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Dec 16, 2005 |
The Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) invited the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) to coordinate an international review of research using high performance computing in the UK - the first ever Anglo-German collaboration of its kind.
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Dec 16, 2005 |
On December 6th and 7th about 250 people attended the 16th Machine Evaluation Workshop at EPSRC Daresbury Laboratories, UK. This workshop is a leading UK national event dedicated to distributed, high performance scientific computing.
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Dec 16, 2005 |
Researchers at the University of Michigan have produced what is believed to be the first scalable quantum computer chip, which could mean big gains in the worldwide race to develop a quantum computer.
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Dec 16, 2005 |
In the last twenty years, the efficacy of antibiotics has been overshadowed by the emergence of drug-resistant bacterial strains. Researchers at the University of New Mexico are using sophisticated computational approaches to understand the mechanism of antibiotic resistance.
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Dec 16, 2005 |
Global tokamak turbulence calculations present truly 'grand challenges' to the most powerful computers in the world. And with the promise that controlled thermonuclear fusion can meet the world's energy requirements without greenhouse gas production or the need for disposal of radioactive wastes, these calculations are of intense interest to researchers worldwide.
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Dec 16, 2005 |
While computer gamers are eagerly awaiting the next generation of platforms, the computer scientists of Lawrence Livermore's Graphics Architectures for Intelligence Applications project are researching graphics processing units to determine how they might be used in applications other than virtual entertainment.
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Dec 16, 2005 |
"Robbie the Robot," named for the mechanical star of the 1950s sci-fi classic "Forbidden Planet," is a cutting-edge, automated storage and retrieval system that will enable vast amounts of data to be seamlessly archived and quickly located for researchers' use.
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Dec 09, 2005 |
The editor for Pacific Northwest National Laboratory's magazine interviews George Michaels, Associate Laboratory Director for the Computational and Information Sciences Directorate (CISD), PNNL's fastest growing research directorate. As CISD's leader, George Michaels is leading the charge to provide the best-in-class tools for the next generation of discovery.
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Dec 09, 2005 |
Using 2,048 processors of LeMieux, PSC's terascale system, a lead resource on the TeraGrid, P. K. Yeung simulated the highest Reynolds number ever calculated by direct numerical simulation of turbulent dispersion, marking a milestone in turbulence simulation.
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Dec 09, 2005 |
For the third consecutive year, an international team of scientists and engineers has smashed the network speed record, moving data at a peak rate of 131.6 gigabits per second. Participants from Caltech, SLAC, Fermilab, CERN, Michigan, Florida, Brookhaven, Vanderbilt and partners in the UK, Brazil, Korea and Japan joined together to set the new world record at the Supercomputing 2005 Bandwidth Challenge.
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Dec 09, 2005 |
As Moore's law has stalled on the desktop, scientists and engineers in virtually every field are turning to high-performance computing to solve some of today's most important and complex problems. With simulation increasingly replacing physical testing, more complex phenomena being modeled, and whole products or systems being simulated, technical computing -- whether in the life sciences, manufacturing, energy, intelligence, defense, or earth sciences -- has become both more prominent and more challenging.
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Dec 09, 2005 |
New simulations of 21st-century climate show that human-produced changes in land cover could produce additional warming in the Amazon region comparable to that caused by greenhouse gases, while counteracting greenhouse warming by 25 percent to 50 percent in some midlatitude areas.
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Dec 02, 2005 |
In a paper which was featured on the cover of the July 28, 2005 issue of Nature, an international group of researchers reported the first observation of geologically produced anti-neutrinos. The observation is giving scientists new insight into the interior of our planet.
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Dec 02, 2005 |
SAS Institute Inc., a provider of business analytics software, recently hosted its 8th annual data mining technology conference, M2005.Nearly 700 attendees from 43 states and 18 countries came to Las Vegas from 300 business, academic and government organizations for the chance to hear from 50 noteworthy speakers.
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Dec 02, 2005 |
Last month at UC Berkeley, Horst Simon presented a lecture entitled "Progress in Supercomputing: The Top Three Breakthroughs of the Last 20 Years and the Top Three Challenges for the Next 20 Years." In the lecture, he gives us his historical perspective of supercomputing over the last two decades and his outlook for the next two.
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Dec 02, 2005 |
This year marks the 15th birthday of the Edinburgh Parallel Computing Centre. This is, for us a significant milestone and I wanted to take this opportunity to review the past decade and a half, not only in terms of the changes we have seen as an organization, but also to reflect on the revolution that has taken place in the HPC arena more generally.
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Dec 02, 2005 |
Finding "affordable visualization" with enough scalable horsepower is often impossible for scientists and engineers who need HPC visualization capabilities to analyze large data sets. Steve Briggs, HPCD's SVA product marketing manager, explains how the HP Scalable Visualization Array addresses this need.
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Dec 02, 2005 |
Earth system and climate science deals with complex phenomena in the atmosphere, the ocean and on land surfaces. Modeling such phenomena numerically on extremely powerful computers is a crucial element of Earth System Sciences program at the Max Planck Institute for Meteorology (MPI-M) in Hamburg, Germany.
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Dec 02, 2005 |
SRI International has announced the formation of its Center of Excellence in Computational Biology. The Center's mission is to conduct collaborative research in symbolic systems biology, synthetic biology and bioinformatics to advance scientific understanding of biological systems and accelerate drug discovery and development.
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Nov 25, 2005 |
This spring, for the first time, real-time forecasts running daily on PSC's LeMieux, a lead resource of the TeraGrid, correctly predicted the details of thunderstorms 24 hours in advance.
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Nov 25, 2005 |
When researchers at the Production Genome Facility at DOE's Joint Genome Institute found they were generating data so fast they couldn't find anywhere to store the files, let alone make them easily accessible for analysis, a collaboration with NERSC's Mass Storage Group developed strategies for improving the reliability of data storage while making retrieval easier.
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Nov 25, 2005 |
This year, teams of HPC experts demonstrated diverse data-intensive applications using the onsite StorCloud storage infrastructure at SC05 in Seattle, Washington.
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Nov 25, 2005 |
TRIPS is a new microprocessor architecture, being designed at the University of Texas at Austin, to support polymorphous computing. The project's goal is to produce a scalable, general-purpose microprocessor capable of executing more than a trillion calculations per second.
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Nov 25, 2005 |
In June 2004, the President's Information Technology Advisory Committee was charged by John Marburger, the President's Science Advisory, to respond to seven questions regarding the state of computational science. In June 2005, the committee released its report, entitled Computational Science: Ensuring America's Competitiveness.
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Nov 11, 2005 |
Linux Networx's CEO, Robert H. "Bo" Ewald, will come to SC05 with some exciting news.His company will use the conference spotlight to announce that it has transformed its clusters into a new product series with two distinct families.
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In quieter times, sounding the bell of funding big science with big systems tends to resonate further than when ears are already burning with sour economic and national security news. For exascale's future, however, the time could be ripe to instill some sense of urgency....
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In a recent solicitation, the NSF laid out needs for furthering its scientific and engineering infrastructure with new tools to go beyond top performance, Having already delivered systems like Stampede and Blue Waters, they're turning an eye to solving data-intensive challenges. We spoke with the agency's Irene Qualters and Barry Schneider about..
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Large-scale, worldwide scientific initiatives rely on some cloud-based system to both coordinate efforts and manage computational efforts at peak times that cannot be contained within the combined in-house HPC resources. Last week at Google I/O, Brookhaven National Lab’s Sergey Panitkin discussed the role of the Google Compute Engine in providing computational support to ATLAS, a detector of high-energy particles at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC).
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May 23, 2013 |
The study of climate change is one of those scientific problems where it is almost essential to model the entire Earth to attain accurate results and make worthwhile predictions. In an attempt to make climate science more accessible to smaller research facilities, NASA introduced what they call ‘Climate in a Box,’ a system they note acts as a desktop supercomputer.
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May 22, 2013 |
At some point in the not-too-distant future, building powerful, miniature computing systems will be considered a hobby for high schoolers, just as robotics or even Lego-building are today. That could be made possible through recent advancements made with the Raspberry Pi computers.
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May 16, 2013 |
When it comes to cloud, long distances mean unacceptably high latencies. Researchers from the University of Bonn in Germany examined those latency issues of doing CFD modeling in the cloud by utilizing a common CFD and its utilization in HPC instance types including both CPU and GPU cores of Amazon EC2.
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May 15, 2013 |
Supercomputers at the Department of Energy’s National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center (NERSC) have worked on important computational problems such as collapse of the atomic state, the optimization of chemical catalysts, and now modeling popping bubbles.
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May 10, 2013 |
Program provides cash awards up to $10,000 for the best open-source end-user applications deployed on 100G network.
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05/10/2013 | Cleversafe, Cray, DDN, NetApp, & Panasas | From Wall Street to Hollywood, drug discovery to homeland security, companies and organizations of all sizes and stripes are coming face to face with the challenges – and opportunities – afforded by Big Data. Before anyone can utilize these extraordinary data repositories, however, they must first harness and manage their data stores, and do so utilizing technologies that underscore affordability, security, and scalability.
04/15/2013 | Bull | “50% of HPC users say their largest jobs scale to 120 cores or less.” How about yours? Are your codes ready to take advantage of today’s and tomorrow’s ultra-parallel HPC systems? Download this White Paper by Analysts Intersect360 Research to see what Bull and Intel’s Center for Excellence in Parallel Programming can do for your codes.
In this demonstration of SGI DMF ZeroWatt disk solution, Dr. Eng Lim Goh, SGI CTO, discusses a function of SGI DMF software to reduce costs and power consumption in an exascale (Big Data) storage datacenter.
The Cray CS300-AC cluster supercomputer offers energy efficient, air-cooled design based on modular, industry-standard platforms featuring the latest processor and network technologies and a wide range of datacenter cooling requirements.