Ohio Supercomputer Center Names New Cluster after Jesse Owens

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2The Ohio Supercomputer Center has named its newest HPC cluster after Olympic champion Jesse Owens. The new Owens Cluster will be powered by Dell PowerEdge servers featuring the new Intel Xeon processor E5-2600 v4 product family, include storage components manufactured by DDN, and utilize interconnects provided by Mellanox. The center earlier had acquired NetApp software and hardware for home directory storage.

Our newest supercomputer system is the most powerful that the Center has ever run,” ODHE Chancellor John Carey said in a recent letter to Owens’ daughters. “As such, I thought it fitting to name it for your father, who symbolizes speed, integrity and, most significantly for me, compassion as embodied by his tireless work to help youths overcome obstacles to their future success. As a first-generation college graduate, I can relate personally to the value of mentors in the lives of those students.”

Carey announced in February that the new system will increase the center’s total computing capacity by a factor of four and its storage capacity by three. Owens was chosen from a list of esteemed finalists that included Nobel Prize winners, famous inventors, talented musicians, well-known industrialists and a former president.

“We are touched and honored to have this supercomputer named for our father,” said Marlene Owens Rankin, the youngest daughter of Owens and his wife, Minnie Ruth Solomon. Rankin and her sisters Gloria Owens Hemphill and Beverly Owens Prather founded The Jesse Owens Foundation to perpetuate the ideals and life’s work of their father. “The learning opportunity provided by this expanded capacity will be invaluable to Ohio students.”

OSC is a member of the Ohio Technology Consortium, the technology and information arm of ODHE. The center currently offers computational services via two supercomputer clusters: the HP/Intel Ruby Cluster and the HP/Intel Oakley Cluster. A third system, the IBM/AMD Glenn Cluster, was retired last month to make sufficient space and power available for the new supercomputer.

This major acquisition will make an enormously positive impact on the work of our clients, both academic and industrial,” said David Hudak, Ph.D., interim executive director of OSC. “Our current systems are running near peak capacity most of the time. Ohio researchers are eager for this massive increase in computing power and storage space.”

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