ALTAIR TO OFFER HPC CLOUD SOLUTIONS ON MICROSOFT AZURE
PBS Works Named as Preferred Workload Management Suite for Azure Manufacturing Clients
FRANKFURT, Germany, July 15, 2015 – Altair today announced a business collaboration with Microsoft to build and offer high-performance computing (HPC) solutions on the Azure cloud computing platform. This follows Microsoft’s decision to name Altair’s
PBS Works suite as its preferred workload management solution for Azure manufacturing clients.
As part of the collaboration, Altair will work closely with Microsoft to develop turnkey solutions allowing users to access cloud high-performance computing (HPC) resources in Azure from any web-enabled device. These solutions will leverage Altair’s PBS Works platform in Azure to enable intuitive web portal access and secure workload management for rapid, scalable access to Azure HPC resources.
Initial solutions will target manufacturing’s increasing HPC demand to run compute-intensive simulations such as computational fluid dynamics (CFD), crash and safety analysis, optimization and electromagnetics.
“We are very happy to be working with Microsoft on this important initiative to bring practical cloud solutions to the users who need them,” said Rob Walsh, Vice President of Business Development, Altair. “With PBS Works powered by Azure, engineers have instant access to the capacity they need to accelerate the innovation process, free of data movement constraints.”
Altair has served the HPC market for decades with award-winning workload management, engineering, and cloud computing software. Used by thousands of companies worldwide, PBS Works enables engineers in HPC environments to improve productivity, optimize resource utilization and efficiency, and simplify the process of workload management.
“Altair is a longtime leader in HPC and cloud solutions,” said Nicole Herskowitz, Senior Director of Product Marketing, Microsoft Azure. “Their unique combination of HPC and engineering expertise make them a strong company to collaborate with as we refine our Azure offering for the manufacturing industry.”
Users of manufacturing simulation software benefit from Microsoft Azure’s Remote Direct Memory Access (RDMA) for Linux and Windows environments, which enables data access and transfer without consuming CPU in the remote host machine.
Altair plans to announce the availability of the PBS-Azure cloud offering during the European Altair Technology Conference in October 2015.
To request more details about this offering, visit
www.pbsworks.com/cloud/microsoft.
For more information on Altair’s PBS Works and HPC cloud offerings, visit
http://www.pbsworks.com/.
About Altair
Altair is focused on the development and broad application of simulation technology to synthesize and optimize designs, processes and decisions for improved business performance. Privately held with more than 2,500 employees, Altair is headquartered in Troy, Michigan, USA and operates more than 45 offices throughout 24 countries. Today, Altair serves more than 5,000 corporate clients across broad industry segments. To learn more, please visit
www.altair.com.