NVIDIA announced details today on this year’s GPU Technology Conference [GTC 2010]. Last year, insideHPC was on hand to report live on all the sights, sounds and juicy news directly from San Jose. This year, the conference will take place from September 20-23 at the San Jose Convention Center.
Last year’s GPU Technology Conference was very exciting, with many top researchers and developers demonstrating how they are using the GPU to solve some of the world’s most difficult challenges, from medical diagnostics to energy exploration,” said Bill Dally, NVIDIA chief scientist. “I am eagerly looking forward to seeing the new advances that will be unveiled this year.”
Once again, the conference will include three main tracks:
- Emerging Companies Summit — a showcase for innovative startups to demonstrate their products and network with venture capitalists, GTC attendees, and other investors.
- GPU Developers Summit — a wide selection of content-rich sessions, tutorials, and presentations for developers, engineers, and scientists.
- NVIDIA Research Summit — a unique opportunity for students, professors, and researchers to present their findings and collaborate.
I consider the GPU Technology Conference to be the single best place to see firsthand the amazing work enabled by the GPU,” said Professor Hanspeter Pfister, School of Engineering & Applied Sciences, Harvard University and GTC 2009 keynote speaker. “It’s a great venue for meeting researchers, developers, scientists, and entrepreneurs from around the world and I’m looking forward to GTC 2010.”
For more info on GTC 2010 [including info on submitting papers and posters], check out the conference website here.