Since 1986 - Covering the Fastest Computers in the World and the People Who Run Them
November 12, 2009
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind., Nov. 11 -- Facebook for scientists -- but built to facilitate serious research rather than socializing -- and an award-winning method for putting idle computers to work on scientific breakthroughs are Purdue-developed technologies in the spotlight at the SC09, the world's largest high-performance computing conference.
Purdue University is highlighting the HUBzero and DiaGrid technologies at the university's booth at SC09, which opens Monday (Nov. 16) in Portland, Ore., and ends five days later.
HUBzero is a soon-to-be open source software platform developed by Purdue for deploying and applying computational research tools, visualizing and analyzing results interactively and publishing them, all through a familiar Web browser. Built-in social networking features akin to Facebook create communities of researchers and educators in science, engineering, medicine and almost any field or subject matter.
DiaGrid works by pooling computers over the Purdue campus network and off campus via the Internet and fast research networks. Whenever machines in the pool are idle, such as at night or when their owners are at lunch, the system sends work to them. Campus Technology Magazine selected DiaGrid for a 2009 international Campus Technology Innovators Award.
Purdue has created an automated system to link the computers of SC09 participants to the pool during the conference. The Purdue booth includes a scoreboard to keep track of whose machines are running the most jobs.
The booth is designed to promote Purdue; Information Technology at Purdue (ITaP), the university's central information technology organization; and the Rosen Center for Advanced Computing, ITaP's research and discovery arm. ITaP technologists developed HUBzero and DiaGrid.
"DiaGrid and HUBzero are model technologies for enabling research that Purdue is making available to the world," says John Campbell, associate vice president in charge of research computing for ITaP, who heads the Rosen Center. "As the premier conference for research computing, SC09 is a prime place to showcase these technologies."
Purdue's booth also will provide academic information to potential Purdue students and information to job seekers about positions with Purdue, ITaP and the Rosen Center. Nearly 10,000 people attended the conference in 2008.
Purdue has become a recognized leader in cyberinfrastructure with the development of HUBzero, which powers nanoHUB.org and many other Web-based "hubs" for research collaboration, says Michael McLennan, senior research scientist and hub technology architect at Purdue. NanoHUB is an international resource for nanotechnology theory, simulation and education with tens of thousands of users.
"Like no other platform, HUBzero can host interactive simulation tools. So, users aren't just reading about research, they can experience it," McLennan says. "HUBzero allows users to work together as they interact with content."
Other hubs link researchers transforming laboratory discoveries into new medical treatments, and Purdue is now working in a consortium with Indiana and Clemson universities and the University of Wisconsin to advance the technology even further.
A hub will be at the center of the Network for Earthquake Engineering Simulation (NEES), a $105 Million National Science Foundation program announced in September, which is led by Purdue. Purdue electrical and computer engineering Professor Rudolf Eigenmann, co-principal investigator of NEES, will give a workshop titled "Cyberinfrastructure for Earthquake Engineering" at the Purdue booth.
McLennan will host two workshops on HUBzero and one about nanoHUB during the conference. Purdue scientist Mathieu Luisier will offer a workshop on using massive supercomputers to simulate nanoscale electronic devices for the next generation of electronics, a central focus of nanoHUB.
DiaGrid includes computers in student computer labs, offices, server rooms and supercomputing clusters and is the first multi-campus collaboration of its kind. Purdue's partners in DiaGrid are IU, Indiana State University, the universities of Notre Dame, Louisville and Wisconsin, Purdue's Calumet and North Central campuses, and Indiana University-Purdue University Fort Wayne.
Together, they now make nearly 30,000 processors available for research jobs ranging from understanding the Solar System's formation to imaging the structure of viruses at near-atomic resolutions in an effort to develop new ways of battling viral illnesses, from swine flu and the common cold to West Nile virus and AIDS.
"The sheer size and ingenuity of the initiative, as well as the diversity of computing resources represented in the grid, really set the project apart," Geoffrey Fletcher, editorial director of Campus Technology, said in announcing the Campus Technology Innovators Award for DiaGrid.
-----
Source: Purdue University
(Digg, Technorati, more)
The National Science Foundation has awarded funding to four projects as part of the Future Internet Architecture program; and the 3PAR bidding war is won by HP. We recap those stories and more in our weekly wrapup.
Read More...
Intel Corp has released Parallel Studio 2011, a set of four tools designed to mainstream software development on multicore x86 architectures. The update folds in a number of parallel programming technologies that the company has acquired or developed independently over the past few years, including the Cilk Arts and RapidMind technologies, and Intel's own Ct data parallel language framework.
Read More...
There's nothing like a blazing hot summer to focus one's attention on the best ways to keep cool. That goes for datacenter operators as well, who are equally worried about keeping their servers properly chilled. While there is no shortage of innovative cooling solutions being proffered by various vendors, a new liquid immersion cooling solution from startup Green Revolution Cooling could end up being the best of them all.
Read More...
Sep 02 | Could see first products in three years. Read more...
Sep 01 | A hand-picked selection of video presentations from the TED conference -- because the next big thing has to start somewhere. Read more...
Aug 30 | CERN project adapts its computation and storage strategy as hardware gets cheaper and better. Read more...
Aug 26 | Chinese-made chip adds vector SIMD unit; delivers 128 gigaflops in 40 watts. Read more...
Aug 25 | Hot Chips presentation offers insights on supercomputer design. Read more...
Jul 29 | | Panasas storage solutions deliver high throughput with many concurrent backup IO streams to standard backup applications such as Veritas NetBackup™ or EMC® NetWorker™. Download this whitepaper to understand the essential elements for effective backup and restore: the tape subsystem, networking, file system workload and administrative policy.
Jul 28 | | As compelling economics and performance drive GPUs into HPC clusters, developers are scrambling to catch up. Download this whitepaper from Platform Computing to understand how to capture the benefits of exciting new GPU capabilities.
In this webinar you will hear about the current storage challenges facing the HPC community, how Panasas storage solutions provide exceptional performance, scalability, and manageability, and how you can achieve the lowest total Cost of Ownership with a system that installs and configures in 15 minutes.
Join this online panel discussion for live Q&A with leading industry experts, analysts, and end-users to discuss the latest innovations, best practices, barriers to implementation, and measurable benefits of server virtualization with a particular focus on today's real world solutions.
Learn about scalable fault-tolerant architectures and examples of energy efficient and scalable supercomputing clusters using dual QDR InfiniBand to combine capacity computing with network failover capabilities with the help of programming languages such as MPI and a robust Linux cluster management package.