Entries filed under “HPC People on the Move”

Bo Ewald Ready to Ride Quantum Computing at D-Wave

D-Wave Systems, a commercial quantum computing company, has announced the formal launch of its US business.

Industry expert and supercomputing veteran, Robert “Bo” Ewald will lead the new business as president and will head up global customer operations as the company’s chief revenue officer. New offices and R&D facilities have opened in Palo Alto, California and others are expected in the near future.

Bo Ewald joining us is huge validation of our business,’ said Vern Brownell, CEO of D-Wave Systems. “Bo is a legendary figure in the supercomputing industry. His knowledge and influence reach a wide array of sectors, where he has delivered state-of-the-art high performance solutions for research, defence and intelligence, energy, manufacturing, financial services and genomics. Throughout Bo’s career he has been dedicated to helping organisations solve their most difficult challenges, which perfectly matches the mission of D-Wave. Today we launch our formal presence in the US and will start to expand our business globally. It is gratifying to have Bo at the helm.

Ewald added: “I’ve been in pioneering technology organisations for a long time with companies that did things that had never been done before and that allowed their customers to do the same. The quantum computers being developed by D-Wave and the applications that will be used by our customers will be an even more revolutionary step than I’ve seen in the industry. People will be able to solve problems that they can only dream about today, on systems that are turning science fiction into science fact.”

This story appears here as part of a cross-publishing agreement with Scientific Computing World.

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HPC People on the Move: More Exodus at Tabor Communications

Hello. It’s me again–Dr. Lewey Anton. I’ve been commissioned by insideHPC to track HPC People on the Move. The personnel landscape in HPC continues to ebb and flow out there. And in a small community like this, the company names on the badges may change, but faces remain the same.

Here are the most recent developments:

  • Richard Brandt has left Tabor Communications, the third editor to exit the company in as many months. Brandt took over as editor of HPCwire in February, replacing Michael Feldman, who had been editor of the publication for seven years or so. Feldman is now an analyst at Intersect360 Research.
  • Nicole Hemsoth is now Director of Editorial Operations and Managing Editor HPCwire. Hemsoth was previously the editor of Datanami and HPC in the Cloud, and with her considerable writing chops, she is well-suited to step in at HPCwire.
  • John Kirkley is now a contributing editor at insideBigData. Kirkley left the Digital Manufacturing Report at Tabor Communications last month to reboot Kirkley Communications.
  • Isaac Lopez is now Managing Editor at Datanami. Previously the publisher of Datanami, Lopez has 11 years in the high technology and publishing industries.
  • Ken Tan has joined Skyera as VP of Operations. Tan is responsible for the worldwide supply chain and manufacturing operations for Skyera as the company ramps its skyHawk series of solid-state storage systems.
  • Susan Lewis has joined Silicon Mechanics as director of product management. Lewis has over 20 years experience in the industry, and her leadership should be a boon for this maker of rackmount servers, storage, and high-performance computing clusters.

Have you moved or know of HPC folks in new positions? Let us know by sending an email to: [email protected] In the meantime, keep up with the HPC community’s movers and shakers by subscribing to insideHPC today.

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Mezzacappa to Lead UT-ORNL Supercomputer Center

Tony Mezzacappa, a leader in the field of astrophysics and supernova science, has been named director of JICS, which operates Titan, the world’s fastest supercomputer. Mezzacappa is a pioneer in the field of supernova science, a UT-Battelle Corporate Fellow, and group leader for theoretical physics in the Physics Division at ORNL as well as a joint professor in the Department of Physics and Astronomy at UT.

Dr. Mezzacappa brings unique and extensive experience in computational astrophysics, supernova science and academic vision to the JICS director position,” said UT Chancellor Jimmy G. Cheek. “We are excited for his leadership and the forward-moving direction of the center.”

Read the Full Story.

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John Barr Joins The Exascale Report

We have been tracking a number of HPC People on the Move recently, and today I learned that John Barr has joined The Exascale Report editorial team as a European correspondent.

Barr is a widely recognized independent industry analyst, formerly Research Director of HPC at the 451 Group, who brings 30 years experience in the HPC industry to the publication. Barr will provide a European perspective on exascale issues, including coverage of users, vendors, and European Commission funded research programmes.

Congratulations go out to John in his new role.


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John Gustafson Joins AMD as Chief Graphics Product Architect

AMD announced today that John Gustafson has joined the company as senior fellow and chief product architect, Graphics Business Unit. In this role, Gustafson will set the technical vision for the AMD graphics business unit, driving the technology roadmap and platform for the AMD Radeon and AMD FirePro product lines.

I look forward to working with my teams to expand the AMD graphics technology roadmap,” said Gustafson. “The next decade will serve as a watershed era for GPUs in graphics rendering power and compute capabilities, creating the opportunity for multi-teraFLOPS APUs. In terms of raw performance, the evolution of discrete graphics has far exceeded that of the CPU, and the programmable characteristics of today’s GPUs have thrown open a door that could very well see it rival the CPU as the most critical element of computer performance in the near future.”

Gustafson is a 35-year veteran of the computing industry. He joins AMD from Intel, where he headed the company’s eXtreme Technologies Lab, conducting cutting-edge research on energy-efficient computing and memory, as well as optical, energy and storage technologies. Prior to that, he served as CEO at Massively Parallel Technologies and CTO at ClearSpeed Technology, a high-performance computing company. Gustafson has also held key management and research positions at numerous companies including Sun Microsystems, Ames Laboratory and Sandia National Laboratories.

In 1988, Gustafson wrote Reevaluating Amdahl’s Law to address limitations of Amdahl’s Law, which models the maximum potential performance improvement from parallel processing. Gustafson proved that processors working in parallel can solve larger problems, marking a change in how the industry viewed parallel processing. Today, Gustafson’s Law is widely accepted among academia as the standard for parallel processing education.

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HPC People on the Move – Barrenechea Leaves SGI for Open Text

It’s me again–Dr. Lewey Anton. I’ve been commissioned by insideHPC to get the scoop on who’s jumping ship and moving on up in high performance computing.

SGI’s CEO Mark Barrenechea has resigned and is taking on a new role as CEO of Open Text. The resignation is effective January 1 and Chairman of the Board Ronald Verdoorn will serve as interim CEO.

This was kind of a shocker as SGI seemed to be doing very well financially of late. So, if you’re like me, you might be wondering what Open Text does. I pulled this description from their web site, but I’m afraid I’d need a supercomputer to translate what it means:

With 17 years experience, OpenText stands unmatched in our understanding of ECM. Our comprehensive OpenText ECM Suite is a reflection of our ECM expertise, enabling you to control the risk and cost related to your content, empower your people and foster decision-making, stimulate agility and innovation, and provide a compelling experience to your end-users. Furthermore, it increases process efficiency, improves user and team productivity, addresses compliance requirements, reaches new customers, and better serves existing ones.

Aren’t we glad we cleared that up? Where did they get this white board picture, from a strip club?

Good luck with that Mr. Barrenechea. Start by turning their web site into something resembling English.

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Podcast: New COO at DDN Looks to the Big Data Future

In this podcast, Rich Brueckner from inside-BigData.com interviews Erwan Menard, the new COO of Data Direct Networks.

Big Data is more than a buzzword. As smart machines, video and social networking are democratizing Big Data proliferation, enterprises everywhere are looking for innovative solutions to capture, process and derive value from this new information,” said Menard. “DDN is at the center of this change with a decade of first-mover advantage at the greatest levels of scale. I am thrilled to be part of such an innovative and passionate organization and to help transform the company into the world’s next information services and solutions powerhouse.”

Read the Full Story.

Download the MP3 * Subscribe on iTunes * Subscribe on other podcast players


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T-Platforms Appoints Komkov as Deputy CEO

This week T-Platforms announced the appointment of Alexei Komkov as Deputy Chief Executive Officer of Products and Technologies. Previously, Mr. Komkov was Deputy General Director of Marketing. According to the company, Komkov’s new role will ensure close links between the study of current and future target audience needs, their implementation in the design, manufacture and commercialization of new products, and the development of multi-level customer support programs.

The consolidation of the management of a number of corporate divisions will allow us to continually improve the quality of our solutions and services, as well as making great strides to increase customer loyalty in Russia and abroad,” said Vsevolod Opanasenko, CEO of T-Platforms. “In his former position, Alexei demonstrated the highest levels of professionalism and system thinking with a creative approach to solving complex problems. I am confident that these qualities, combined with the employees’ support, will allow him to successfully achieve new, more ambitious goals.”

In this new position, Komkov also retains his former duties including responsibility for maintaining the life cycle of T-Platforms products and projects. Read the Full Story.

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Cray CTO Steve Scott Leaves the Company

By Timothy Prickett MorganGet more from this author

Steve Scott, the long-time chief technology officer at supercomputer maker Cray, gave his two weeks’ notice last week. Actually, it was more like 11 days, which is not exactly a lot of warning for a company like Cray. But it looks like Scott was presented with an offer he just could not pass up, and tongues are wagging about just what that might be.

In an 8-K filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission on August 1, Cray kept it short and sweet, saying that on that day that Scott would be leaving, effective August 12, and would “be taking a senior position at a technology partner of the company”. Scott also got the obligatory boilerplate about Cray’s appreciation for his service and leadership, which is no doubt genuine.

Cray was not going to spill the beans about what Scott is up to. “We are not identifying which company Steve is going to – we will let Steve’s future employer decide whether or not to publicly announce his new role,” a Cray spokesman told El Reg by email.

Filling Scott’s shoes will be no easy task, of course, since there are very few companies that manufacture the kind of high-end supercomputers that Cray does – and many of them such as Tera Computer, OctigaBay, and Cray Research are already part of the Cray collective. “We are in the process of finding a replacement for his position, and we will take our time to find the right candidate that can successfully lead our long-term technical direction,” the Cray spokesperson said when asked about the headhunting process.

Cray did not answer a direct question as to whether or not Margaret Williams, who came to Cray from IBM in May 2005 as senior vice president of engineering, would get the CTO job. Williams used to manage IBM’s AIX and parallel computing software development and then was in charge of Big Blue’s database software development for a few years in her two decade career at IBM. She also ran IBM’s team at the US Air Force’s Maui High Performance Computing Center in Hawaii.

Scott received his PhD in computer architecture from the University of Wisconsin in 1992 and jumped straight to Cray Research, the arm of the original Cray company that the company’s founder created to sell computers. (Cray Computer – where Seymour Cray worked until his death in 1996 – did research, while Cray Research built and sold computers. It is great fun to be an eccentric genius.) Cray Research merged with rival Silicon Graphics in February 1996, several months before Seymour Cray died, and sold off the Superserver parallel server business to Sun Microsystems (making Sun the dot in dot.com during the bubble) and focused on the T3D and T3E massively parallel machines. Scott was one of the architects on the T3E processor and invented the GigaRing interconnect that was used in Cray’s systems in the late 1990s.

SGI sold Cray Research off to Tera Computer in March 2000, and Scott made the move to Tera and was the chief architect on the Cray X1/X1E vector machines and the “Red Storm” interconnect that is the basis of the last several generations of Cray XE parallel Opteron supers. Scott is the leader of the current “Cascade” project, which is building a next-generation interconnect called “Aries” that will hook the Aries router to CPU processors through PCI-Express links instead of through the HyperTransport ports used on current Opteron-based Cray XE supers.

By going with PCI-Express, Cray can simplify the way CPUs and GPUs hook into the Aries interconnect and also support both Xeon processor from Intel as well as the Opteron processors from Advanced Micro Devices and its own XMT multithreaded chips (which plug into Opteron sockets in the later generations). Opteron was the right choice for the original “Red Storm” teraflops-busting massively parallel super that Cray made for Sandia National Labortatory back in 2003. But being tied so closely to AMD’s processor roadmap has been hard on Cray.

Cray’s spokesman did not respond to a request for comment about what Scott’s departure means for the Aries interconnect or Cascade systems, which are being funded with $190m from the US Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency to deliver machines that scale from 10 to 20 petaflops somewhere in late 2012 or early 2013.

Great Scott! We’ve lost our CTO!
El Reg sent Scott an email to try to tease out what his plans were and suggesting that whatever it was had to be a lot of fun to dislodge him from Cray.

“Yes, I think the new gig will be fun and rewarding,” Scott emailed in reply. “Cray has been great, and it is very hard to leave. There will be an announcement from my new employer sometime this month, so I won’t be saying anything before then.”

Cray’s statement said that Scott was going off to one of its technology partners, presumably to allay fears that his departure would be disruptive to Cray’s product roadmaps. Cray’s biggest partner, of course, is CPU and GPU maker Advanced Micro Devices, which just so happens to be desperately seeking a new chief executive officer. The AMD CEO post been vacant for the past seven months after Dirk Meyer was shown the door, presumably for not seeing the tablet chip opportunity and messing up the server chip business. AMD hired Don Newell from Intel to be its server CTO last August and presumably doesn’t need an uber-CTO like Scott.

Nvidia and Intel are both relatively new partners of Cray’s, and both companies could make use of a guy with Scott’s knowledge, talents, and contacts. Nvidia already has Bill Dally, a parallel computing expert from Stanford University, as its chief scientist, so presumably the graphics chip maker doesn’t need another top techie unless Dally is leaving. Intel would seem to have the least use for Scott, unless it plans to do more experimental supercomputing work, as it did to break the teraflops barrier with the ASCI Red supercomputer at Sandia back in the late 1990s.

The other big Cray partner, of course, is DARPA. Scott could end up working for Uncle Sam in some fashion, too. ®

This article originally appeared in The Register.

Also posted in Business of HPC, HPC, HPC People | 2 Comments

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