Saturday, 23 June 2018

A useful reading list for travelling to ISC18

Travelling to Frankfurt for ISC? Need to feed your HPC thirst while on planes, trains, or in hotel rooms? Here is my pick of things to download and read so that you are fully informed when you start ISC:

See you in Frankfurt!

Andrew / @hpcnotes

Wednesday, 20 June 2018

NAG-TACC HPC Leadership Institute 2018

Just taken over a HPC management or leadership role? Or hoping to soon? Or know someone who could grow into those roles? Or been a HPC director for years but value ongoing personal development?

The HPC Leadership Institute is a partnership between Numerical Algorithms Group (NAG) and Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC) to deliver training on the business aspects of High Performance Computing. The training covers strategy, total cost of ownership (TCO), cloud vs on-site, supercomputer procurement, governance, user services, and much more.

The 2018 course will be held in Austin TX September 11-13. Learn more and register now at:

https://www.tacc.utexas.edu/education/institutes/hpc-leadership-institute


Does it matter whether USA, China, EU, or someone else has the biggest supercomputer?

Much fuss will be made over the ORNL's new Summit supercomputer at the ISC18 event next week - in particular the fact that it means the USA replaces China as the home of world's fastest supercomputer according to www.top500.org. This brings the usual question as to whether it really matters which country has the biggest supercomputer.

Having a supercomputer 20%, or even 2x, faster than a competitor isn’t critical on its own, because it is possible to make up 20% or 2x actual competitive capability through better software, better people, or better service delivery practices.

However, a 10x faster supercomputer would be an issue, because that would typically reflect a political commitment to High Performance Computing (HPC) involving hardware and software and people - and so could mean potential capability dominance.

Of course, if you had the 2x slower supercomputer without investing in people/software/practices to make up the difference, then that would be a meaningful competitive gap and would matter.

Read more in this article at WiredUK: "Why the US and China's brutal supercomputer war matters"