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Rensselaer Supercomputing Center Director To Speak on Future of American Manufacturing at Clinton Global Initiative Meeting in Chicago
James Myers, director of the Computational Center for
Nanotechnology Innovations (CCNI) supercomputing facility at Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute, will speak about the future of American
manufacturing today as part of a panel discussion at the second
annual CGI America meeting of the Clinton Global
Initiative.
Myers is a member of CGI America’s advanced
manufacturing working group, titled Strengthening the Pipeline,
which is tasked with developing solutions to “support
ecosystems that attract and grow manufacturing companies
through collaborative strategies, including national
partnerships, regional clusters, urban initiatives, and new
technology.” The meeting is taking place in Chicago.
CCNI is a $100 million
partnership between Rensselaer, IBM, and New York state. The
center houses one of the world’s most powerful university-based
supercomputers and is a national leader in promoting the
application of high-performance computing in industry. CCNI
supports a network of more than 700 researchers in academia and
industry across a diverse spectrum of disciplines in the
Northeast and beyond.
“Digital manufacturing—using high performance computing to
design advanced products and processes—is a critical
competitive advantage for many U.S. companies. However, they
represent only a small fraction of the estimated 300,000
manufacturers in our country. I am delighted to participate in
CGI America and for the opportunity to share information about
the successful public-private partnership model for industry
engagement we’ve developed in New York to dramatically increase
the number of companies taking advantage of high performance
computing to grow their businesses. Our goal is to assure that
digital techniques are a coherent part of regional advanced
manufacturing strategies and are available at a scale that
creates jobs and grows our economy,” Myers
said.
Established in 2005 by President Bill Clinton, the Clinton
Global Initiative convenes global leaders to create and
implement innovative solutions to the world's most pressing
challenges. To date CGI members have made more than 2,100
commitments, which are already improving the lives of nearly
400 million people in more than 180 countries. When fully
funded and implemented, these commitments will be valued at
$69.2 billion. Along with its Annual Meeting held each
September in New York, the Clinton Global Initiative also
convenes CGI America, a meeting devoted to economic recovery
and job creation in the United States.
In partnership with the Rensselaer Scientific Computation
Research Center (SCOREC) and New York
state’s High Performance Computing Consortium (HPC2), CCNI works with
New York state companies to develop and use massively parallel
computational methods to support optimization of current
products and the development of next-generation technologies.
These partner companies include Xerox, ITT Goulds Pumps, and
Corning. CCNI and its partners provide expertise, training, and
support in addition to computational resources to enable
companies to effectively bring new capabilities to bear on
their business-driven technical challenges.
CCNI opened its doors in 2007 with more than 100 teraflops
of computing power, and today supports a broad range of
at-scale modeling, simulation, and analysis research across a
spectrum of science and engineering disciplines. The center is
committed to hastening the advance of ever-shrinking computer
chips and other devices that are designed and manufactured by
the micro- and nanoelectronics industry and to driving the
academic and industrial adoption of computationally and
data-intensive techniques. Over the last five years, more than
700 researchers from 50 universities, companies, and government
laboratories have run high-performance science and engineering
applications at CCNI.
Last year, Rensselaer won a
$2.65 million grant from the National Science Foundation
(NSF) to purchase, install, and run a new balanced, green
supercomputing system at CCNI designed to support the
development of next-generation computational and data-intensive
applications. The new system is expected to be comprised of a
powerful IBM Blue Gene/Q supercomputer along with a
multiterabyte memory (RAM) storage accelerator, petascale disk
storage, rendering cluster, and remote display wall systems.
The new system will be a national resource for academic and
industrial researchers across many different disciplines.
Myers is also a member of the High Performance Computing
Advisory Committee of the U.S. Council on Competitiveness. The
committee seeks to stimulate and facilitate wider usage of HPC
across the private sector to propel productivity, innovation,
and competitiveness. Its goals include identifying private
sector HPC applications needs and priorities, as well as
outlining the workforce education and training needed to
integrate HPC in the private sector.
Prior to joining Rensselaer in 2010, Myers served as
associate director for cyberenvironments at the National Center
for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) at the University of
Illinois. Before NCSA, Myers led the development of scientific
“collaboratories” for research and education at Pacific
Northwest National Laboratory, serving as chief scientist for
the Computational Sciences and Mathematics Division. He
received a bachelor’s degree in physics from Cornell
University, and his doctoral degree in chemistry from the
University of California, Berkeley.
For more information on CNNI at Rensselaer, visit:
Rensselaer Computational Center for Nanotechnology
Innovations (CCNI)
http://www.rpi.edu/research/ccni/·
GNS Healthcare Expands Membership at Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute Supercomputing Center To Advance Big Data
Healthcare Solutions
http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=3051
Innovating New Ways To Share and Preserve Scientific
Data on Sustainability
http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=2952
New Supercomputer To Boost Rensselaer Leadership in
High-Performance Computing
http://www.rpi.edu/about/inside/issue/v5n14/supercomputer.html
Rensselaer Supercomputer Director Named to National
Initiative on High Performance Computing
http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=2872·
Rensselaer Alumni Magazine: SuperPower
http://www.rpi.edu/magazine/fall2007/superpower-1.html
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Published
June 7,
2012 |
Contact: Michael Mullaney
Phone: (518) 276-6161
E-mail: mullam@rpi.edu |
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