HPCwire

Leading HPC
Solution Providers

























HPCwire >> Off the Wire

Saudi University, UCSD Announce Partnership


Calit2 collaborates on facilities for researchers developing technologies to benefit society

Oct. 14 -- King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST) and the University of California, San Diego today announced a special partnership to collaborate on world-class visualization research and research training activities. The partnership is expected to enhance research in areas ranging from solar power to clean water and new medicines.

Under the four-year agreement, the UC San Diego division of the California Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology (Calit2) will provide expertise in visualization, virtual-reality and collaboration tools to support KAUST's ambitious plan to deploy state-of-the-art technologies for scientific research.

The technologies will allow materials scientists, biomedical researchers, electrical engineers and other researchers to speed development of new technologies. The partnership will also enable collaboration between researchers at KAUST and UC San Diego, whose visualization facilities will eventually be linked via very high-speed networking.

Calit2's development of visualization and collaboration facilities has attracted worldwide attention. The partnership with KAUST will expand the network of elite academic institutions that have access to ultra-high-resolution display and collaboration facilities.

"A research university needs shared facilities that can bring together researchers to collaborate across disciplines," said Nadhmi Al-Nasr, KAUST's interim president. "We look forward to working with our colleagues at Calit2 to provide KAUST students and faculty with the advanced display, virtual-reality and collaboration technologies that are essential ingredients of today's IT-based and computationally intensive education and research environments."

"As one of the youngest top-tier U.S. universities in science and technology, UC San Diego has a particular affinity with the ambitious challenge facing KAUST," said UCSD Vice Chancellor Steven W. Relyea, who was scheduled to represent the university at a meeting in Jiddah, Saudi Arabia, of KAUST partners Oct. 15-16.

About a dozen researchers from Calit2 will prototype and evaluate appropriate technologies for use on the KAUST campus. These will be deployed first in the Applied Mathematics building, a shared-use facility at the core of the new campus. Over time, the visualization tools, displays and services will expand to other parts of the campus and even to its research partners in Europe, Asia, the Americas and the Middle East.

"KAUST and Calit2 share a common interest in using new technology to tear down the traditional walls between scientists, disciplines and even countries," said Ramesh Rao, director of the UCSD division of Calit2 and a professor of electrical and computer engineering in UCSD's Jacobs School of Engineering. "Effective research involves visualizing huge data sets and collaborating on solutions in real time with colleagues who may be down the hall or around the world. Calit2 has made a substantial investment in visualization and collaborative tools, and we are delighted that KAUST has targeted this area as a critical building block and selected UCSD as a partner in this endeavor."

The proposed KAUST visualization systems would create a world's-best visualization suite. When ready in September 2009, this research facility will host both the world's highest VL6 resolution and brightest virtual environment, and a world-class Multipurpose Room (MPR).

"The combination of all the systems together makes a statement to the rest of the world that KAUST is committed to providing the ultimate scientific visualization suite anywhere on the planet," said Majid Al-Ghaslan, interim Chief Information Officer, who is responsible for the development, support and operation of innovative technology solutions and services that advance learning and discovery at KAUST, including the Shaheen supercomputer, to be built in a joint venture by KAUST and IBM under an agreement announced last month.

KAUST's future visualization facility will be supported by proposed developmental systems that will allow unprecedented flexibility for the researcher/developer to design applications for the world-class facility without tying up larger systems. The new facility will be enhanced with the ability to record signals/sessions from each of the displays digitally in high-definition. This approach will set the KAUST Visualization Facility apart and catapult it beyond visualization suites anywhere in the world. A state-of-the-art spatial audio system would be the first of its kind and would make the KAUST Visualization Facility the world's only known research center for this type of audio system. This system is to be designed in collaboration with Meyer Audio and UC San Diego, recognized as world leaders in this technology.

The KAUST Visualization Cluster would go beyond other international systems through its use of the GraphStream visualization cluster. GraphStream components decrease the physical footprint and reduce the power utilized while gaining the compute power needed to run a best-in-world visualization suite.

About KAUST

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST) is being built in Saudi Arabia as an international, graduate-level research university dedicated to inspiring a new age of scientific achievement in the Kingdom, the region and around the globe. As an independent, merit-based institution, KAUST will employ many of the best practices from leading research universities and enable top researchers from around the globe and across all cultures to work together to solve challenging scientific and technological issues. The KAUST global research and education network will support diverse talents, both on its campus and at other premier universities and research institutions, through collaborative research agreements, grants, and student scholarship programs. KAUST will be merit-based, open to men and women from all cultures around the world, and governed by an independent, self-perpetuating Board of Trustees. The core campus, located on more than 36 million square meters on the Red Sea at Thuwal, is set to open in September 2009. For more information about KAUST, visit www.kaust.edu.sa.

About Calit2 at UC San Diego

The UC San Diego Division of the California Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology (Calit2), together with Calit2's division at UC Irvine, house over 1,000 researchers across the two campuses, organized around more than 50 projects on the future of telecommunications and information technology and how these technologies will transform a range of applications important to the California economy and its citizens' quality of life. Created in 2000 by the State of California to maintain and extend its leadership in critical technologies, Calit2 brings together teams of faculty, student and staff researchers on both campuses with leading California telecommunications, computer, software, and applications companies. They conduct studies in "living laboratories" to investigate how the future Internet will accelerate advances in areas such as environmental science, civil infrastructure, intelligent transportation and telematics, genomic medicine, new media arts and digital cinema. For more information about Calit2, visit www.calit2.net.

-----

Source: Doug Ramsey, UC San Diego


Article Tools

  • Print This Article

Share & Save Options

Discussion

There are 0 discussion items posted.  

Sponsored Links

Interview: Appro CEO Shares HPC Vision
Appro CEO Daniel Kim provides a glimpse into Appro's vision and opportunities for its supercomputer and high-performance cluster solutions.



Feature Articles

Computed Tomography Software Taps Into NVIDIA GPUs

Minnesota-based North Star Imaging, a firm that specializes in industrial X-rays for nondestructive testing and analysis, is employing NVIDIA GPUs to accelerate 3D renderings in their CT (computed tomography) software. Julien Noel, the company's CT product manager, says the exceptional computational power afforded by CUDA and Tesla hardware is increasing customer productivity and transforming their workflow.
Read More...

The Next Big Thing in Humanities, Arts and Social Science Computing: 18thConnect

For the humanities scholar who may have only recently mastered library and archival finding aids beyond the archaic card catalog, the possibility of retrieving source materials at the flash of a keystroke (well maybe a few...) is very heady stuff.
Read More...

HPC Clouds -- Alto Cirrus or Cumulonimbus

The "cloud" model of exporting user workload and services to remote, distributed and virtual environments is emerging as a powerful computing paradigm. Yet, one domain that challenges this model in its characteristics and needs is high performance computing.
Read More...

Top Headlines

Dawning 6000 to Use Chinese-Made Loongson Processor

Nov 28 | People's Daily Online | Currently under development, the Dawning 6000 HPC system will be based on the Chinese-made "Loongson" microprocessor. Read more...

Can Supercomputers Help Save the Economy?

Nov 27 | Computerworld | The use of supercomputers to increase the industrial might of the U.S. has amounted to little more than an asterisk from a financial standpoint in both the federal budget and the economy as a whole. Read more...

IBM to Establish 'Collaboratory' in Dublin

Nov 26 | Science Business | IBM is getting ready to set up a supercomputing research “collaboratory” in Dublin, Ireland. Read more...

Texan Prof Sees Big Future for Graphene Storage

Nov 25 | The Register | A Rice University professor believes that his proposed graphene arrays could be many times denser and faster than existing storage tech, and they'd be more reliable too. Read more...

Super Micro Computer: A One-Man, or at Least One-Family, Powerhouse

Nov 24 | The New York Times | Server maker Super Micro Computer lives by two principles: give customers what they want, and do it as fast as humanly possible. Read more...

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.

Special Feature: SC08

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

 TradeTech Architecture – Europe’s largest meeting of CTOs and CIOs in the capital markets
Symposium 2009