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Providing Competitive Advantage to Industry Through High-Performance Computing
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, IBM, and Other
Partners Will Sponsor Workshop and Conference on Oct. 26-28 To
Highlight Value of Supercomputing for Companies in New York
State and Across the Nation
Leaders in academia, industry, and government will meet at
Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute next month to discuss strategies for leveraging
the awesome power of supercomputers to drive growth,
innovation, and competitive advantage for American
companies.
The discussions are part of a three-day national workshop
titled “Providing Competitive Advantage to Industry Through
High-Performance Computing: Accomplishments and a Path
Forward.” The conference, held by the New York State High Performance
Computing Consortium (HPC2), will take place
October 26-28 at Rensselaer. HPC2 is a partnership
between science and education organization NYSERNet, Rensselaer, University at Buffalo, Stony Brook University,
and Brookhaven National
Laboratory.
See the program and registration information at: http://www.rpi.edu/hpcw/index.html
“Although substantial progress has been made in recent
years, the industrial use of HPC is not as advanced,
widespread, or effective as it should be,” said conference
chair John
Kolb, chief information officer and the vice president for
information services and technology at Rensselaer. “This unique
workshop will provide a status report of New York’s
forward-thinking efforts to boost innovation and
competitiveness though investments in HPC, along with an
opportunity to discuss what efforts are needed to further
expand the impact of HPC in industry.”
The workshop’s executive summit, on Friday, Oct. 28, will
feature a panel discussion led by Rensselaer President Shirley Ann
Jackson. The conversation will explore topics surrounding
the untapped potential of HPC in industrial competitiveness and
innovation for manufacturing and other sectors. Confirmed
participants are:
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Dr. Shirley Ann Jackson (Moderator)
President, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
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Ms. Deborah L. Wince-Smith
President and CEO, Council on Competitiveness
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Dr. Robert F. Brammer
Vice President for Advanced Technology, Northrop
Grumman
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Dr. David Galas
Senior Vice President of Strategic Partnerships,
Institute for Systems Biology
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Dr. John E. Kelly
Senior Vice President and Director, IBM
Research
The first two days of the event will feature technical
sessions highlighting successful and leading-edge applications
of HPC and massively parallel computing in industry. Additional
sessions will identify challenges related to realizing business
value from HPC, and explore potential strategies to overcome
these hurdles.
See the full schedule of technical sessions at: http://www.rpi.edu/hpcw/program.html
“This workshop is particularly timely as a recent study on
the use of HPC by manufacturers revealed a great disparity in
the adoption of HPC by small to medium-sized manufacturers
relative to large ones — 8 percent vs. 62 percent. While the
adoption rate by large manufacturers speaks to the success of
efforts to introduce HPC to industry, the adoption rate in
smaller companies is a clear indication that additional effort
is needed. This workshop will suggest ways in which this gap
may be reduced, leading to increased productivity and
competitiveness,” said Thomas Furlani, interim chief
information officer and director of the Center for
Computational Research at the University at Buffalo.
“It has been exciting to see the progress achieved with
support from New York state for the HPC2 consortium,
and the impact this has had on bringing HPC to commercial
partners generating important competitive advantages,” said
Reinhold Mann, associate laboratory director in charge of HPC
at Brookhaven National
Laboratory. “I look forward to this conference when
HPC2 will highlight our collective accomplishments
and also chart the course for the future of this successful
enterprise.”
HPC2 is a New York
state-funded partnership between NYSERNet, a private
not-for-profit corporation created to foster science and
education in New York, and three supercomputing centers: the
Rensselaer Computational Center
for Nanotechnology Innovations (CCNI), Stony Brook
University/Brookhaven National Laboratory’s New York Center for
Computational Sciences, and the University at Buffalo’s Center for
Computational Research.
“This is about making New York more competitive to better
support our science and technology economy. Through the HPC2,
New York can provide education, outreach, and training in
simulation-based engineering science, to increase support for
research and development job growth,” said Edward Reinfurt,
director of Empire State Development’s
Division of Science, Technology and Innovation.
The goal of HPC2 is to increase New York state’s
competitiveness in research and development, provide education,
outreach, and training in simulation-based engineering science,
and help support job growth in New York.
Along with HPC2, sponsors of the workshop are
IBM, Empire State Development Corporation, NYSERNet, University
of Buffalo, Stony Brook University, Brookhaven National
Laboratory, Rensselaer, and the U.S. Army Research Laboratory’s
Army Research Office.
For more information on high-performance computing research
by HPC2 partners,
visit:
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Published
September 30,
2011 |
Contact: Michael Mullaney
Phone: (518) 276-6161
E-mail: mullam@rpi.edu |
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