High performance computing

IDH Distinguished Lecture: Dan Reed

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Date:
Fri, 2012-05-04 14:00 - 15:00
Location:
Klaus 1447

 

IDH Distinguished Lecture Speaker

By: Dan Reed Corporate Vice President, Technology Policy Group, Microsoft Corporation

Title:

HPC 2.0: The Challenge of Scale

Abstract:

SC10

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Date:
Sat, 2010-11-13 (All day) - Fri, 2010-11-19 (All day)
Location:
New Orleans, LA

About SC10

New Orleans is where the future began for renowned discoverers and innovators of the past, and in November 2010, The Big Easy plays host to discoverers of the future at SC10, the 23rd meeting in the conference's annual history.

Georgia Tech-Led Team Wins Gordon Bell Prize for Supercomputing


George Biros is an associate professor in the College of Computing's School of Computational Science & Engineering. Biros led a team of researchers that won the 2010 Gordon Bell Prize in supercomputing for creating a simulation of 260 million deformable red blood cells flowing in plasma.

November 21, 2010

ATLANTA – Nov. 22, 2010 – A team led by George Biros, associate professor in Georgia Tech’s School of Computational Science & Engineering (CSE), has won the Association for Computing Machinery’s Gordon Bell Prize for the world’s fastest supercomputing application. The award was announced at the Supercomputing 2010 conference, Nov. 18 in New Orleans.

Georgia Tech Keeps High Performance Computing Sights Set on Exascale at SC10


November 9, 2010

The road to exascale computing is a long one, but the Georgia Institute of Technology, a new leader in high-performance computing research and education, continues to win new awards and attract new talent to drive technology innovation. From algorithms to architectures and applications, Georgia Tech's researchers are collaborating with top companies, national labs and defense organizations to solve the complex challenges of tomorrow's supercomputing systems.

Georgia Tech Engaged in $100 Million Next-Generation Computing Initiative


Mark Richards, David Bader and Dan Campbell (left-to-right) pose in the Advanced Computing Technology Lab operated by the Georgia Tech Research Institute. (Credit: Gary Meek)
November 7, 2010

Imagine that one of the world's most powerful high performance computers could be packed into a single rack just 24 inches wide and powered by a fraction of the electricity consumed by comparable current machines. That would allow an unprecedented amount of computing power to be installed on aircraft, carried onto the battlefield for commanders -- and made available to researchers everywhere.

Genomics on the Petascale

Supercomputing is having a supercharging impact on the life sciences, and none more than genomics. David Bader and Mark Borodovsky (CompSci & Eng) write about genomics research made possible through high performance computing. Source: Scientific Computing

Location: 
Atlanta, GA
Release: 
Tuesday, May 24, 2011 - 10:13
Expire: 
Monday, August 22, 2011 - 10:13

Georgia Tech-Led Team Wins Gordon Bell Prize for Supercomputing

Subtitle: 
Application simulated 260 million blood cells flowing in plasma
Summary Sentence: 
A team led by School of CSE professor George Biros wins world's top supercomputing prize for simulation of 260 million blood cells flowing in plasma.

ATLANTA – Nov. 22, 2010 – A team led by George Biros, associate professor in Georgia Tech’s School of Computational Science & Engineering (CSE), has won the Association for Computing Machinery’s Gordon Bell Prize for the world’s fastest supercomputing application. The award was announced at the Supercomputing 2010 conference, Nov. 18 in New Orleans. Source: Office of Communications

Location: 
Atlanta, GA
Contact: 

Michael Terrazas

Assistant Director of Communications, College of Computing

mterraza [at] cc [dot] gatech [dot] edu

404-245-0707

Release: 
Monday, November 22, 2010 - 07:00
Expire: 
Thursday, February 17, 2011 - 15:31
Media Item: 
62882

Georgia Tech Keeps High Performance Computing Sights Set on Exascale at SC10

Subtitle: 
Strategic initiatives in heterogeneous systems, massive parallelism and massive data analytics lead the way
Summary Sentence: 
Strategic initiatives in heterogeneous systems, massive parallelism and massive data analytics lead the way.

Georgia Tech displays high performance computing issues such as sustainability, reliability and massive data computation November 13-19, 2010 at SC10 in New Orleans, LA.

Location: 
Atlanta, GA
Contact: 

Stefany Sanders
College of Computing
404-312-6620

Release: 
Wednesday, November 10, 2010 - 15:01
Expire: 
Tuesday, February 8, 2011 - 15:01
Media Item: 
46038

Georgia Tech Engaged in $100 Million Next-Generation Computing Initiative

Subtitle: 
DARPA Program Will Put Petascale Computer into a 24-inch Cabinet
Summary Sentence: 
Georgia Tech is supporting a major new computing initiative.

Georgia Tech researchers are engaged in a $100 million DARPA program to fit a high performance petaflop computer into a single rack just 24 inches wide and power it with a fraction of the electricity consumed by comparable current machines. Source: GT Research News

Location: 
Atlanta, GA
Contact: 

Stefany Sanders

College of Computing

stefany [at] cc [dot] gatech [dot] edu

404-312-6620

Release: 
Monday, November 8, 2010 - 11:15
Expire: 
Sunday, February 6, 2011 - 11:15
Media Item: 
62602

Intel Pivots to Supercomputing Defense

GPU maker NVidia may have a head start on Intel when it comes to manufacturing chips for the next generation of supercomputers, says Richard Fujimoto (CSE). Source: FoxBusiness.com

Location: 
Atlanta, GA
Release: 
Tuesday, June 15, 2010 - 12:17
Expire: 
Monday, September 13, 2010 - 12:17
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