IBM-Landmark deal could make Linux standard platform for oil industry
A three-year deal for IBM to provide software, hardware and services to the global petroleum industry has the
potential to make Linux the standard platform for oil and gas exploration and production. The agreement was announced
by IBM and Landmark Graphics, a wholly owned unit of Halliburton, one of the world's largest providers of products
and services for the petroleum and energy industries.
Houston-based Landmark supplies software and services for the oil and gas industry, including products for
exploration, production, drilling, data management and business decision analysis.
The company approached IBM with Linux in mind, officials of both IBM and Landmark said. The deal is part of IBM's
previously announced $ 1 bn Linux initiative, and that effort is part of what attracted Landmark to the partnership,
Landmark executives said. "We clearly think they're the leader in the industry with the [Linux] investment they've
made to date," said Landmark President and CEO Andy Lane.
The companies will offer Linux for advanced 3-D graphics on desktops to Landmark customers, as well as server and
mobile computing products and advanced cluster technology for supercomputing applications.
IBM Global Services will offer operational support, outsourcing and IT consulting to Landmark customers as part of
the deal. Dallas-based Halliburton's bevy of customers includes top oil and gas companies such as BP, Shell Oil,
ChevronTexaco and ExxonMobil. That customer roster is why the deal could make Linux the standard for the industry,
executives said.
Landmark has had a schedule for porting applications to Linux, and the deal will let customers automatically switch
to that platform, said Lane and John Sherman, Landmark's executive vice president of marketing and systems. What
Landmark's executives didn't expect as they began porting desktop applications to Linux was the performance boost in
computing speed they saw in tests, with two to five times improvement common, and in some cases up to 30 times. "It
really surprised us," Lane said.
The possibility of even much smaller performance gains is exciting for the worldwide petroleum exploration and
production industry. "What we're trying to do in essence is look down in the earth. These [computers] are MRIs on
supersteroids," Sherman said, comparing the procedure to magnetic resonance imaging, a medical procedure that takes
highly detailed images of a patient's insides, including organs, tissues and blood flow.
Exploration and production requires the ability to crunch enormous amounts of data as quickly as possible. That
crunching ideally needs to be done in places such as oil rigs in the Gulf of Mexico, as well as back at central data
hubs, which can then disperse data analysis to other operations.
"The key to future success is in making oil-field management a real-time activity, not only for operation, but also
for discovery," Sherman said. The potential cost savings is enormous, said Eric Leon, general manager at IBM's Global
Chemical and Petroleum Industry unit. In cases where those managing oil rigs have to wait multiple days for data
analysis to be returned to them, important decisions about redirecting or stopping drilling, for instance, have to be
put off.
"These rigs cost millions and millions per day" to operate, he said. "If you can save a day... I think it could make
a tremendous difference."
The exploration and production computer sector alone is estimated to spend more than $ 2 bn annually on hardware,
software and services. That includes "white-collar office spending" and doesn't take into account networks and the
like, Sherman said, quoting a figure from Pohlman International, a petroleum analysis firm in Florence, South
Carolina.
The industry is Unix-heavy for reservoir analysis and management, and Landmark approached the IBM deal and its Linux
focus as a possible way to save customers money by letting them work on plug-and-play machines and myriad peripherals
all running on a single operating system.
"Supporting multiple flavours of Unix is expensive," Sherman said, though he quickly noted that Landmark will
continue to offer customers Unix support. However, the plug-and-play possibilities are a key attraction of the deal.
"This is something we've never been able to do, and it's really exciting," he said, predicting that within two to
five years, companies will move toward standardizing on Linux.
The IBM-Landmark deal has potential implications beyond the petroleum industry because its focus is on Linux on the
desktop, with the platform used as a technical workstation rather than for productivity, said Stacey Quandt, an
analyst at Giga Information Group in Santa Clara, California.
"Anyone using a Linux cluster as a computational cluster or grid... there's definitely potential for other
applications," Quandt said. Just about any vertical industry that relies on high-end computational applications could
benefit, she added.
The movie industry has already discovered Linux for some applications,"but this is a different ballgame," Quandt
said, referring to the level of data crunching that goes on in exploration and production and in industries such as
aerospace and pharmaceuticals, which could well find that Linux on the desktop also makes sense for them.
