SC15 is the 27th year of the SC Conference series – once again featuring an exceptional Technical Program, Industry and Research Exhibits, Education Program and many other activities. SC15 is the one place where attendees can see tomorrow’s technology being used to solve world-class challenge problems today. The SC15 early registration deadline is October 15th. […]
Berkeley Lab’s Katherine Yelick Wins Ken Kennedy Award
UC Berkeley Professor to Receive ACM/IEEE-CS Kennedy Award at SC15 for Contributions to International Research Agenda Katherine Yelick ACM and IEEE Computer Society have named Katherine Yelick as the recipient of the 2015 ACM/IEEE Computer Society Ken Kennedy Award for innovative research contributions to parallel computing languages that have been used in both the research […]
SC15 Invited Talk Spotlight: Societal Impact of Earthquake Simulations at Extreme Scale by USC’s Dr. Thomas H. Jordan
Simulation of a “wall-to-wall” rupture of the southern San Andreas Fault. The peak ground velocities during this magnitude-8 earthquake are shown in color. White lines are seismograms at selected points. Graphic by Geoff Ely, Southern California Earthquake Center (click on image to enlarge). The highly nonlinear, multiscale dynamics of large earthquakes is a wicked physics […]
SC15 Panel Focus for Nov. 17th
Panel Title: Post Moore’s Law Computing: Digital versus Neuromorphic versus Quantum The end of Moore’s Law scaling has sparked research into preserving performance scaling through alternative computational models. This has sparked a debate for the future of computing. Currently, the future of computing is expected to include a mix of quantum, neuromorphic, and digital computing. […]
SC15 Releases Video Profiling the Importance of Supercomputing as Explained by IDC’s Steve Conway
Click above to view the latest SC Conference video on the importance of HPC. Steve Conway, Research Vice President in IDC’s High Performance Computing group, provides a high-level overview of the importance supercomputers and cites specific examples where it is making a difference every day. Mr. Conway plays a major role in directing and […]
SC15 Invited Talk Spotlight: The Power of Visual Analytics – Unlocking the Value of Big Data
Visual Exploration of Network Traffic for Host and Server Monitoring: The screenshot shows the hourly amount of network traffic for thousands of hosts in a large computer network for 24 hours. The different nested circles represent the topological subnet hierarchy of the network. Each filled circle represents a whole subnet or when zoomed in single […]
Alexander Szalay Named Recipient of 2015 IEEE Computer Society Sidney Fernbach Award
Alexander Szalay Alexander Szalay, a Bloomberg Distinguished Professor at the Johns Hopkins University, has been selected as the recipient of the 2015 IEEE Computer Society Sidney Fernbach Award. Szalay was recognized “for his outstanding contributions to the development of data-intensive computing systems and on the application of such systems in many scientific areas including astrophysics, […]
SC15 Invited Talk Spotlight: Trends and Challenges in Computational Modeling of Giant Hydrocarbon Reservoirs
Multimodal visualization of giant oil and gas reservoir models. Giant oil and gas reservoirs continue to play an important role in providing energy to the world. Nowadays, state of the art technologies are utilized to further explore and produce these reservoirs since a slight increase in the recovery amounts to discovering a mid-size reservoir somewhere […]
Getting to Know the Student Cluster Competition Teams
From left, the Technische Universität München team is: Michael Zellner, Gregor Matl, Felix Thimm, Daniel Gallenberger, Felix Spaeth, and Sharru Moeller. The following is an interesting look at one of the nine Student Cluster Competition teams competing in Austin this November. Click here to learn more about some of the other teams. For what reasons […]
SC15 Invited Talk Spotlight: Reproducibility in High Performance Computing
The number of lines of code published in ACM Transactions on Mathematical Software, 1960–2012, on a log scale. The proportion of articles that published code remained roughly constant at about a third, with standard error of about 0.12, and the journal consistently published around thirty-five articles each year. Source: click here and click here. Ensuring […]
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