Access Grid Event
Future Directions of Advanced Computation
9.00am Australian Eastern Standard Time
Thursday 20 January 2005
Room N101
CSIT Building ANU Campus or via the access grid in the
APAC Venue
As part of the APAC Summer School in Advanced Computing we will be
holding an Access Grid Event in which three eminent overseas
computational scientists, Profs Jack Dongarra, Chris Johnson and
David Keyes, will provide their visions (via the grid) for the
future of Advanced Computing.
After their formal presentations, other visitors to the event will
have the opportunity to be involved in a online forum.
Please feel free to join us in the APAC grid venue for this event.
On the other hand, space in N101 CSIT will be limited and preference
will be given to participants of the APAC summer school.
Overseas presenters
Professor Jack Dongarra
High Performance Computing: A Look Behind and Ahead (9MB ppt)
Jack Dongarra has contributed to the design and implementation of
the following open source software packages and systems: EISPACK,
LINPACK, the BLAS, LAPACK, ScaLAPACK, Netlib, PVM, MPI, NetSolve,
Top500, ATLAS, and PAPI. He has published approximately 200
articles, papers, reports and technical memoranda and he is
coauthor of several books.
Professor Chris Johnson
Computational
Multi-Field Visualization (32MB ppt)
Chris Johnson is a leader in computer-intensive scientific
visualization. His Institute's freely distributed SCIRUN software
is used for inverse modeling of electromagnetic brain activity
including adaptive multi-grid methods. He will speak about
advanced modeling of brain activity in the emerging grid computing
environment. Movies associated with this presentation are available here.
Professor David Keyes
The Future of Supercomputing,
Part II: Simulation for Scientific Discovery (2.5MB ppt)
David Keyes is the author or co-author of over 100 publications in
computational science and engineering, numerical analysis, and
computer science. He has co-edited 8 conference proceedings
concerned with parallel algorithms and has delivered over 200
invited presentations at universities, laboratories, and
industrial research centers in over 20 countries and 35 states of
the U.S. With backgrounds in engineering, applied mathematics, and
computer science, and consulting experience with industry and
national laboratories, Keyes works at the algorithmic interface
between parallel computing and the numerical analysis of partial
differential equations, across a spectrum of aerodynamic,
geophysical, and chemically reacting flows.
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