The need for flexible computing systems offering increased scalability is crucial to supporting the increasing demand for better lifecycle economics. With users in the oil and gas, financial services, government research, defense, and Software as a Service (SaaS) markets, Liquid Computing has merged computing, networking, and broadband into a controlled system to address the performance issues associated with today's commercially available servers and switches.
The company, a developer of a new class of scalable computing system, will be presenting at the sixth annual Server Blade Summit in Anaheim, California on Wednesday, May 2. Liquid Computing's CTO and co-founder, Mike Kemp, will challenge computing conventions and discuss how to solve performance bottlenecks associated with traditional blade servers in the data center.
Liquid Computing Inc., is first to deliver a new class of computer system called LiquidIQÔäó to meet the needs of scalable computing users within Enterprise High Performance Computing and Software as a Service markets. LiquidIQÔäó is an Interconnect Driven Server that delivers a set of managed computing and communications resources. It can be configured with software commands into one or several cluster configurations, shared memory or cache coherent server regions at best lifecycle economics and uncompromising performance, scalability and availability.