Sun Microsystems has introduced a pay-for-use pricing model for grid computing, enabling customers to gain access to computing cycles on an on-demand basis. Grid cycles can be purchased in packs of hours through Sun, with prices starting at $1 per hour. . . .. Taking an innovative approach to the marketing of high-performance computing, Sun Microsystems Latest News about Sun Microsystems is offering its N1 Grid program in a pay-for-use pricing model that mimics the way such commodities as electricity and wireless Latest News about wireless phone plans are sold. With prices starting at US$1 per processor Latest News about Processors, per hour, grid cycles can be purchased in packs of hours through Sun. The company will offer a range of computing plans and will work with its partners on a wholesale basis to take this offering to its customers. Clients can gain access to computing cycles on an on-demand basis without ownership or outsourcing Latest News about Outsourcing contracts. The idea is to provide lower shared-services costs matched with customers' workloads. Handling Heavy Loads Sun initially is targeting heavy, non-transactional workloads, such as computer-based simulations, modeling and rendering, that are optimized for so-called "supercomputing" systems. Developers, enterprises and governments can use computing power on an hourly basis. Another focus area is software testing on standardized grids. . Taking an innovative approach to the marketing of high-performance computing, Sun Microsystems Lates. microsystems, introduced, pay-for-use, pricing, model, computing, enabling, customers. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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