hang on to SGIs but there's a lot of migration towards both Linux and Mac. In fact, my impression is that Apple may be making real pro
        • I attend cryptographic conferences on a regular basis, being a young scientist in the field.

          Three years ago, I saw NO mac laptops in the audience. 300 people, all mathematicians,computer scientists and electrical engineers, half of them with a laptop, no mac.

          Two years ago, some appeared.

          Last years, one in twenty had a mac laptop.

          This year, one in ten. It's amazing how people are "discovering" powerbooks and ibooks.

          And you can tell the owner from the machine!

          Firm execs or young academicians backed by
      • by Yarn ( 75 ) on Thursday May 13, 2004 @06:36AM (#9137371) Homepage
        I'm network manager at the Genetics dept at Cambridge Uni. After mashing my network inventory scripts a bit I can give you a few stats:
        297 Total Unique MACs
        105 Apple
        58 3Com
        20 HP
        17 Intel
        12 Sun
        10 CompalElec
        8 Dell
        5 Sony
        4 Toshiba

        Dumped my database of all mac addresses into a text file, then:
        for foo in `cat temp|sed s/:..:..:..$//g` ; do grep -i $foo manuf ; done | awk '{print $2}' | sort | uniq -ci | sort -n -r | head -n 10
  • The actual prize (Score:5, Informative)

    by Pranjal ( 624521 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @06:51PM (#9133560)
    The actual prize is composed of the following item

    • (1) Xserve G5 dual-CPU model with 2 GB of RAM, 750 GB of storage
    • (3) Xserve G5 cluster configuration with 2 GB of RAM, 80 GB of storage
    • (1) APC Smart-UPS 2200 VA Power Supply
    • (1) XtremeMac Xrack Pro Sound Suppressing Server Enclosure
    • (4) AppleCare Premium Service and Support Contracts
    • (1) Asanté GX5-800 8-port Gigabit Ethernet Switch
    • (5) Category 5e Ethernet Cables
    • (1) BioTeam INquiry Cluster Provision Tool


  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @06:55PM (#9133617)
    Please, no beowulf cluster jokes.
  • United Devices (Score:5, Interesting)

    by kyoko21 ( 198413 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @07:04PM (#9133707)
    Apple should give a set away to United Devices (Profit) [ud.com] or Grid [grid.org]. Both of these ventures specialize in distributed Cancer/Drug simulations. Let's find a cure for breast and prostate cancer!!!! Go Go Go!!!
    • Re:United Devices (Score:5, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @07:08PM (#9133753)
      Last time I checked, the UD client was Windows only.

      Perhaps a give away to Folding@Home [stanford.edu] wouldn't be so bad.
    • Re:United Devices (Score:4, Informative)

      by Gogo Dodo ( 129808 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @08:11PM (#9134299)
      Both UD and Grid are distributed systems. There's not much point in giving the hardware to them. UD and Grid work by using client resources to do the work, not a centralized server farm. Sure, they could use it for some of their backend stuff, but if you're looking to boost UD and Grid's processing power, the clusters are not going to help since UD and Grid are Windows only.
  • BFD (Score:5, Insightful)

    by bmarklein ( 24314 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @07:10PM (#9133769)
    Companies give research grants to universities all the time. A DEC grant paid for two years of grad school for me in the early 90's, and gave my lab a bunch of sweet Alphas. Why is this news - because it's Apple?
    • "file a refund action with ebay"

      Of course! When Apple does somthing thats been done before its because they're inovative.

      • no that's Microsoft. No one but trolls are calling Apple innovative with this. It may get marked, but it's not innovative.
    • Re:BFD (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Daniel Dvorkin ( 106857 ) * on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @07:46PM (#9134081) Homepage Journal
      Probably because it's not an outright grant, but a contest which (theoretically) anyone can enter. And there are a fair number of /.ers who might be interested. I'd enter myself, but my chances of winning as a grad student are probably somewhere between 0 and NULL.
    • Because those Apple supercomputer-in-a-box setups are cool. When i win the lottery, i'm gonna get me a couple two.
  • by malia8888 ( 646496 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @07:21PM (#9133848)
    Looking at the picture of the prize--looks like "Hal" to me but with wheels!! :P

  • My Proposal (Score:3, Funny)

    by platypibri ( 762478 ) <platypibri@@@gmail...com> on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @07:34PM (#9133978) Homepage Journal
    Attn: Apple Inc.

    I would like to formally propose an educational study in which the effect that faster Photoshop and Quark X-Press productivity would have on my pocket book would be studied. I'd also like to crunch some numbers on the effect of staggering frame rates in UT2K4 would have on my on-line gaming experience, as I currently suck. My studio would be the happy receipient of one of your donor G5 machines. Thank you for your time.

  • by amichalo ( 132545 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @07:55PM (#9134167)
    So lets run some numbers:
    5 $40,000 (retail) prizes = $200,000 retail
    only 4 ($160,000) are educational and after looking at the awards, there is no stipulation the 1 non-educational award must go to a non-profit so there is only the $160,000 tax right off guaranteed.
    Now if you are a reseller, I don't know if you can right off the retail value of the goods & services donation or not, so that would make the value even lower.

    Now the return on the investment:
    Well you get smart people in research institutions all over the country dreaming up ways to use 5 Xserves and the 10 way G5 64=bit computing power they bring. So even if they don't win, somebody may get some dollars budgeted to actually buy this type of system outright. Or perhaps they win a different grant and use those moneys to fund it.
    Then you have publicity. At least a few hundred /. readers saw it. Does this influence them to but a $40,000 cluster? that's a big nope. Does it influence them to try the Xserve? well perhaps it helps reinforce the production applicability of the Xserve (it runs iTMS and the V-tech super computer and these $40,000 clusters so maybe I shoudl give it a try) Does it make people want to but PowerBooks and iPods, again, doubtful.

    So what's left
    So after Apple ponies up $200,000 in hardware and software, less their margins and tax deductions, they still spent six figures on a marketing stunt and some good Karma. Will it pay for itself? Well if only ONE of these institutions who wins a cluster actually adds on to it within an order of magnitude of V-tech, I would say 'yeah' it will pay for itself.

    Have other companies (Big Blue, Hp, etc) had success with similar programs?
  • "The Apple Workgroup Cluster for Bioinformatics places the power of computational clustering within reach of ordinary scientists."

    ...if they have $40k (or are awarded the grant).

    How many "ordinary scientists" have $40k burning a hole in their pocket?

    And who would admit to being an ordinary scientist anyway!?

    • My company [intelligent-imaging.com] sells digital microscopy systems -- microscope, camera, Mac or PC workstation, capture and image processing software, and assorted other goodies -- which typically run between $75,000 and $250,000. Now, I don't know if our customers would like to be described as "ordinary scientists" <g> but we do sell plenty of systems. Academic customers usually pay with grant money, of course; corporate (mostly pharmaceutical) customers just write a check ... In any case, there are plenty of scientist
    • by the gnat ( 153162 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @11:02PM (#9135546)
      How many "ordinary scientists" have $40k burning a hole in their pocket?

      At a decent research university, probably most of them. If they're comp bio, they probably have even more money than that. In bioinformatics, you don't need to spend $250 on a milliliter of antibodies or thousands of dollars on primers - the overhead for keeping a lab running is much lower. And experimentalists regularly have to spend considerably more than $40k on their equipment - as the other poster pointed out, microscopes are an excellent example. (EM systems are even worse - these are usually at least $300k.) Therefore, grant money stretches a long way.
  • From the website "he Apple sales team will be happy to help you with the purchase of your Apple Workgroup Cluster for Bioniformatics." It's not a bunch of stuff Apple put together just for the give-away. It's a packaged product, and Slashdot has helped sell it. Haloed by thou marketing company's name. I love this company.... I love this company, but some things are just crazy.
  • I decline! (Score:5, Funny)

    by callipygian-showsyst ( 631222 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @08:24PM (#9134398) Homepage
    Sorry, Apple, but I can't accept your offer. You see, my IT department won't support Mac servers.
    • Well then show them the 3rd party benchmarks showing how AltiVec-optimized BLAST on a dual 2ghz G5 completely creams absolutely anything else out there, CPU-for-CPU.

      If that fails, the XServe doubles as a handy bludgeon--feel free to beat the Win-Magnans all the way back to their cave.

      • You're much more considerate than the guy who just called me an "idiot!"

        (This was no joke! They really won't support anything other than Windows XP for desktops or FreeBSD (and 2003 Server) for servers.)

  • Apple (Score:5, Insightful)

    by arfuni ( 775132 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @08:34PM (#9134483) Homepage
    There's a lot of statements in this thread about about Macs not being useful for science due to software support. What the hell? That's like saying that HP, Dell, etc can't be used - Mac systems can take UNIX versions just like any other computer. Regardless, our university's physics department apparently uses nothing but Apple systems, although generally old ones due to the budget.
    • Re:Apple (Score:3, Informative)

      by the gnat ( 153162 )
      There's a lot of statements in this thread about about Macs not being useful for science due to software support. What the hell? That's like saying that HP, Dell, etc can't be used - Mac systems can take UNIX versions just like any other computer.

      I think people are confusing commercial and non-commercial apps. The commercial programs are either targeted towards industry/pharma, or are part of some other proprietary system - for example, controlling a purification or mass spec system. These are usually W
      • Re:Apple (Score:5, Interesting)

        by nettdata ( 88196 ) on Thursday May 13, 2004 @05:36AM (#9137184) Homepage
        You're right...

        My cousin does cancer research at Harvard, and I design/write software for a living. He found that there was a huge empty space for software that would help him do his job (cancer research), so 2 years ago we started a software company that specializes in reagent management (cryogenic storage, dna plasmids, oligos, antibodies, protocols, animal experiments, etc., all cross-referenced), and made sure that it was 100% Java and cross-platform.

        While we really have no direct competition (yet), it is very interesting to see the platform requirement limitations (mostly DOS/Windows) that a lot of the other software companies have. There really is a huge shortage of cross-platform software.

        Our experience has shown that most commercial labs tend to be Windows based, while most academic labs are Mac based. It is also not uncommon to have the Academic labs have 1 or 2 Win32 boxes that are there just to run a particular program they're using. It also appears that the IT departments in academia tend to use Linux back-end servers, with an interestingly high occurance of Yellow Dog. (That's Linux on PPC, for those of you unfamiliar with YD). Usually, we've found that the YD servers are older G3 and G4 towers that have been repurposed.

        Now, these are the environments that we've been exposed to, and may not accurately represent the group as a whole, but regardless, it's been an interesting and enlightening experience seeing what/how different labs are currently (and used to) using by way of software.
  • Dear Apple (Score:5, Funny)

    by Wesley Felter ( 138342 ) <wesley@felter.org> on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @08:44PM (#9134558) Homepage
    Before you start giving away Xserve clusters, could you please ship the Xserves that we ordered over a month ago?
  • by mac os ken ( 732050 ) on Thursday May 13, 2004 @12:06AM (#9135880) Homepage Journal
    Lets just get this straight and not dive into the tireless Win/*nix/OS X debate. Apple is giving away some serious prizes. PERIOD. This isn't about a turf war.

  • by gsdali ( 707124 ) on Thursday May 13, 2004 @02:18PM (#9142122)
    Think of the time saved by being able to buy a preconfigured cluster. Just open the box plug in, fire up and go. Now Beowulf may be cheaper, butthink of the time saved by just being able to buy a cluster off the shelf. Think of the time saved by not having to set up and configure. I don't really mind who's selling this kind of solution but I'm glad someone someone is.

    Roll on clustered Shake and FCP renndering though.

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