Penguin Computing

Penguin Computing is a computer company headquartered in Fremont, California. Scyld Beowulf is a cluster management software package developed by Scyld Software. It is was designed to be deployed to a Beowulf cluster. Scyld Software is a subsididary of Penguin Computing.

The company was originally founded in San Francisco in 1998 by Sam Ockman. It raised $1.7 million in 2006 from Weber Capital, San Francisco Equity Partners and Convergence Ventures.[1] It raised $1.5 million in funding in 2009 from San Francisco Equity Partners, Convergence Partners, vSpring Capital and Weber Capital.[2]

The Scyld Beowulf software known as "Scyld ClusterWare 5" was compatible with either Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5 or CentOS 5. In 2011 support was broadened to include SUSE Linux Enterprise Server.[3]

In 2009, the Penguin on Demand service was announced, which offered batch processing.[4] In 2012 Penguin Computing announced the UDX1 server that was based on products from Calxeda intended to run software such as Apache Hadoop.[5]

See also

References

  1. "VC Deals". PE Week Wire (Thomson Financial). February 7, 2006. Retrieved June 3, 2013.
  2. "Penguin Computing snaps up $1.5M for Linux cluster virtualization". Venture Beat. November 9, 2009. Archived from the original on November 13, 2009. Retrieved June 3, 2013.
  3. Timothy Prickett Morgan (January 13, 2011). "Penguin goes hybrid with ClusterWare: Linux meets Windows HPC". The Register. Retrieved June 3, 2013.
  4. Cade Metz (August 11, 2009). "Penguin goes hybrid with ClusterWare: InfiniBand with wings". The Register. Retrieved June 3, 2013.
  5. Timothy Prickett Morgan (October 19, 2012). "Penguin Computing muscles into the ARM server fray: Aiming Cortex-A9 clusters at Big Data". The Register. Retrieved June 3, 2013.

External links

Official website


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