"ExaRAID" brought four times processing power!
Nakatani Laboratory is one of Japan's leading laboratories which is developing the next-generation micromagnetic simulation and has adopted ExaRAID for the simulation system of their research. In this research, it is required to process file sizes from tens of MB to several GB, but the previous RAID device could only process 100 jobs at the same time. Now ExaRAID has improved it to 400 jobs. Professor Nakatani said, "Even though 6 months have elapsed since installation, it shows high stability and high performance. I would like to introduce this cost-efficient product to other researchers."
"ExaRAID" has been adopted for research of the next-generation memory (MRAM) simulation system!
Customer Information
Customer Name:
The University of Electro-Communications
Dept. of Communication Engineering and Informations Nakatani Laboratory
Application:
Research of the next-generation memory (MRAM) simulation system!
Implemented System
Server: Macintosh (Processor: 2.26GHz x 2 Quad-Core Intel Xeon)
OS: Mac OS X Server 10.6.1
Storage: ExaRAID (bottom of the rack)
RAID Configuration: 22TB RAID5 (Logical Size)
About Nakatani Laboratory, Graduate School of Informatics and Engineering, The University of Electro-Communications
Nakatani Laboratory is a laboratory that develops simulation techniques focusing on micromagnetic simulation and researches magnetic memory, hard disks, and magneto-optical disks using the simulation method they developed. Currently, they are also participating in the New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization, IAA "spintronics technology projects in non-volatile function".
About MRAM
The Magnetoresistive Random Access Memory (MRAM) is a non-volatile memory using magnetism.
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