HP
today announced that DreamWorks Animation (Nasdaq: DWA) used HP technology to
develop cutting-edge animation for its latest film, “Turbo,” which debuts in theaters today.
HP Converged
Infrastructure
technology spanning servers, storage, networking, services and management
software; HP Converged Cloud; as well as HP Workstations
and printers helped DreamWorks Animation process massive amounts of data, creating
new levels of imagery and powering innovative computer graphics (CG) animated
movie-making techniques.
“DreamWorks
Animation’s strategic alliance with HP ensured that we had the high-performance
computing, continuous availability and streamlined management capabilities
needed to accurately depict Turbo’s dream of becoming the world’s fastest
racer,” said Derek Chan, head of Technology Global Operations, DreamWorks
Animation. “HP’s advanced Converged Infrastructure portfolio enabled our
artists and engineers to create the highest-quality picture possible.”
HP Workstations,
HP Networking enable efficiency
DreamWorks
Animation tapped the power of HP Z Workstations to recreate the thrill of the
Indy 500, with snails traveling 220 miles per hour and more than 500,000 crowd characters
filling a replica of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
HP Z800 and
Z820 Workstations,
powered by Intel® Sandy Bridge Xeon® E5 processors, enabled artists to execute
iterations 50 percent faster than previous workstations and develop
increasingly complex camera angles and special effects. When not in use by creative
teams, workstation processing power was used to run nighttime rendering jobs, contributing
to the millions of compute hours needed to produce the movie.
Integrated
with HP Workstations, HP Remote Graphics Software—a free HP Workstation tool—enabled
animators to collaborate more efficiently across geographies by viewing ideas
and assets on a single display.
HP FlexNetwork architecture solutions
enabled DreamWorks Animation to increase performance, reduce latency between
global studio locations and provide constant availability to support faster
rendering and review times while boosting animator productivity.
HP Networking provided animators with access
to a central repository of assets, simplifying collaboration by allowing
artists to easily share and retrieve resources across all locations. In
addition, the highly reliable network infrastructure allows creative teams to
work anytime from anywhere, with production spread across studios from Glendale
and Redwood City, Calif., to Bangalore, India.
HP Converged
Cloud services and servers boost processing power, scalability
The
production of “Turbo” required 75 million render hours to create fully realized
images, including 32 Indy 500 race cars and 32 million crowd character
instances, the highest of any DreamWorks Animation film to date.
DreamWorks
Animation utilized HP
Enterprise Cloud Services to provide a robust, scalable, cloud-based
infrastructure that offers the additional compute power needed to render the 10
CG films that are in production at any given time. HP Enterprise Cloud
Services, part of the HP Converged
Cloud
portfolio,
enables
DreamWorks Animation to meet growing business needs while remaining within its
existing data center footprint.
To
handle the rendering demands of “Turbo,” DreamWorks Animation relied on the
high-performance computing capabilities of HP ProLiant Generation
8 (Gen8) servers. HP ProLiant Gen8
servers increased render throughput by 40 percent and performance per watt by
42 percent,(1)
allowing DreamWorks Animation to render an average of 500,000 jobs a day to
ensure that the studio had the creative workforce to complete the production on
time.
HP delivers comprehensive
technology solutions
The
breadth of HP’s portfolio provides DreamWorks Animation with comprehensive
technology solutions, enhancing each aspect of production, including:
·
Reliable
application performance through HP 3PAR StoreServ Storage, creating a
storage infrastructure for critical production pipeline tools. Secondary HP
3PAR StoreServ arrays provide disaster-recovery capabilities, helping to keep
operations up and running.
·
Secured
back up and archiving with HP StoreOnce B6200 and HP StoreAll 9730 Storage allows
artists and engineers to protect and conveniently access the 230 terabytes of
files that make up “Turbo,” in addition to the studio’s other films and
production assets.
·
Simplified
network management with the HP Intelligent Resilient Framework (IRF) enables the studio
to manage multiple article network switches and configure redundancy without
unwanted downtime.
·
Increased
data center density and flexibility with HP
BladeSystem c7000, allowing engineers to smoothly implement next-generation
servers with minimal disruption.
·
Improved
color accuracy and consistency across workstations and printers with HP
DreamColor displays to simplify creative
decision making without the need for specially designed color rooms.
·
Reduced
print management complexity and improved workflow processes with HP Managed Print Services, which leverage integrated
monitoring software to enable DreamWorks Animation to anticipate future
resource demands, accelerate business and quickly remediate technical issues.
·
Flexible
and scalable compute power required to meet intense rendering demand provided
via the cloud by HP Enterprise Services.
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