Leading Software Tool Vendors Line Up Behind DRC's Coprocessor Systems for High Performance Computing.CebaTech, DSPlogic, Impulse Accelerated Technologies Impulse Accelerated Technologies, Inc. is a privately held company providing software development tools for embedded systems and high performance computing, and in particular for applications based on field programmable gate array (FPGA) devices. , Mitrionics, and Synplicity Join Celoxica to Extend Programming Expertise and Drive Adoption of Reconfigurable Computing See adaptive computing. TAMPA, Fla. -- DRC DRC Democratic Republic of Congo DRC Down (Stage) Right Center DRC Director(ate) of Reserve Components DRC Disability Rights Commission (United Kingdom) Computer Corporation, a leading provider of coprocessor coprocessor Additional processor used in some personal computers to perform specialized tasks such as extensive arithmetic calculations or processing of graphical displays. systems, today announced new software tool partners, CebaTech, DSPlogic, Impulse Accelerated Technologies, Mitrionics, and Synplicity are joining with existing partner Celoxica to extend programming expertise to the DRC Reconfigurable Processor Unit (RPU RPU Rochester Public Utilities (Rochester, NY) RPU Revenue Per User (telecommunications) RPU Remote Processing Unit RPU Ray Processing Unit (computer graphics; ray tracing) ) and development environments. At this week's Supercomputing show, DRC and its tool partners are driving adoption of reconfigurability by showcasing solutions that deliver 10- to 200-time improvements in high-performance applications. "We are committed to providing complete system-level reconfigurable solutions that address the power, heat, performance, density and cost issues associated with today's high-performance computing High-speed computing, which typically refers to supercomputers used in scientific research. ," says Larry Laurich, CEO (1) (Chief Executive Officer) The highest individual in command of an organization. Typically the president of the company, the CEO reports to the Chairman of the Board. of DRC. "To that end, we will continually seek out and partner with industry leaders and innovators who will help us achieve this goal and drive the expansion of coprocessor-based systems for supercomputing." At the Supercomputing 2006 trade show, DRC has been invited to participate in AMD's booth, #1413, and will be demonstrating the power of its new RPU110 family for visualization and Smith-Waterman. DRC will also show its new DS2000 for application development on large clusters of CPUs and RPUs. In addition, DRC and its partners are discussing how their tools work together to modify application subroutines to run in hardware for dramatic improvements in system performance. Here is what DRC's partners are saying: CebaTech "CebaTech's ability to take any untimed ANSI C (language, standard) ANSI C - (American National Standards Institute C) A revision of C, adding function prototypes, structure passing, structure assignment and standardised library functions. ANSI X3.159-1989. cgram is a grammar for ANSI C, written in Scheme. software directly to hardware in a dramatically shortened design cycle opens up exciting possibilities for reconfigurable design and coprocessor-based solutions," said Tim Sullivan, president of CebaTech. "We are excited to be working with DRC to demonstrate how computationally intensive software applications benefit dramatically from hardware acceleration In computing, hardware acceleration is the use of hardware to perform some function faster than is possible in software running on the normal (general purpose) CPU. Examples of hardware acceleration include blitting acceleration functionality in graphics processing units (GPUs) and ." For more information visit www.cebatech.com. Celoxica According to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. Jeff Jussel, Celoxica's Americas general manager and VP of marketing, "Celoxica is committed to providing the software and kernel functions necessary to enable FPGA-based coprocessing. Our strong partnership with DRC allows us to deliver a complete solution for acceleration, as much as 200 times, for applications in industries such as finance, life sciences, and oil and gas exploration." In its booth at SC06, #501, Celoxica will be demonstrating algorithm acceleration using a DRC development system on a video processing Video processing techniques are used in video codecs, video players and other devices. For example—commonly only design and video processing is different in TV sets of different manufactures. application compiled from C algorithms to the FPGA (Field Programmable Gate Array) A type of gate array that is programmed in the field rather than in a semiconductor fab. Containing up to hundreds of thousands of gates, there are a variety of FPGA architectures on the market. RPU using its DK Design Suite environment. For more information visit www.celoxica.com. DSPlogic "We are very pleased to expand the portability of the Reconfigurable Computing Toolbox to include DRC's leading-edge computing platforms," says Mike Babst, president of DSPlogic. "I am confident that our rapid graphical programming language will help software programmers, without any knowledge of hardware design, extract the highest performance from the DRC platforms." For more information visit www.dsplogic.com. Impulse Accelerated Technologies "We are currently developing support within Impulse C for the DRC RPU platform," said Brian Durwood, co-founder of Impulse Accelerated Technologies. "We expect our solution to be available in 4-6 weeks." For more information visit www.impulsec.com. Mitrionics "We are pleased to announce support for DRC's Reconfigurable Processor Unit and coprocessor systems," said Anders Dellson, CEO of Mitrionics, Inc. "As scientists and researchers are gaining more choices for FPGA-based systems on which to run their supercomputing applications, Mitrionics is committed to supporting these systems with our development platform and Mitrion Virtual Processor. We expect DRC will make a strong contribution to our growing market segment." Visit Mitrionics at Supercomputing 06 in Booth #2045. For more information visit www.mitrionics.com. Synplicity Synplicity is supporting DRC's Reconfigurable Processor Unit with its Synplify Pro software, the industry's leading FPGA synthesis solution. "DRC has developed innovative technology that will expand the use of FPGAs in the high-performance computing (HPC (Handheld PC) A palmtop computer that weighs less than one pound and runs specialized versions of popular applications. Microsoft coined the term for its Windows CE operating system, which is an abbreviated version of Windows. See Pocket PC. ) market," stated Andy Haines, senior vice president of marketing at Synplicity. "Synplicity views the HPC market as a compelling growth opportunity for our company and the industry as a whole. We are excited to partner with DRC to help fuel the growth of FPGAs in compute-intensive applications, and expose new customers to our Synplify Pro software." For more information visit www.synplicity.com. About DRC DRC delivers complete solutions for compute-intensive problems and for accelerating high-performance applications in a tightly coupled coprocessing environment. DRC is the leading provider of coprocessor systems that plug directly into a systems processor socket. Offloading CPU-intensive software subroutines to hardware in a DRC Reconfigurable Processor Unit (RPU) makes applications run many times faster than ordinary solutions connected to a peripheral bus. Coprocessor bandwidth and latency bottlenecks are all but eliminated. The company's RPU and development systems also solve the high-performance computing industry's growing physical limitations of heat, clock speed, and density. Industry leaders Cray, AMD (Advanced Micro Devices, Inc., Sunnyvale, CA, www.amd.com) A major manufacturer of semiconductor devices including x86-compatible CPUs, embedded processors, flash memories, programmable logic devices and networking chips. , Xilinx and Microway are promoting, deploying and supporting DRC solutions to their customers. In addition, leading EDA (1) (Electronic Design Automation) Using the computer to design, lay out, verify and simulate the performance of electronic circuits on a chip or printed circuit board. providers Celoxica, CebaTech, DSPlogic, Impulse Accelerated Technologies, Mitrionics, and Synplicity provide development software supporting the DRC RPU. More information about DRC is available at www.drccomputer.com. |
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