Hot Seat Session 1 : International Supercomputing Conference 2009

Link:
  • https://lecture2go.uni-hamburg.de/l2go/-/get/v/10068
Autor/in:
Beteiligte Personen:
  • Regionales Rechenzentrum der Universität Hamburg/ MCC/ Lecture2Go
  • MCC
Verlag/Körperschaft:
Universität Hamburg
Erscheinungsjahr:
2009
Medientyp:
Audiovisuell
Schlagwort:
  • Regionales Rechenzentrum (RRZ)
Beschreibung:
  • 02:30PM - 02:45PM Programming from Multi-Core to Cluster Ryan Waite, Principal Product Unit Manager HPC, Microsoft, USA 02:45PM - 03:00PM Intelligent Performance & More: Intel Delivering Leadership HPC Technology Richard Dracott, General Manager, High Performance Computing, Digital Enterprise Group, Intel, USA 03:00PM - 03:15PM Heterogeneous Computing - Coping with the Energy Wall Dr. Donald Grice, Distinguished Engineer, Technical Executive, IBM Systems & Technology Group (STG), IBM, USA 03:15PM - 03:30PM Unified Scalable File Systems James Reaney, Director Research Markets, BlueArc, USA 03:30PM - 03:45PM Bull´s Petascale Approach with Standard Components Jean-Marc Denis, Director for Large HPC Infrastructure Projects, Bull, France 03:45PM - 04:00PM Best Practices for Managing Multiple Petabytes of Storage in an HPC Environment Nick Harper, Vice President, International, Spectra Logic, USA 04:00PM - 04:15PM Utilize Multicore CPUs toward Sustained Petascale Computing Dr. Motoi Okuda, Executive Architect, Technical Computing Solutions Unit & Assistant to the President of Next Generation Technical Computing Unit, Fujitsu, Japan 04:15PM - 04:30PM The Advantages of Adaptive Intelligent Automation Compared with Static Management - How Moab Adaptive HPC & Cloud Improve Application & Other Consolidation Projects Michael Jackson, President, Cluster Resources, USA 04:30PM - 04:45PM Cray´s Roadmap to Sustained Petascale Computing & Beyond Dr. Steven Scott, Chief Technology Officer, Cray, USA
Beziehungen:
URL https://lecture2go.uni-hamburg.de/l2go/-/get/l/3701
Lizenz:
  • UHH-L2G
Quellsystem:
Lecture2Go UHH

Interne Metadaten
Quelldatensatz
oai:lecture2go.uni-hamburg.de:10068