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Hewlett Packard Enterprise To Acquire Supercomputer Maker Cray for $1.3 Billion (anandtech.com) 101

Hewlett Packard Enterprise will be buying the supercomputer maker Cray for roughly $1.3 billion, the companies said this morning. Intending to use Cray's knowledge and technology to bolster their own supercomputing and high-performance computing technologies, when the deal closes, HPE will become the world leader for supercomputing technology. From a report: Cray of course needs no introduction. The current leader in the supercomputing field and founder of supercomputing as we know it, Cray has been a part of the supercomputing landscape since the 1970s. Starting at the time with fully custom systems, in more recent years Cray has morphed into an integrator and scale-out specialist, combining processors from the likes of Intel, AMD, and NVIDIA into supercomputers, and applying their own software, I/O, and interconnect technologies. The timing of the acquisition announcement closely follows other major news from Cray: the company just landed a $600 million US Department of Energy contract to supply the Frontier supercomputer to Oak Ridge National Laboratory in 2021. Frontier is one of two exascale supercomputers Cray is involved in -- the other being a subcontractor for the 2021 Aurora system -- and in fact Cray is involved in the only two exascale systems ordered by the US Government thus far. So in both a historical and modern context, Cray was and is one of the biggest players in the supercomputing market.
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Hewlett Packard Enterprise To Acquire Supercomputer Maker Cray for $1.3 Billion

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    Let me preface this by saying I've been a fan of Seymour Cray's hardware for years - back when you could sit on them (without causing panic).

    Is Cray really that relevant nowadays? They started out as a system integrator - of their own hardware and software - but nowadays, they deploy Linux and build systems based on x86 processors with NVIDIA compute cards. Yes, they are good at making it all work with high-bandwidth, low-latency networking... but anyone (including HPE) could do the same over time.

    What doe

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      In particular the Gemini product line from Cray provides high speed memory access and clustering up to 50 peta-flop capabilities.

      Beyond that they have expertise in system design and job scheduling that will become commodity products as more companies jump on the personalized genetic medicine band wagon

      Unfortunately, we have also seen HP kill the DEC ALPHA processor (while supporting Itanium and hiding ALPHA benchmarks that crushed the Intel product), so there is a fair chance that Cray will suffer a similar

      • Unfortunately, we have also seen HP kill the DEC ALPHA processor (while supporting Itanium and hiding ALPHA benchmarks that crushed the Intel product), so there is a fair chance that Cray will suffer a similar fate

        Alpha was killed by the clock rates of x86, and its coffin was screwed shut by amd64. Once AMD adopted NUMA and HyperTransport, it became simple to build PC-based computers with very large memory and high core count. Intel followed suit some years later, and now there is no real benefit to doing anything other than throwing more x86_64 cores at your problem.

        • Alpha was killed by Compaq - before HP bought that company. Besides, HP itself had already decided w/ Intel that Itanium would replace both PA-RISC and x86. While the latter failed, primarily due to AMD coming out w/ AMD64, the former was achieved pretty easily. It didn't make sense for Compaq - having aborted its own RISC platform PA-RISC - to now bat for Alpha, which had worse yields and worse margins

    • Re:Relevance? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Junta ( 36770 ) on Friday May 17, 2019 @11:17AM (#58608964)

      Basically, if US government is going to build a top-10 system, Cray or IBM is simply going to be the one they go with.

      Part of that is that it is simply not as easy as it sounds. You don't just slap linux, some cpus, and some gpus together and call it a day. There's a bit more to it.

      Another is that they are doing their own interconnect. The only other companies in the world that are on par with Cray's is Mellanox (to be acquired by nVidia) and Intel (OmniPath). Those interconnects are absolutely required to deliver best performance. They are however niche, as they require very carefully designed topology to actually deliver value, and can't provide a significant chunk of capabilities that are typical in ethernet networks.

      Cray also has software that is only paired with Cray solutions, so a Cray software shop will buy Cray.

      Of course, their brand value and relationships with certain government entities effectively seal the deal. With this HPE basically bought a guarantee of most future national labs business. Now they really only have to compete with IBM for that business, since they had already bought SGI (which is a prime example of a company who at the end had no significant technology advantage, but brand strength and government habits basically handed them a lot of US federal business as well).

      Now a few years ago, this probably would not have been worth it, as the US government super computing budget went anemic (US or US allies were the super computing leads, so hard to justify big purchases to reinforce that). However China overwhelming the top slot triggered the US govt to inject lots of funding to win the pissing contest.

      For Cray this is also an easy call. They have had a tight grip on *gigantic* US super computing deals, but pretty much no viable business anywhere else. It is exceptionally difficult to pay for the dedicated R&D to keep that up on that low volume of business. Additionally with the reduced competition, I would expect winning bids to come in a bit higher and with some richer margins.

      At the end, HPE will become 2nd place Top500 Vendor by number of entries behind Lenovo, and edge out Lenovo for top performance share (the performance share a better rough indication of the revenue involved). When the two current Cray national labs wins come online, that performance gap will almost certainly widen.

      Of course the Top500 benchmark and logistics are pretty flawed, but it's still a coveted marketing win.

    • Is any processor using ECL these days? Has MOS been able to get the once unobtainable clock rates of ECL?
      • by Compuser ( 14899 )

        Wow, somebody actually remembers what made Cray special. Brings a tear to my eye. And no, ECL (or its derivatives) is still the fastest. But as MOS devices shrank and various capacitances went down, the tech got pushed not too far behind ECL. I think that once EUV runs out of room to shrink things and all these GAAFET fads will play out, we will be back to building things out of some nano version of BJTs. I also hope to live to see the day when nanofluidics on a chip with superfluid helium as coolant are st

    • Is Cray really that relevant nowadays?

      And the other big question is, how is HP still in existence?

    • Back in the late 80's . . . HP was a cool place to work for doing things "The HP Way".

      . . . and DEC was a cool place to work, because we all logged in in terminal room to a VAX.

      . . . and SUN was über cool because of their workstations.

      IBM was totally out, because they did mainframes.

      So the joke is . . . which one of the companies listed above still exists today . . . ?

    • You need to take a look at Slingshot.

  • Sigh (Score:5, Interesting)

    by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Friday May 17, 2019 @10:49AM (#58608788)

    Another once great company to get pushed through the HP meat grinder. Is there anything that HP hasn't destroyed? Their lab equipment division was lucky enough to spin off as Agilent (Keysight), but other than that has anything ever been touched by HP and survived to tell the sad tale?

    • Re:Sigh (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Shag ( 3737 ) on Friday May 17, 2019 @10:59AM (#58608846) Journal

      So this is the Cray that Seymour Cray left, that merged with SGI, then was sold to Tera Computer Company, which then renamed itself Cray, right?

      As opposed to the Cray that Seymour Cray founded after leaving Cray, which then went bankrupt, or SRC that he founded after that.

      Smart man he was... start a company, then stop being CEO and become a consultant.

      • Re:Sigh (Score:4, Informative)

        by quanminoan ( 812306 ) on Friday May 17, 2019 @12:40PM (#58609592)

        The original Cray did very well for a while, but the main reason for their prosperity was government spending on supercomputers for weapons simulation. Towards the end of the cold war this became increasingly difficult to justify, and Cray began its decline. Cray (the man) was pressured out of the company since he wanted to pursue some pretty outlandish and risky designs that his board couldn't see as justifiable, but he left on good terms more or less. "The Supermen" is a great book if you're interested.

    • Re:Sigh (Score:5, Funny)

      by UnknownSoldier ( 67820 ) on Friday May 17, 2019 @11:30AM (#58609060)

      Isn't that an old joke in there?

      Q. How do you know when a tech company is dead / past its prime?
      A. When HP buys it! /zing!

    • Engine Block Shredder
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

    • Wasn't this already done years ago? Cray had been bought and digested by SGI, which in turn got bought and digested by HPE? So what's this acquisition about - I thought it had already happened
      • This acquisition is about putting a stake through it's heart, as clearly SGI and HPE haven't been able to kill it.

  • by x0 ( 32926 ) on Friday May 17, 2019 @10:54AM (#58608812) Homepage
    First HP killed Digital, then Compaq. Eventually, all computers will be HP, all restaurants will be Taco Bell, and all media will be Disney...

    m
    • Get started learning how to use those three shells...

    • Can you please tell me how to use the shells?

    • Actually, it was Compaq that ate Digital and Tandem. HP ate Compaq, then SGI and now Cray
  • by psergiu ( 67614 ) on Friday May 17, 2019 @10:59AM (#58608850)

    History goes like this ...
    Cray makes good Supercomputers
    SGI acquires Cray
    Original Cray devs leave for HP and build their Cross-Bar architecture machines (starting with T-class, V-class, SuperDome, RP/RX series)
    SGI start building computers with x86 CPUs
    Cray spins off from SGI. SGI dies a slow death.
    HP fires most CPU & X-Bar architecture teams to save $$$
    HP releases "x86 SuperDome crap" which nobody wants to buy
    HP acquires Cray hoping to get some smart people to make them a sell-able product

    Future:
    HP fires most Cray smart people to save $$$
    HP releases overpriced x86 crap nobody wants to buy
    HP acquires another company

    • Are you a biz prof? You certainly should be, if not!
    • by sl3xd ( 111641 )

      Um... I'll add a few tidbits

      History goes like this ...
      Cray makes good Supercomputers, but there are few sales.
      Cray goes bankrupt, and is purchased by SGI
      some Cray devs leave for HP and build their Cross-Bar architecture machines (starting with T-class, V-class, SuperDome, RP/RX series)
      SGI designs the Nintendo 64
      some SGI engineers leave and form 3dfx, the first widely adopted 3D graphics accelerator.
      3DFX goes bankrupt and is bought by Nvidia.
      SGI's Cray Engineers design new machines (Altix) using Itanium proc

  • Willing to bet HP will take credit now for the project Cray was working on with AMD to build the fastest super computer. IT WAS ALL HP!!!
  • by Solandri ( 704621 ) on Friday May 17, 2019 @11:17AM (#58608962)
    When the two split [datacenterdynamics.com], HP retained the PC and printer businesses. HP Enterprise [wikipedia.org] retained the research labs, storage systems, servers, and financial businesses. So this is the "good" parts of the original HP.

    In HHGTTG parlance, HP contained the hairdressers, TV producers, insurance salesmen, personnel officers, security guards, public relations executives, and management consultants.. HP Enterprise contained the high achievers, the scientists, thinkers, artists, and important leaders.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    This acquisition was done by HPE, NOT HP. Two different companies at this point.
    HP does the PCs and printers.
    HPE does servers, storage, networking, software and services around that.

  • by Cray ( 20232 )

    Nice to see one's name in print.

  • I'd by Cray too just for the name... ...if I had the money. I guess that's why I don't have the money.

  • Welp, there's a death if I ever saw one. Cray was an amazing company that was on the cutting edge, died, came back, died again, but this time, HPE will likely kill them for good.

    Both HP and IBM love to kill other companies. That's pretty much all they do now. /me pours one out for Notes/Informix/Compaq/Tivoli/Storwise/Trusteer/Cleversafe/Red Hat/Snapfish/Voodoo PC/3Com/Palm/SGI
    I expect Dell to be joining their ranks eventually. Some how EMC and VMWare are still alive.

  • ...I coded many stuff on a Cray YMP, I loved that system. I also declined a job offer about image processing at the beginning of my career (1990), the working environment was awful, but the computer I had to use was a CDC, the antesignan of Cray. I also tested a T3D, then Cray started to decline, together with Convex, Thinking Machines, and DEC. Now everything is left for computational math is Intel, with a small niche for ARM systems. I wonder what happened to Siemens-Fujitsu, and their project for matrix
  • RIP Cray, it was nice to know you. So sad you ended up in the clutches of zombie HP. Safe assumption that this constitutes the end of innovation at Cray and there will soon be a mass exodus of talent. Countdown begins now: 3, 2, 1...

As you will see, I told them, in no uncertain terms, to see Figure one. -- Dave "First Strike" Pare

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