High-performance computing vendor SGI has unveiled a new platform, the
Adaptive Data Warehouse, which provides an version of Oracle's database software
optimised to run on its hardware.
The system combines Oracle’s database software with SGI’s Altix Server
hardware and its InfiniteStorage systems.
SGI was previously best known for its 3D graphics systems, but having
undergone an enforced transformation, it is hoping to reinvent itself has a
high-end enterprise computing vendor.
The Adaptive Data Warehouse is based on technology originally designed for
data intensive work such as battlefield intelligence, energy exploration and
weather forecasting, said SGI’s director of enterprise data management Ken Won.
With businesses increasingly handling high-volume transactions or running
sophisticated pattern-matching algorithms to catch identity thieves, such
powerful number-crunching systems are increasingly attractive to enterprise
buyers, he added.
SGI was delisted from the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in November 2005. It
filed for Chapter 11 bankrupcy protection in May 2006, which it came out of in
October 2006.
It is producing systems mainly based on Intel Xeon x86 hardware, although it
also produces Itanium systems. SGI previously focused on computer hardware based
on MIPS’ RISC processors.
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