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Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Appoints Cyberinfrastructure Expert James Myers To Lead the Computational Center for Nanotechnology Innovations
Myers will lead efforts at one of the world’s
most powerful university-based computing
centers
James Myers, who currently serves as associate director for
cyberenvironments at the National Center for Supercomputing
Applications at the University of Illinois, has been selected
by Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute to lead the Computational
Center for Nanotechnology Innovations (CCNI) at Rensselaer.
Located at Rensselaer’s Technology Park in North Greenbush,
N.Y., CCNI is a $100 million collaboration between Rensselaer,
IBM and New York state. The center houses one of the world’s
most powerful university-based supercomputers and is considered
one of the top supercomputer centers internationally. The
center was formally opened in 2007.
Work at the CCNI is designed both to help continue the
impressive advances in shrinking device dimensions seen by
electronics manufacturers, and to extend this model to a wide
array of industries that could benefit from nanotechnology,
according to the partners. The CCNI systems consist of
massively parallel IBM Blue Gene supercomputers, POWER-based
Linux clusters, and AMD Opteron processor-based clusters,
providing more than 100 teraflops of computing power.
“Today’s information technologies drive new discovery and
scientific breakthroughs. Jim Myers brings a wealth of
experience and strategic vision in these technologies to CCNI
and Rensselaer,” said Rensselaer Vice President for Research
Fran Berman. “We are excited that Jim will be joining us and we
look forward to his leadership of CCNI.”
“Jim Myers’ strong grounding in a variety of scientific
areas and his broad experience in developing data and
computationally intensive infrastructure to support
leading-edge research in high-performance computing
environments makes him an ideal candidate to lead the CCNI,”
said John Kolb, Rensselaer’s vice president for information
services and technology and chief information officer.
Melodie Mayberry-Stewart, New York state CIO and director of
the Office for Technology said, “The research and development
that takes place on the high-powered supercomputer enables New
York state government to harness the technologies of the
digital age to solve complex problems in public safety, cyber
security, education, transportation, health, or human services,
to name just a few — and at no cost. Our joint investment
with CCNI, NYSTAR, and IBM is a perfect example of the kind of
collaboration that will keep New York at the forefront of the
new and innovative digital economy. I look forward to
working with Jim Myers and CCNI to continue advancing our
partnership.”
“Dr. Jim Myers’ expertise in optimizing the use of
high-performance computing platforms as well as his world-class
researcher status makes him a key asset in the high-performance
computing initiative in New York. One of the main goals
of this collaboration between IBM, RPI, and NYS is to provide
businesses, both large and small, the access and technical
assistance to facilitate complex research which will allow them
to enhance and grow their global competitiveness,” said Edward
Reinfurt, executive director of the New York State Foundation
for Science, Technology and Innovation.
Myers will join Rensselaer as director of CCNI and clinical
professor in computer science on Nov. 1. He has over 15 years
of broad experience designing, developing, and operating
cyberinfrastructure for scientific communities spanning
academia, government, and industry.
Prior to his current role, Myers led the development of
scientific “collaboratories” for research and education at
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, serving as chief
scientist for the Computational Science and Mathematics
Division.
Open source software developed by Myers and his colleagues —
under U.S. Department of Energy, National Science Foundation,
and Office of Naval Research funding — includes collaborative
portals, workflow tools, scientific content management
middleware, remote instrument control software, an electronic
laboratory notebook (ELN), real-time collaboration tools, and
data translation and metadata extraction tools that
collectively have been used by thousands of researchers and
educators.
His current development and deployment efforts include the
creation of digital watershed technology that provides web 2.0
interfaces to integrated geospatial and time series information
from models and sensors, the Dark Energy Survey telescope’s
petascale data processing system, the Mid-America Earthquake
Center’s MAEViz hazard risk management environment, and
National Archives and Records Administration-supported data
parsing technologies being integrated into the SHAMAN digital
preservation environment.
Myers is also active in cyberinfrastructure design and
standardization efforts related to content management, semantic
services, and provenance.
Myers received his Ph.D. in chemistry from the University of
California, Berkeley; and his bachelor’s degree in physics from
Cornell University.
For more information about CCNI, visit: http://www.rpi.edu/research/ccni/.
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Published
August 30,
2010 |
Contact: Mark Marchand
Phone: (518) 276-6098
E-mail: marchm3@rpi.edu |
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