HPCwire

Leading HPC
Solution Providers


























HPCwire >> Off the Wire

HPC Centers in Switzerland, U.S. Announce Collaboration


MANNO, Switzerland, and BERKELEY, California, Feb. 7 -- The Swiss National Computing Centre (CSCS) and the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center (NERSC) at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory have signed a memorandum of understanding for a staff exchange program between the two centers.

The agreement gives more formal structure to already existing ties between the two centers. Berkeley Lab Associate Director for Computing Sciences Horst Simon is a member of the CSCS advisory board. Both centers also share a common technological focus, having selected Cray XT supercomputers as their primary systems after thorough reviews of various systems.

Last year, a group CSCS visited NERSC for a series of discussions about systems and facilities. Howard Walter, who oversees NERSC's computational systems, paid a return visit in January 2008, sharing NERSC's expertise in designing and building energy efficient computing facilities.

"While many of us at NERSC are in frequent contact with our colleagues at other supercomputing centers in the U.S., we see this agreement as a means to broaden our outreach and perspectives." said NERSC Director Kathy Yelick. "Our informal discussions have already yielded valuable insights. With a more formalized structure, we expect these exchanges to be even more productive."

The two centers also play similar roles in their national research communities: CSCS is the largest supercomputing center in Switzerland and is managed by the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich. NERSC is the U.S. Department of Energy's flagship facility for computational science, serving 2,900 users at national laboratories and universities around the country.

"Not only do our two centers share organizational and operational similarities, but we both have the same primary goal of advancing the scientific research of our users," said CSCS COO Dominik Ulmer. "We believe each center has a lot of expertise to share and we are looking forward to working together on new HPC technologies that will allow us to further enhance the support and services we offer our users."

Under the agreement, staff exchanges will be arranged based on specific projects of mutual interest. Each center will continue to pay the salary and expenses of staff participating in the exchanges. According to the agreement, which was signed in late January, the goal is "sharing and furthering the scientific and technical know-how of both institutions."

About CSCS

Founded in 1991 CSCS is the Swiss National Supercomputing Centre, providing, developing and promoting technical and scientific services for the Swiss research community in the fields of high-performance and high-throughput computing. It pioneers new information technologies; collaborates with domestic and foreign researchers, and carries out its own research in scientific computing. For more information, visit http://www.cscs.ch/.

About NERSC

Established in 1974, the NERSC Center is the flagship scientific computing facility for DOE's Office of Science. Located at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in Berkeley, Calif., NERSC enables interdisciplinary teams of scientists to address fundamental problems in science and engineering that require massive calculations and have broad scientific and economic impacts. Go to http://www.nersc.gov for more information.

-----

Source: Swiss National Computing Centre, and the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center


Article Tools

  • Print This Article

Share & Save Options

Discussion

There are 0 discussion items posted.  

Sponsored Links



Feature Articles

The Linux HPC Empire Strikes Back

While the Microsoft juggernaut has been touting the joys of its new Windows HPC Server 2008, the Linux HPC contingent has been somewhat less vocal of late. But now Red Hat has come up with its version of an integrated cluster solution.
Read More...

Nexsan Looks to Scare Up HPC Customers With Storage Beast

Even though the cost of servers still dominates the datacenter budget, storage is actually on a steeper growth curve. HPC storage, in particular, is being singled out as high-growth opportunity. Vendors are scrambling to keep up.
Read More...

The Week in Review

Google datacenters most energy efficient; Cluster Resources to demo Moab Hybrid Cluster; Red Hat Linux releases HPC distro. John West recaps those stories and more in our weekly wrap-up.
Read More...

Top Headlines

AMD to Split Into Two Operations

Oct 07 | The New York Times | Advanced Micro Devices said Tuesday that it would split into two companies — one focused on designing microprocessors and the other on the costly business of manufacturing them. Read more...

Lustre to Battle Corruption

Oct 07 | GCN.com | Sun Microsystems has been busy building a lot more intelligence into Lustre, a file system used for large-scale cluster computing. Read more...

Oracle and HP's Database Machine Predicated on Voltaire

Oct 06 | The Register | Does the HP Oracle Database Machine represent InfiniBand's big chance to break out its HPC niche? Read more...

3D Imaging Spreads to Fashion and Beyond

Oct 06 | BusinessWeek | A body scan can save a lot of time in the fitting room, and fields from medicine to architecture are adopting 3D computing applications. Read more...

Structural Engineers and Computer Scientists Hope to Integrate Disciplines to 'Revolutionize Building Construction'

Oct 03 | UCSD News | Despite the evolution of computer science over the past 30 years, structural engineering -- hindered by a reluctance to adapt to digital innovations -- has remained relatively unchanged as a discipline. Read more...

Featured Whitepapers

Panasas® Tiered Parity™ Architecture

Sep 04 | | Disk drives are approximately 250 times denser today than a decade ago. This is good news for users who are creating, manipulating and storing more data than ever before. It gives them an opportunity to derive more value from their stored data and lowers the capital acquisition and operating expense associated with that data.

Multimedia

Video White Paper: Architecting a Better Network Storage Solution

BlueArc's Titan architecture represents an evolutionary step in file servers by creating a hardware-based file system that can scale bandwidth, IOPS, and overall data capacity well beyond conventional software-based devices. With its ability to virtualize a massive storage pool of up to four usable petabytes of tiered storage, Titan can scale with growing data requirements, offering a competitive advantage for businesses, researchers, or other enterprises seeking to better manage data growth while still ensuring optimal performance.

High Performance on Wall Street

Newsletters

Stay informed! Subscribe to HPCWire email Newsletters.

Get updates and insights on the High Productivity Computing industry delivered driectly to your inbox.





HPC Job Bank

Featured Events

LCI Workshop
SIFMA
HP-CAST
2008 Virtualization Conference & Expo
Symposium 2009