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C-DAC develops supercomputer for bioinformatics |
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Dated February 07, 2007
The
Financial Express
Centre for Development
of Advanced Computing (C-DAC)
is all set to launch a new supercomputer with dedicated
applications for Bioinformatics in the next six months. The blueprint for the
new supercomputer has been finalised. The machine would
have a computing capacity of 1.5 terraflops and would
be integrated with the genome grid that is in currently
in progress, said Rajendra Joshi, coordinator,
bioinformatics group, C-DAC.
This is part
of C-DACs efforts to become a one stop solution
for researchers and industry. The objective is to work
on projects with real industry applications and the
genome grid is the first step towards it, he said.
The genome grid would be integrated with C-DACs
Garuda grid that connects 17 cities in India.
The grid for
biofinformatics provides computational capacity for
handling enormous data for genome analysis, complex
algorithms for molecular simulation. In the first phase,
we have around 40 academic institutes that are connected
to the grid. The next phase would involve the industry.
The genome grid would be ready by December this year,
Joshi said. Besides developing infrastructure to enable
grid computing for bioinformatics, CDAC has begun to
take on projects in outsourced bioinformatics. A
number of companies have approached C-DAC to outsourcing
their requirements in bioinformatics. We have already
tied up with Jubilant Biosys and Nicholas Piramal for
some projects. Pharma companies in India spend little
resources on R&D and end up becoming providers of
formulations. We want this to change and help them reduce
time in new drug discovery, he said. The TCG Group
has approached C-DAC with a proposal to use C-DACs
grid computing and HPC for its BT Park coming up at Pune. Syntel is in talks
to help C-DAC for overseas collaborations.
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