Posted on 05/18/2010 1:14:01 PM PDT by reaganaut1
Microsoft has formed a new group to better its share of the market for the most powerful computers in the world. Its plan of attack: make the machines easier to use.
On Monday, Microsoft said it has created an effort called the Technical Computing Initiative focused on the field of high-performance computing, in which dozens to thousands of PCs are lashed together to jointly perform complex calculations beyond the capacity of individual machines. Microsoft has quietly staffed up the group with several hundred employees and is launching a marketing push with a new website touting trends in high-performance computing.
While most people will never come close to needing a high-performance computer, theyre key to the design of a lot of everyday products. They help engineers simulate the impact of wind shear on airplanes and scientists to discover new drugs. Hedge-funds feed mountains of data into them to develop trading strategies.
...
Well, not everyone exactly since high-performance computing applications will still require a lot of technical know-how. Muglia offers an example of how Microsoft plans to make high-performance computing more accessible: Today many financial services firms use the companys Excel spreadsheet application to develop financial models, but if the firms need the power of a supercomputer to crunch numbers, they often have to write specialized applications in programming languages like Fortran that a much smaller group of users are fluent in.
Microsofts Technical Computing group is working on software that will allow a program like Excel to run in parallel on thousands of machines so the application can be used to tackle monster financial computing chores on its own, Muglia says.
(Excerpt) Read more at blogs.wsj.com ...
I’ve never had a problem running Excel on a single computer.
This is what happens I guess when a product is essentially as mature as it’s going to get and the dev team is looking for something to do...hehe
Excel has had resolution problems if one was using numbers smaller than integers.
ping
How bout starting with making it easier to see ALL computers in a heterogenous network!
For the life of me I don't know why they think they have to change networking on every new g-damn version of Windows.
...like computing the NATIONAL DEBT AND THE DEFICIT SIMULTANEOUSLY!..................
/johnny
Hello SkyNet....
sorry microsoft but cloud computing is security unacceptable
I’d be happy to see their software work well on just one computer.
That’s always been my objection to it. I’m not certain I would want all of my data spread across a bunch of computers I don’t control.
imagine a brokerage firm using cloud computer and a hacker creates a crash by just infesting one computer in the cloud.
I wuz using Excel to do some numerical modeling and couldn't explain to my boss why there were these oscillations as things approached Zer0. Later I found out that M$ had pimped me.
You’re against bloatware!
Communist!
I have both a Furby and a pet rock. They do not exist in the computer lab/electronics lab that constitutes my grown daughters’ bedroom though.
/johnny
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