
2008
11.2008 NIH Grant Supports Research Into Mapping the Brain With Machine Vision
10.2008 Kitware, OSA release software for ISP
10.2008 Kitware Receives 2008 Best of Clifton Park Award
10.2008 Kitware Welcomes New Employees
09.2008 Kitware Awarded $6.7M DARPA Contract
09.2008 Kitware Wins Phase I STTR for Feature Extraction with ParaView
09.2008 Kitware Wins DOE Phase I SBIR to Develop Collaborative Visualization with ParaView
08.2008 Kitware Ranks No. 3026 on the 2008 Inc. 5,000 List
05.2008 Kitware Welcomes New Employees
01.2008 KDE Adopts Kitware's Cross-Platform Build Tool CMake
2007
10.2007 Kitware's Brad Davis Wins 2007 Marr Prize at ICCV
10.2007 Kitware Collaborator wins 2007 Nobel Prize in Medicine
08.2007 Kitware Establishes Computer Vision Group, Dr. Anthony Hoogs to Lead
01.2007 AFRL Awards Kitware Phase II SBIR for Automatic Segmentation
2006
10.2006 DOD Awards Kitware Phase II STTR for High-Performance GPU Computing
09.2006 Kitware Releases New Edition of VTK User's Guide for VTK 5.0
06.2006 Kitware Welcomes New Employees
04.2006 DOD Awards Kitware Phase I SBIR for Automatic Segmentation
03.2006 NSF Awards Kitware Phase II SBIR for Volume Rendering of AMR Datasets
01.2006 Kitware Establishes North Carolina Office, Welcomes New Employees
2005
07.2005 DOD Awards Kitware Phase I SBIR for High-Performance GPU Computing
03.2005 Kitware Welcomes Rick Avila
03.2005 Sandia, Kitware and NVidia Achieve Breakthrough Performance with ParaView
2004
11.2004 NSF Awards Kitware Phase I SBIR for Volume Rendering of AMR Datasets
10.2004 Kitware Teams to Create the National Alliance for Medical Image Computing
09.2004 Kitware to Create Image-Guided Surgery Software Toolkit
09.2004 Kitware Awarded Phase II SBIR Grant From The Department Of Energy
09.2004 Kitware Wins Contract from NLM for Long-Term ITK Maintenance
09.2004 Kitware To Develop Automated ITK Journal Publishing System
09.2004 Kitware To Develop 3D Segmentation and Registration Interaction Widgets
09.2004 Kitware Awarded Teams with UNC for Phase I STTR from NBIB/NIH
09.2004 Kitware Releases New Edition Of VTK Users Guide With Updates For VTK 4.4
09.2004 Georgetown University And Kitware Win Phase II STTR Grant From NIH
08.2004 Kitware Welcomes New Employee
07.2004 Kitware Releases New Edition of Mastering CMake Book With 2.0 Updates
07.2004 Kitware Won Contract To Extend Laser Ultrasound Software Development
06.2004 Kitware Welcomes New Employee
04.2004 Kitware and Pfizer Engage in Joint Development
04.2004 Kitware Welcomes New Employees
02.2004 Kitware Expands Office Space Due To Increase In Staff Over Past Year
01.2004 Kitware Welcomes New Employees
2003
11.2003 Kitware Wins Los Alamos National Laboratory Contract
09.2003 Kitware Announces VolView 2.0 Volume Visualization System
07.2003 Kitware Wins Phase I SBIR Grant From The Department Of Energy
05.2003 Georgetown University And Kitware Win Phase I STTR Grant From NIH
03.2003 Kitware Wins Phase II SBIR Grant From The National Science Foundation
2002
10.2002 Kitware Announces ParaView 0.6 Parallel Visualization Application
09.2002 Kitware Extends Contract With NLM For Segmentation And Registration Toolkit
07.2002 Kitware Wins Phase II SBIR From The US Army Research Lab
03.2002 Kitware Announces VolView 1.3 Volume Visualization System
01.2002 Kitware Wins Phase I SBIR From The US Army Research Lab
01.2002 Kitware Wins Phase I SBIR Grant From The National Science Foundation
01.2002 VTK Is A Finalist For Jolt Product Of Excellence And Productivity Award
2001
05.2001 PolyViz Is Added To The ActiViz Product Family
05.2001 Kitware Unveils Their New Look At www.kitware.com
03.2001 ActiViz Products Enable Embedded Visualization
02.2001 Kitware Expands Office Space Due To Increase In Staff Over Past Year
2000
12.2000 Kitware Announces VolView 1.2 Volume Visualization System
03.2000 Kitware Signs 3 Year Contract With US National Labs For Parallel Processing
1999
11.1999 Kitware Signs Contract With NLM For Segmentation And Registration Toolkit
1998
11.1998 Support For VolumePro Board From Real Time Visualization Added To VTK
05.1998 Kitware Wins Phase I SBIR Grant From The US Air Force
March 2005
Sandia National Labs Achieves Breakthrough Performance Using NVIDIA(R) Technology For Scientific Visualization
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. and SANTA CLARA, Calif., March 17 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Sandia National Labs, Kitware Inc., and NVIDIA Corporation (Nasdaq: NVDA - News) today announced a breakthrough in large data scientific visualization, attaining rendering rates of over 1.5 billion polygons per second.
The breakthrough was achieved with ParaView (www.paraview.org), an open source visualization application developed by Kitware Inc. (www.kitware.com), processing data in the National Nuclear Security Administration's (NNSA) Advanced Simulation and Computing (ASC) program at the three national laboratories: Sandia National Labs (SNL); Los Alamos National Labs (LANL); Lawrence Livermore National Labs (LLNL).
Visualization is an integral component of ASC and is essential to understanding the massive data produced in simulations for national security. One of the world's largest polygonal datasets is a 473 million triangle isosurface generated from a Richtmyer-Meshkov simulation run at LLNL (LLNL: UCRL-MI-151066). In a recent test with this isosurface, Sandia utilized ParaView on 128 visualization nodes (workstations), each comprised of the following:
ParaView performed various operations on the data including coloring, t-stripping, clipping, and glyphing at interactive rates. Rendering of the surface was performed at an aggregate rate of over 1.5 billion polygons per second, which equates to three-four frames per second.
For typical simulation results, ParaView streams images from a cluster to the user's desktop at about 15 frames per second. This level of performance is enabled by the latest generation of NVIDIA graphics hardware and fast PCI Express read-back rates. Sandia currently has over 260 NVIDIA Quadro FX 3400 PCI Express graphics boards installed in its visualization clusters.
"The combination of ParaView and high-performance graphics hardware has opened up a new level of interactivity with large data sets, helping researchers around the world to better visualize many types of data -- from global climate modeling to intricate fluid dynamic simulations," said Brian Wylie, visualization team leader, Sandia National Labs.
ParaView is also being used by the US Army Research Laboratory (ARL) on tiled display systems for the analysis of physics based simulations in armor/anti-armor applications. ARL's large projection and LCD display walls are driven with NVIDIA Quadro FX 3000G graphics boards installed in AMD Opteron-based visualization clusters. In this case, the US Army is able to leverage both the graphics processing and framelocking capabilities of the NVIDIA hardware to display large datasets across a number of displays or projectors for improved image analysis.
"When calculations require tens of CPU years and produce terabytes of output, parallel visualization is no longer a luxury; it's a necessity," said Jerry Clarke, scientific visualization team leader, US Army Research Laboratory. "ParaView on our visualization clusters is an important part or our physics-based simulation environment and our future."
About ParaView
ParaView is built on top of the popular Visualization Toolkit (VTK) and has the goal of being the world's most scalable visualization platform. ParaView leverages cutting-edge parallel rendering algorithms, contributed by researchers at SNL, and leading technology in commodity PC clusters and graphics hardware to interactively visualize some of the world's largest datasets.
The national laboratories have unique requirements in the area of scalable visualization. The sponsorship of this open source, distributed memory, parallel visualization architecture was first fostered by Los Alamos National Labs. Given the similar needs of the laboratories, all three laboratories (Los Alamos, Sandia, and Livermore) currently contribute to the development of ParaView and the underlying VTK toolkit.
About Sandia
Sandia is a multiprogram laboratory operated by Sandia Corporation, a Lockheed Martin company, for the U.S. Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration. Sandia has major R&D responsibilities in national security, energy and environmental technologies, and economic competitiveness.
About NVIDIA
NVIDIA Corporation is a worldwide leader in graphics and digital media processors. The Company's products enhance the end-user experience on consumer and professional computing devices. NVIDIA graphics processing units (GPUs), media and communications processors (MCPs), and wireless media processors (WMPs) have broad market reach and are incorporated into a variety of platforms, including consumer and enterprise PCs, notebooks, workstations, PDAs, mobile phones, and video game consoles. NVIDIA is headquartered in Santa Clara, California and employs more than 2,000 people worldwide. For more information, visit the Company's Web site at www.nvidia.com.
Kitware, Inc. is a leading software development company providing products and services in the areas of medical image analysis, visualization and 3D graphics, supercomputing, computer vision, open publication, and software quality process. Kitware is known for its advanced open source software tools such as the widely used Visualization Toolkit (VTK), Insight Segmentation and Registration Toolkit (ITK), and the CMake build management software. Established in 1998, Kitware is rapidly growing to support top research and development clients around the world; including such prestigious customers as the US National Labs (Sandia, Los Alamos, Livermore, and Argonne), the National Institutes of Health, the Army and Air Force Research labs, and a variety of academic, commercial and governmental research labs. Our commercial customers range from Fortune 500 oil and gas companies to small medical imaging start ups.