Berkeley Lab Staff Bringing Expertise, Computing Artifacts to SC18

November 7, 2018

Nov. 7, 2018 — As in years past, Berkeley Lab staff will contribute significantly to technical program and the exhibition at the SC18 Conference being held Nov. 11-16 in Dallas, Texas.

The SC conference series is the largest international conference for high-performance computing, networking, data analysis and storage, drawing about 11,000 attendees from around the world.

Berkeley Lab staff will contribute to the conference’s technical program by:

  • Authoring or co-authoring seven technical papers
  • Organizing or contributing to nine tutorials
  • Organizing or presenting at 15 workshops
  • Offering perspectives on three panel discussions
  • Giving two presentations to vie for the ACM Gordon Bell Prize
  • Sharing ideas at three Birds-of-a-feather sessions
  • Presenting two technical posters

Read a day-by-day look at Berkeley Lab staff activities.

Lab staff will also contribute to the program in the U.S. Department of Energy booth (#2433) by giving two presentations, offering six demonstrations and hosting six informal roundtable discussions. The two featured talks will give updates on the next-generation NERSC supercomputer and the next-generation network architecture for ESnet:

  • Nick Wright of NERSC will present “Introducing NERSC-9, Berkeley Lab’s Next-Generation Pre-Exascale Supercomputer” at 1:45 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 13.
  • ESnet Director Inder Monga will discuss “ESnet6: Design of the Next-Generation Science Network” at 2:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Nov. 13.

In conjunction with the 30th anniversary of the first conference in the SC series, the DOE booth is featuring both a timeline showing breakthrough computing systems over the past seven decades, as well as a display of components from some of those machines. Berkeley Lab will be displaying:

  • The nameplate and a memory module from a Control Data Corp. 6600, installed at Berkeley Lab in 1965. In 1974, the machine was the first supercomputer connected to ARPANET, an early that provided the technical foundation for the Internet. Connecting an HPC system to the network helped pave the way for today’s ubiquitous networked computing.
  • A compute module from a Cray T3E-900 installed at NERSC in 1997. Nicknamed MCurie, the 512-processor system was the proving ground for an ORNL-led materials research team to hone their new model of metallic magnet atoms. The team won the 1998 Gordon Bell Prize with a performance of 657 gigaflops and using a T3E at Cray’s factory and achieved 1.02 teraflops, the first sustained performance of a scientific application to exceed 1 teraflops.
  • A Cray XE6 Compute Blade from Hopper, a 153,408 processor-core Cray XE6 system installed at NERSC in 2010. The system ushered in the petaflops arena for the DOE Office of Science’s broad user community of 3,000 users and 600 projects running at NERSC. Hopper debuted at No. 5 on the Nov. 2010 TOP500 list with a speed of 1.05 petaflops.

During the conference, ESnet staff will also support technology demonstrations in partners’ booths.

Additionally, staff members will participate in a number of conference outreach programs for students and early career professionals.


Source: Berkeley Lab

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