A weekly podcast hosted by Michael Feldman, Editor of HPCwire, and Addison Snell, CEO of InterSect360 Research. Michael and Addison break down the week's most compelling news and offer their own unique perspectives on how these stories affect the HPC industry.
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July 13, 2012
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Posted by - July 13, 2012 @ 12:21 PM, Pacific Daylight Time
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Intel Corporation has acquired Whamcloud, a startup devoted to supporting the open source Lustre parallel file system and its user community. The deal marks the latest in a line of high performance computing acquisitions that Intel has made over the past few years to expand its HPC footprint.
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Intel, AMD, NVIDIA, and Whamcloud have been awarded tens of millions of dollars by the US Department of Energy (DOE) to kick-start research and development required to build exascale supercomputers. The work will be performed under the FastForward program, a joint effort run by the DOE Office of Science and the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) that will focus on developing future hardware and software technologies capable of supporting such machines.
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Computer memory is currently undergoing something of an identity crisis. For the past 8 years, multicore microprocessors have been creating a performance discontinuity, the so-called memory wall. It's now fairly clear that this widening gap between compute and memory performance will not be solved with conventional DRAM products. But there is one technology under development that aims to close that gap, and its first use case will likely be in the ethereal realm of supercomputing.
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Jul 16, 2012 |
EUV lithography, the technology chipmakers are counting on to keep Moore's Law alive, is behind schedule.
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Jul 12, 2012 |
State says supercomputing center can’t pay bills to keep machine running.
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Jul 11, 2012 |
Computer scientist builds intelligent machine with single-core laptop and some slick algorithms.
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Jul 10, 2012 |
Science cloud in proof-of concept stage.
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Jul 09, 2012 |
EU project offers software that makes datacenters more energy-efficient.
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06/25/2012 | NetApp | A single hour of data collection can result in 7+ million files from just one camera. Collection opportunities are limited and must be successful every time. As defense and intelligence agencies seek to use the data collected to make mission-critical battlefield decisions, there’s greater emphasis on smart data and imagery collection, capture, storage and analysis to drive real-time intelligence. The data gathered must accurately and systematically be analyzed, integrated and disseminated to those who need it – troops on the ground. This reality leads to an inevitable challenge – warfighters swimming in sensors, drowning in data. With the millions, if not billions, of sensors providing all-seeing reports of the combat environment, managing the overload demands a file system and storage infrastructure that scales and performs while protecting the data collected. Part II of our whitepaper series highlights NetApp’s scalable, modular, and flexible storage solution to handle the demanding requirements of sophisticated ISR environments.
Join Michael for a look at the first PGI Accelerator Fortran and C compilers to include comprehensive support for OpenACC, the new open standard for programming accelerators using compiler directives.