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Guest Feature: Looking forward to ISC 2011

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In this special guest feature, Intel’s John Hengeveld lists the things he’ll be looking at ISC’11.

I love the now annual trek to Hamburg for ISC. I love the eclecticism of the city. I love the garden by the convention center (which is a great jogging path…) It’s a great place to stop and take a breath.

Beatles and Herring.
Chaos and Substance.

I also love ISC. I go to many of the events in the technical computing industry and ISC is a really interesting show. Each year great new ideas attack the dogma of HPC at ISC. “Commercial Off the Shelf will never make good HPC,” “Linux isn’t reliable enough,” “Nobody outside of the ivory towers needs HPC,” “Moore’s Law will run out before we get to Petascale,” and thud! Another bit of doctrine falls.

Each year I make my list of what I am looking for at ISC. What are the questions that need answering? Who is going to step up to create the buzz of the show floor? What new technology or idea will set aside the previously unassailable?

Here is my list for 2011:

  1. It’s the Workload Stupid: While the industry waits for major new platforms based on silicon coming in the second half of this year, there is still a great deal of innovation going on based on existing architectures. One of my pet theories is that there are many workloads in HPC that require distinct design points in hardware and software to achieve efficient and cost effective performance. Since there isn’t one form of parallelism or a canonical data structure, one size cannot fit all… Hence there is a thirst for architectural reinvention to deliver optimized performance. How are architectural innovators performing and how is their innovation being accepted to serve the distinct classes of workloads? Are major OEMs continuing to deliver new design points that target distinct HPC workloads?
  2. Alternate Architecture Acceptance: How have attached coprocessors like Intel’s MIC products and Nvidia and ATI GPGPUs been accepted as tools for delivering performance leading up to an exascale era? Are the advancements in software development methodology keeping pace with the complexity requirements and putting us on the glide slope we need as an industry? Intel has been signaling that we will see new proof points on its MIC architecture. Will Intel make its case that this architecture has legs? Will it make the case that the software model is viable?
  3. Will HPC get its heads into the clouds? I have heard enough talk about HPC in the CLOUD. I want to see the industry start to pull together solutions. There is a relationship between HPC in the Cloud and the so called “Missing middle.” The missing middle is a moniker that refers to the many potential HPC customers who need HPC for technical computing, but cannot access it for technical, economic or social reasons. HPC in the Cloud could be one means of servicing these requirements. How will the industry bridge this gap? Intel has ideas here – But so do many others, watch this space.
  4. Is FABRIC ripping at the seams: I am concerned that the rate of fabric development is not going to keep up with node level performance. Fabric remains a key bottleneck to HPC performance. What technologies are going to change the game in interconnect?
  5. Is Efficiency the Hobgoblin? Will the top500 list show any improvement in efficiency? Some of the systems to enter the top 10 have been hybrid systems with great peak flops, but pretty miserable efficiency numbers. Is this a trend that cannot be stopped?

Anyway, between the Beatles statues on the Raiperbahn and the windmills on the shore, A lot goes on in Hamburg. I think perhaps the industry will catch its breath and assess its challenges and opportunities, I hope it does… The path to exascale will consume us soon enough; we need the stamina to crash through.

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Posted in Events, ISC11 | 2 Comments

insideHPC Adds HPC Evangelist, John Hengeveld, As Featured Blogger / Columnist

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PORTLAND, OREGON — May 27, 2011 — insideHPC, the web’s premier short-format HPC news site, today announced that Intel’s John Hengeveld, a well known HPC evangelist, will be a featured insideHPC blogger / columnist covering a wide variety of topics of interest to the global HPC community.

Education and community awareness are priorities for all of us at Intel,” said John Hengeveld, director of technical compute marketing, Intel Corporation. “insideHPC is widely respected and has tremendous reach, serving as a key distribution channel enabling us to maintain steady contact with the global HPC community.”

“We are very pleased to have John joining us at insideHPC as a regular columnist,” said Rich Brueckner, Publisher of insideHPC.  “Intel continues to innovate and lead in HPC, not only with their technology, but with their ongoing efforts to engage with the HPC community.”

John’s column on insideHPC will appear monthly starting in June.

About insideHPC

insideHPC’s crisp, uncluttered style and filtered, short format news site has been growing steadily since being launched in 2006, and today is one of the most popular news and information portals for stakeholders around the globe interested in High Performance Computing, supercomputing, and emerging high-end computing technologies.

Each month, insideHPC.com serves up hundreds of thousands of page views to a highly targeted, dedicated following of supercomputing and HPC professionals. Our stories, original articles, and rich media content is read by HPC influencers, recommenders and decision makers around the globe via our standard news site, special event supplements, and direct email outreach.

About John Hengeveld

John Hengeveld is the director of technical compute marketing for Intel’s Data Center Group.  He is responsible for end user and OEM marketing for Intel’s Workstation and HPC businesses and leads an outstanding team of industry visionaries.  John has been at Intel for 6 years and was previously the senior business strategist for Intel’s Digital Enterprise Group and the lead strategist for Intel’s Many Core development initiatives. John has 20 years of experience in general management, strategy and marketing leadership roles in high technology.

John is dedicated to life-long learning, he has taught Corporate Strategy and Business Strategy and Policy; Technology Management; and Marketing Research and Strategy for Portland State University’s Master of Business Administration program.  John is a graduate of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and holds his MBA from the University of Oregon.

 

 

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Intel launches ScienceSim virtual world for education and visualization, ties in with SC09

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In a post on Intel’s Research blog late last week, John Hengeveld announced an open invitation for ScienceSim

Intel logoToday we are publically [sic] inviting others to come to ScienceSim and investigate its use for building collaborative visualization tool.. Within ScienceSim’s world you’ll find some starting buildings, templates for forums and conference centers and the like.

What is it?

ScienceSim enables customizable physics, optimizations to achieve better scalability, and can serve as a testbed for data visualization and control for science experiments like fusion reactions, biomedical applications, geophysical, intelligence analysis.. to name a few potential areas of work. As our CTO said in a previous blog, the Intel team is working with the Supercomputing 2009 conference to have folks develop academic material around this platform and have a forum to discuss these efforts and how they fit towards building a 3D internet of the future.

Intel’s CTO Justin Rattner remarked on ScienceSim and where it fits into Intel’s strategy last November (this is the post referred to above)

One year ago, at the Intel Developer Forum, I spoke about how as computing technology advances and broadband connectivity becomes ubiquitous, today’s nascent virtual worlds and online games will evolve into a “3-D Internet.” I believe that eventually these immersive connected experiences (as we call them) will become a primary mode for human interaction, ranging from simulated worlds used for collaboration, socialization, and entertainment to augmented realities like Google Earth that combine real-world imagery with the user-generated information. I’d like to share some recent progress we’ve made in this area.

Today, during a forward looking overview of next year’s Supercomputing conference, an ACM and IEEE Computer society sponsored event, Wilfred Pinfold (an Intel colleague and general chair of Supercomputing 2009) announced to the Supercomputing 2008 conference attendees plans to create a new virtual world called “ScienceSim.” Supported by Intel and the conference committee, this collaboration aims to use these immersive, connected environments to further cutting edge scientific research.

Hmmm. Call me skeptical. I gave SecondLife a whirl and was left…unstimulated…by the various pavilions and whatnot set up that had something to do with HPC and HPC vendors. There just didn’t seem to be any point, other than having a “presence” in the next big thing. But I’ll try it out. Maybe there will be something to it this time. I think the key is a) doing something in the environment that you just can’t do outside of it that b) people want to do. Otherwise, ScienceSim is just overhead for a fancier display of an experience you can get elsewhere (or don’t want anyway).

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Posted in Computing Research | 2 Comments

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