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Michael Feldman
IT Revolution Just an Einstein Away
Post Date: December 14, 2006 @ 9:00 PM, Pacific Standard Time
Blog: From the Editor
Is there any chance the information technology juggernaut can be managed by a few million brave souls? Hope is on the way.
Michael Feldman
A Look Back at 2006
Post Date: December 14, 2006 @ 9:00 PM, Pacific Standard Time
Blog: From the Editor
Wow, 2006 is almost in the books. Editor Michael Feldman recaps the some of the top HPC events and trends of the past year.
Michael Feldman
The IT Workforce Conundrum
Post Date: December 07, 2006 @ 9:00 PM, Pacific Standard Time
Blog: From the Editor
In the Information Society that we seem to be inhabiting, it has become a cliché to talk about the insatiable demand for information technology workers. The IT workforce shortage is an annoying reality, but it makes sense. In agricultural societies of the past, a significant percentage of the populace ended up as farmers to serve that economic model. Things are no different in this era; only the economic engine has changed.
Michael Feldman
Commodity Processor Chaos or Convergence?
Post Date: November 30, 2006 @ 9:00 PM, Pacific Standard Time
Blog: From the Editor
The adoption of commodity GPUs and Cell processors into high performance computing is disrupting the comfortable framework of homogeneous x86 computing the industry has enjoyed for the past decade. Where is this technology taking us? Editor Michael Feldman talks about the evolution of GPU computing as seen from the perspective of two industry insiders and reviews some recent work in Europe using the Cell processor for molecular dynamics.
Michael Feldman
High Productivity Computing for the Rest of Us
Post Date: November 23, 2006 @ 9:00 PM, Pacific Standard Time
Blog: From the Editor
If you think the DARPA HPCS program is just of interest for capability-class supercomputing users -- think again. HPCS, in its most ambitious interpretation, is an attempt to drive a stake through the heart of cluster computing. And the government just anted up almost half a billion dollars to do just that. Editor Michael Feldman talks about some of the ramifications of HPCS as we enter the final phase of DARPA's high productivity computing initiative.
Michael Feldman
The SC-ingularity is Near
Post Date: November 09, 2006 @ 9:00 PM, Pacific Standard Time
Blog: From the Editor
The largest supercomputing conference of the year -- SC06 -- is about to begin.Editor Michael Feldman offers his perspective on the event's controversial keynote speaker, Ray Kurzweil. He also discusses an emerging technology that promises to both simplify multi-threaded programming and improve its performance. And while no one at SC06 may be talking about this technology, it could have profound effects on the future of high performance computing.
Michael Feldman
How to Talk to a Techno-Liberal (and you must)
Post Date: November 02, 2006 @ 9:00 PM, Pacific Standard Time
Blog: From the Editor
In the spirit of the upcoming elections, Editor Michael Feldman ponders the liberal and conservative tendencies of scientists and engineers, and how it affects technological progress -- and how it's manifested in the world of high performance computing.
Michael Feldman
HPC Gets Virtual; AMD Gets Graphic
Post Date: October 26, 2006 @ 9:00 PM, Pacific Daylight Time
Blog: From the Editor
Virtualization is entering the HPC world. Editor Michael Feldman talks about three vendors who are trying to rewrite the HPC cluster model with hardware that can be dynamically reconfigured to match changing workloads. He also offers some of his thoughts on AMD's plans for processors that combine x86 CPUs with ATI GPUs.
Michael Feldman
The Games People Play
Post Date: October 19, 2006 @ 9:00 PM, Pacific Daylight Time
Blog: From the Editor
The use of graphics processing units (GPU) for general-purpose computing is poised to change the nature of IT, especially in the HPC community. AMD's merger with ATI Technologies might be the catalyst that drives this new trend.Editor Michael Feldman offers this thoughts on the mainstreaming of GPUs and how this might effect the AMD-Intel rivalry.
Michael Feldman
PlayStations and Petaphilia
Post Date: October 12, 2006 @ 9:00 PM, Pacific Daylight Time
Blog: From the Editor
Editor Michael Feldman talks about Terra Soft's announcement of the first Cell-processor-based supercomputer cluster and suggests a use for discarded PlayStations. He also offers some comments about a Wired Magazine article that chronicles the rise of petascale data centers and how the IT industry is adapting to this new centralized computing model. Finally, Feldman contemplates the state of the DARPA High Productivity Computing Systems (HPCS) program and wonders when we'll get to Phase III.
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During a conversation this week with Cray CEO, Peter Ungaro, we learned that the company has managed to extend its reach into the enterprise HPC market quite dramatically--at least in supercomputing business terms. With steady growth into these markets, however, the focus on hardware versus the software side of certain problems for such users is....
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Contributing commentator, Andrew Jones, offers a break in the news cycle with an assessment of what the national "size matters" contest means for the U.S. and other nations...
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Today at the International Supercomputing Conference in Leipzing, Germany, Jack Dongarra presented on a proposed benchmark that could carry a bit more weight than its older Linpack companion. The high performance conjugate gradient (HPCG) concept takes into account new architectures for new applications, while shedding the floating point....
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Jun 19, 2013 |
Supercomputer architectures have evolved considerably over the last 20 years, particularly in the number of processors that are linked together. One aspect of HPC architecture that hasn't changed is the MPI programming model.
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Jun 18, 2013 |
The world's largest supercomputers, like Tianhe-2, are great at traditional, compute-intensive HPC workloads, such as simulating atomic decay or modeling tornados. But data-intensive applications--such as mining big data sets for connections--is a different sort of workload, and runs best on a different sort of computer.
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Jun 18, 2013 |
Researchers are finding innovative uses for Gordon, the 285 teraflop supercomputer housed at the San Diego Supercomputer Center (SDSC) that has a unique Flash-based storage system. Since going online, researchers have put the incredibly fast I/O to use on a wide variety of workloads, ranging from chemistry to political science.
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Jun 17, 2013 |
The advent of low-power mobile processors and cloud delivery models is changing the economics of computing. But just as an economy car is good at different things than a full size truck, an HPC workload still has certain computing demands that neither the fastest smartphone nor the most elastic cloud cluster can fulfill.
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Jun 14, 2013 |
For all the progress we've made in IT over the last 50 years, there's one area of life that has steadfastly eluded the grasp of computers: understanding human language. Now, researchers at the Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC) are utilizing a Hadoop cluster on its Longhorn supercomputer to move the state of the art of language processing a little bit further.
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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.
Join HPCwire Editor Nicole Hemsoth and Dr. David Bader from Georgia Tech as they take center stage on opening night at Atlanta's first Big Data Kick Off Week, filmed in front of a live audience. Nicole and David look at the evolution of HPC, today's big data challenges, discuss real world solutions, and reveal their predictions. Exactly what does the future holds for HPC?
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