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Editor's Pick of the Week Software Toolbox from Maplesoft Makes Grid Computing Easier | Published January 9, 2008 Dear Desktop Engineering Reader:
The key to the Grid Computing Toolbox is simplicity. Setup involves starting a server process on each machine on a network. Your grid then self-assembles. The Grid Computing Toolbox also integrates with job schedulers like PBS, so you don’t have to do much fiddling with that stuff. Even better, though, is what Maplesoft calls its “personal grid server.” This functionality lets you simulate a grid on your desktop workstation so that you can test and debug your parallel applications before you deploy them on the real grid. Also good news, the Grid Computing Toolbox lets you parallelize your large Maple-based numeric or symbolic computations for a multiprocessor workstation as well as Beowulf clusters and homogeneous or heterogeneous networks. Still, the best part of the Grid Computing Toolbox is that it lets you be an engineer, not an administrator — no matter how much fun that might be — while enabling you to exploit the power of grid computing even if you live on a multiprocessor workstation. You can learn more about the Grid Computing Toolbox from today’s Pick of the Week write-up, where you’ll also find links to additional information from Maplesoft. Thanks, Pal. – Lockwood Anthony J. Lockwood
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