MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif., -- When it opens in February of 2006, the Louisiana Immersive Technologies Enterprise (LITE) will transform what people have come to expect from communities working to attract high-tech businesses. Not content to rely on the usual tax breaks and highway interchanges to draw new technology and Research & Development jobs, the State of Louisiana, the Lafayette Economic Development Authority (LEDA) and the University of Louisiana at Lafayette have united to provide something that can make companies more agile, competitive and innovative.
LITE will be packed with leading-edge solutions from Silicon Graphics (NYSE: SGI - News), whose compute, storage and visualization systems will provide LITE users with multiple immersive environments capable of engaging workgroups of one to hundreds of participants. The concentration of supercomputer-class servers, interactive 3D theaters, blistering visualization systems, massive data storage and high-speed networking will give Louisiana businesses and research universities a chance to use technologies that have traditionally been available only to the world's energy leaders, pharmaceutical giants, aerospace firms, government agencies, and science museums.
LITE involves partnerships between government, universities, and industry for basic research, application development, testing and validation, product development, and commercial production, along with delivery of visualization technologies and high-performance computer modeling.
Previously known as the Acadiana Technology Immersion Center (ATIC), LITE is an economic development enterprise that will serve clients in the government, university and industry sectors, with worldwide access provided via the Louisiana Optical Network Initiative (LONI). Corporations or research organizations that partner with Louisiana-based businesses and universities will be provided access at an incentive rate. Businesses that locate technology resources -- such as people, programs, facilities and equipment -- in Louisiana will receive additional considerations and incentives.
"Businesses and research organizations today need the very best resources to win in the global economy," said Gregg Gothreaux, LEDA President. "With LITE, Lafayette is providing access to the world's most comprehensive immersive technologies available for businesses of all sizes, in addition to university researchers from Louisiana and beyond. Powered by SGI, LITE will help us develop the local resources in talent and expertise that abound in the Lafayette area, and cultivate this region and Louisiana as a center for innovation in energy research, manufacturing, aerospace, environmental, entertainment and other technology-rich industries."
Located on the campus of the University of Louisiana at Lafayette, the $20 million, 70,000-square-foot LITE complex will be co-named the SGI Center for Innovative Research and Advanced Visualization. It will feature one of the most comprehensive and tightly integrated installations of SGI technology ever assembled. LITE technology resources, all of which are connected via a high-speed fiber optic network, include:
-- 3D immersive visualization cube. Small groups of engineers,
scientists and designers can immerse themselves in fully interactive
3D models and data sets for seismic analysis, computer-aided
modeling, product stress test analysis, and a host of other
applications that require visualization of large data sets. A
six-sided display, using SXGA+ DLP(TM) projection technology,
virtually encloses participants in the data, which is displayed in
stereo. Advanced tracking headset technology shifts the display in
real time to accommodate participants' head movements. The
10-by-10-by-10-foot cube is driven by a Silicon Graphics Prism(TM)
visualization system with 16 Intel® Itanium® 2 processors and
six graphics pipes outputting interactive data onto six Christie
Mirage high performance DLP projectors displaying resolution of
1,050 by 1,050 pixels resolution on each wall.
-- 3D immersive auditorium. A 174-seat auditorium facing a curved,
37-foot screen creates one of the world's largest SGI® Reality
Center® facilities at LITE. Passive or active stereo display
capabilities enable every audience member to see interactive data in
3D for large-scale presentations, reviews and tutorials. Three
Christie Mirage DLP projectors use Christie blending and warping
technology to create a seamless, 37-foot-wide display. A second
16- processor Silicon Graphics Prism visualization system with six
graphics pipes drives the auditorium, which is also equipped with a
digital cinema-quality Surround Sound system.
-- Immersive collaboration tele-conference room. A compact lecture
theater enables audiences of up to 30 people to collaborate with
each other or with facilities located locally or around the world.
Dual Christie Mirage DLP projectors merge to create a single display
and are fed by one of the LITE's two Silicon Graphics Prism systems
via a high-speed fiber link. Laptop-based videoconferencing eases
collaboration across campus and beyond.
-- Conference room with SGI Reality Center. Audiences of 20 can
experience the immersive qualities of an SGI Reality Center with a
curved DLP display served by three Christie projectors. LITE users
can also transport the display to trade shows or other locations for
presentations and design reviews. The unit is served by one of the
facility's two Silicon Graphics Prism systems, one of which can be
transported for portable presentations.
-- AmiraVR software. Mercury Computer Systems' AmiraVR software enables
every LITE visualization environment to immerse participations in 3D
data.
-- SGI Altix 350 Cluster. Twenty-two SGI® Altix® 350 servers, each
powered by 16 Intel Itanium 2 processors, provide
supercomputer-class computational capabilities for companies and
researchers engaged in a broad array of disciplines. Altix systems
allow users to hold massive data sets completely in memory, giving
them faster insights to complex problems.
-- SGI InfiniteStorage solution. A storage area network (SAN) with the
SGI® InfiniteStorage Shared Filesystem CXFS(TM) provides instant
data sharing among the LITE's visualization and compute systems
without the performance and management bottlenecks inherent in
traditional SAN systems. Built on 8TB of SGI InfiniteStorage TP9500
Fibre Channel RAID, the storage solution can grow in capacity,
performance, connectivity and heterogeneity to flexibly meet LITE 's
future needs.
LITE administrators plan to deploy the SGI resources as a visualization and computational GRID that will be available to users on a large scale via LITE's 60GB connection to the Louisiana Optical Network and the National Lamba Rail. As such, the facility will become an important resource to researchers throughout North America and the world.
Funded by the State of Louisiana, the LITE facility will create an environment designed to stimulate collaboration between technology-intensive companies, ventures and entrepreneurs, researchers at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette and other state and national universities, as well as federal government agencies. The University of Louisiana at Lafayette will occupy 5,000 square feet of the new facility, with plans to enhance its long-established advanced computing research efforts.
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April 19 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/