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Yahoo!, HP, Intel meet in the cloud
Open source research project to "remove barriers"
By Caroline McCarthy
Published: Wednesday 30 July 2008
HP, Intel and Yahoo! have teamed up to create a "test bed" project for research in cloud computing.
The open-source project will consist of data centres around the globe "to promote open collaboration among industry, academia and governments by removing the financial and logistical barriers to research in data-intensive, internet-scale computing".
The three have partnered with the Infocomm Development Authority of Singapore, Germany's Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, and the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign as well as the National Science Foundation.
Using largely HP hardware and Intel processors, six initial data centres will be built at those locations, each with 1,000 to 4,000 processor cores (about 125 to 500 servers). All the centres are expected to become fully functional later this year. Researchers from all three companies as well as the host institutions will have access to the project.
The three companies declined to state how much each had contributed financially but did say each was responsible for committing hardware and people to do the research.
When HP Labs underwent a major reorganisation in March, it named large-scale cloud services as a key focus. Labs director and company senior vice president, Prith Banerjee, said the project is important to HP because "we believe we are entering a new era called 'Everything as a Service'", where devices and services will "interact seamlessly through the cloud. To realise the full potential, the tech industry must think of the cloud as a platform".
Yahoo!'s commitment to cloud computing stems from its involvement in the Apache Hadoop project, an open-source project for large-scale data processing, similar to Google's proprietary MapReduce software. Yahoo! formed a cloud computing group as part of a major reorganisation in June, and earlier this year partnered with a research facility in India to make one of the world's fastest supercomputers available for cloud computing research.
The three founding companies said they were "open" to adding additional partners in the future and stressed the open-source element of the project, saying HP, Yahoo! and Intel were each committed to using information gleaned from the test beds and contributing it to open-source projects both commercially and for further research.
CNET News.com's Erica Ogg and Stephen Shankland contributed to this report.
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