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Peer 1 starts hosting cloud-based GPUs

Peer 1 starts hosting cloud-based GPUs

By:  Jennifer Kavur  On: 29 Jul 2010 For: Computing Canada Creator
 

One exec boasts of massive performance improvements from moving workloads off of CPUs and onto graphics processing units

Vancouver-based infrastructure service provider Peer 1 Network Enterprises Inc. is now offering cloud-based graphics processing units (GPUs) based out the company’s flagship data centre in Toronto.

The GPU Cloud, announced at the Siggraph International Conference in Los Angeles, Calif., runs NVIDIA Corp.’s Tesla S1070 and Tesla M2050 hosted GPUs and the RealityServer 3D Web application service platform from mental images GmbH, a subsidiary of NVIDIA based in Berlin, Germany.

Moving workloads off of a CPU onto a GPU results in massive performance improvements, said Robert Miggins, senior vice-president of business development at Peer 1 Hosting. “There’s an appeal about GPUs over CPUs, period,” he said.

But no other company has offered hosted GPU’s until now, he said. “You get massive performance improvements and the flexibility of utility-based pricing and the ease of turning things on and turning things off,” he said.

With the GPUs, Peer 1 Hosting says it can offer “flexible and reliable access to a system capable of delivering high computational performance across demanding applications” like graphics rendering, complex quantitative processing, video compression and 3D Web services.

“These GPUs from NVIDIA allow a user to accomplish workloads of any kind,” said Miggins. Applications include 3D rendering, analyzing geophysical data in the oil and gas industry, and number crunching in the insurance and finance industries.

Latency is always a concern, but “we feel we’ve gotten that well taken care of,” said Miggins. “The great thing about Peer 1’s story is we own and operate the network,” he said.

“We’ve got this incredibly performance-driven, super-fast network that guarantees not only 100 per cent uptime, which is something we offer standard with the zero packet loss network, but it’s high-performance,” he said.

One of the complexities of running hosted GPUs is that they draw a lot of power, said Miggins, but the company is “very enthusiastic” about the Toronto data centre location. “We’ve got loads of empty space, we’ve got loads of unused power and it’s just the perfect place,” he said.

Toronto-based hosting will also hold special appeal to Canadian customers.

Canadian customers often want to have their data stored in Canada and questions about geography come up frequently, he said. “The notion of running their hosting or storing their data in the U.S. sometimes presents problems,” he said.


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Jennifer Kavur Jennifer Kavur Jennifer Kavur was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2008 to 2010.

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