Archiwum dla Październik, 2011

Tygodniowy newsletter “CUDA: Week in Review.” – 10.10.2011

 

Mon., October 10, 2011, Issue #63

Click     here for online version

 

WELCOME
Welcome to CUDA:         Week in Review, an online news summary for the         worldwide CUDA, GPU computing and parallel programming ecosystem.
CUDA SPOTLIGHT
William Putman, NASA
CUDA TOP STORIES
October         Webinar Lineup
Ecosystem         Update
Awards and         Recognitions
CUDA on the         Web
 
 
CONTENTS
CUDA SPOTLIGHT
CUDA DEVELOPER NEWS
NEW ON THE BLOG
REPLAY OF THE WEEK
CUDA JOBS
GPU MEETUPS
CALLS FOR PAPERS
CUDA CALENDAR
CUDA RESOURCES
Sign         up to be a CUDA Registered Developer
Follow         @GPUComputing on Twitter

 

 
GPU-Accelerated Climate       Simulation
This week’s Spotlight is on William Putman, a NASA research       meteorologist in the Global Modeling and Assimilation Office (GMAO) in       the Earth Sciences Division of Goddard Space Flight Center’s Sciences and       Exploration Directorate. Here’s an extract from our interview:

NVIDIA: Bill, what does your       group do?
Bill: Our research and       development activities aim to maximize the impact of satellite       observations in climate, weather and atmospheric composition prediction       using comprehensive global models and data assimilation.

To achieve this goal, the GMAO develops models and assimilation systems       for the atmosphere, ocean, and land surface, generates products to       support NASA instrument teams and the NASA Earth Science program, and       undertakes scientific research to inform system development pathways.

Within the GMAO we have a group of developers (Dr. Max Suarez, Dr.       Matthew Thompson and myself) tasked with the restructuring of NASA’s       Goddard Earth Observing System atmospheric general circulation model       version 5 (GEOS-5) to take advantage of new accelerator technologies including       GPUs.

NVIDIA: What are the benefits of using CUDA?
Bill: The Portland Group (PGI)       offers us an opportunity to explicitly program for GPUs using CUDA       Fortran and also provides a directive-based accelerator model. GEOS-5 is       primarily written in Fortran, thus the PGI CUDA Fortran syntax allows us       to develop GPU kernels in GEOS-5 using a familiar coding environment.

Like CUDA C, CUDA Fortran allows for low-level management of the       initialization, data transfer, and coding details of a project without       the need to translate legacy Fortran code into C. This aids both in speed       of development and with keeping a readable (to developers) codebase       within GEOS-5 while achieving much the same performance as CUDA C.

  - Read the complete interview here

  (Would you like to be in the CUDA Spotlight? Email     cuda_week_in_review@nvidia.com)

 
Check Out the October     CUDA Webinar Lineup!

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Tues., Oct. 11: PGI Accelerator for C – Simplified GPU     Programming Using Directives
Presented     by Dr. Michael Wolfe, The Portland Group
https://www2.gotomeeting.com/register/623491562

Tues., Oct. 11: CUDA Optimization: Memory Bandwidth Limited Kernels + Live     Q&A
Presented     by Tim Schroeder, NVIDIA
https://www2.gotomeeting.com/register/936728978

Wed., Oct. 12: Intro to Parallel Nsight and Features (Preview of Version     2.1)
Presented     by Shane Evans, NVIDIA
https://www2.gotomeeting.com/register/522390506

Thurs., Oct 20: Overview and Usage of LibJacket CUDA Library
Presented     by James Malcolm, AccelerEyes (with NVIDIA)
https://www2.gotomeeting.com/register/378528682

Thurs., Oct. 27: GPU Computing with MATLAB
Presented     by Sarah Wait Zaranek, MathWorks
http://www.mathworks.com/company/events/webinars/wbnr59816.html

Ecosystem     Update
Rogue Wave Software, provider of cross-platform software development tools,     announced the release of TotalView 8.9.2 with support for CUDA 4.0: http://bit.ly/o6fobN

Awards and Recognitions
The Johns Hopkins University has been named a CUDA Center of Excellence,     recognizing its ground-breaking work leveraging GPU computing. As a CCOE,     Johns Hopkins will utilize equipment and grants provided by NVIDIA to     support a number of research and academic programs, including deployment of     the “Data-Scope,” a GPU-powered, ultra-high throughput     supercomputer to dramatically increase the speed of scientific data     analysis: http://bit.ly/qOiVRI

Boise State University, a CUDA Research Center, received two grants that     build on GPU computing initiatives:
- NOAA Field Research Office collaboration to develop a CUDA Fortran     version of NOAA’s HYSPLIT Air     Dispersion model: http://ready.arl.noaa.gov/HYSPLIT.php
- NSF CAREER Grant for multi-scale modeling of short-term forecasting and     grid integration of wind energy: http://1.usa.gov/p3xWRu

This year’s PRACE (Partnership for Advanced Computing in Europe) Award goes     to a paper titled “Astrophysical Particle Simulations with Large     Custom GPU Clusters on Three Continents.”     Prof. Richard Kenway, Chairman of the PRACE Scientific     Steering Committee, noted that “the work points the way to exploit exascale     technologies for problems at the forefront of science.” http://www.prace-project.eu/news/the-prace-award-winners-2011-announced

CUDA on the Web
A new video on “Volt: Interactive Volume Rendering with CUDA” has     been posted by the Computer Graphics Lab at the Bonn-Rhine-Sieg University     of Applied Sciences. Volt is an interactive direct volume renderer that     takes advantage of GPUs for high quality interactive ray casting.
- http://cg.inf.fh-bonn-rhein-sieg.de/?page_id=2700

The Irish Center for High-End Computing (ICHEC) launched a new website     dedicated to GPU computing. ICHEC’s Director, Prof. James Slevin, said:     “Computer simulation has now reached a level of predictability that     firmly grounds its impact and importance along with theory and     experimentation as the third pillar of science research.”
- http://gpgpu.ichec.ie/

Industrial Mathematics KTN released a new report on “The GPU Computing     Revolution: from Multi-Core CPUs to Many-Core Graphics Processors.”     Produced in collaboration with the London Mathematical Society, it was     written by Simon McIntosh-Smith of the University of Bristol.
- https://connect.innovateuk.org/web/mathsktn/articles/-/blogs/the-gpu-computing-revolution

 
GPUs Storm into Climate Simulations, by Will Park

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Inner Geek – Project GT90 Supercar, by Adam Pintek
 
NEW: Each week we     highlight a session from GTC 2010. Here is our pick for this     week:

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            Rapid     Prototyping using Thrust: High Performance Dosimetry (GTC 10)
Guillaume     Saupin – CEA, France
http://www.gputechconf.com/page/gtc-on-demand.html#2104
 
NEW: AIR, a provider of risk modeling software, is seeking     a Senior Software Engineer in Boston, Mass. Responsibilities include     contributing to development of next-generation HPC-based analytical     framework, algorithms and tooling (using C++,C#, SQL and CUDA).
- Apply online: http://bit.ly/o74ZQe

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              Kudos     to the South Florida GPU Meetup, organized by Adnan Boz, for designing a     clever logo based on a fish swarm. The group recently held its third     Meetup, where Adnan presented on “Thinking in Parallel.”

Feel free to attend upcoming GPU Meetups. The atmosphere is casual and     collaborative. Participants and sponsors are warmly welcomed.

- US
Silicon Valley GPU Meetup – Oct. 10, 6:15 pm
New Mexico GPU Meetup – Oct. 15, 5:00 pm
New York GPU Meetup – Oct. 24, 6:00 pm (Special     joint meeting with
C++ Dev Group)
South Florida GPU Meetup – Oct. 24, 6:30 pm

- Australia
Sydney GPU Meetup – Oct. 13, 6:00 pm
Melbourne GPU Meetup – Oct. 19, 5:30 pm
Brisbane GPU Meetup – Oct. 20, 6:00 pm

 
GTC Asia 2011 (Dec. 14-15)
Poster deadline: Nov. 3
http://www.gputechconf.cn/en/call-for-posters.html

GTC U.S. 2012     (May 14-17)
Session deadline: Nov. 3
Poster deadline: Dec. 8
http://www.gputechconf.com/page/participate.html

Bioinformatics:     BICoB 2012 (March 12-14)
Paper deadline: Oct. 28
http://sce.uhcl.edu/bicob12/

 
October 2011

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- NEW: PGI Accelerator       for C – Simplified GPU Programming Using Directives (Webinar)

Oct. 11, 2011
Presented by Dr. Michael Wolfe, The Portland Group
https://www2.gotomeeting.com/register/623491562

- NEW: CUDA Optimization: Memory Bandwidth Limited Kernels + Live       Q&A (Webinar)

Oct. 11, 2011
Presented by Tim Schroeder, NVIDIA
https://www2.gotomeeting.com/register/936728978

- NEW: Intro to Parallel Nsight and Features (Webinar)

Oct. 12, 2011
Presented by Shane Evans, NVIDIA
https://www2.gotomeeting.com/register/522390506

- CUDA 4-Day Training Course – Acceleware

Oct. 11-14, 2011, Los Angeles, Calif.
Presented by Acceleware with Microsoft
http://acceleware.com/oct11los-angeles

- GPU-Accelerated Derivative Pricing Models — SciComp

Oct. 17, 2011, London, UK
Presented by SciComp, NVIDIA, Dell, Microsoft
http://www.scicomp.com/seminars/2011/signup

- NEW: Overview and Usage of LibJacket CUDA Library – AccelerEyes       (Webinar)

Oct 20, 2011
Presented by James Malcolm, AccelerEyes (with NVIDIA)
https://www2.gotomeeting.com/register/378528682

- GPU Computing with MATLAB (Webinar)

Oct. 27, 2011
Presented by Sarah Wait Zaranek, MathWorks
http://www.mathworks.com/company/events/webinars/wbnr59816.html

November 2011

- CUDA 4-Day Training Course —       Acceleware

Nov. 1-4, 2011, Frankfurt, Germany
Presented by Acceleware with Microsoft
http://acceleware.com/nov1frankfurt

- Supercomputing 2011 (SC11)

Nov. 12-18, Seattle, Washington
http://sc11.supercomputing.org/

- GPU Programming for Defense/Intelligence — AccelerEyes       (Webinar)

Nov. 15, 2011
Learn to accelerate common defense and intelligence algorithms         using easy, powerful programming libraries, with Jacket for use with         MATLAB and LibJacket for C/C++/Fortran.
http://bit.ly/rdZ8pH

- CUDA Training (Basic and Advanced) — CAPS

Nov. 22-24, 2011, Rennes, France
http://t.co/DWe0Zqka
Email: training (at) caps-entreprise.com

December 2011

- AGU (American Geophysical       Union) Meeting

Dec. 5, 2011, San Francisco
Session on High-Res Modeling Using GPU and Many-Core         Architectures
http://sites.agu.org/fallmeeting/scientific-program/session-search/530

- NEW: Intro to GPU Programming Workshop – La Maison de la       Simulation

Dec. 5-9, 2011, France
http://www.maisondelasimulation.fr/index.php

- GTC Asia

Dec. 14-15, 2011, Beijing, China
Featuring the latest GPU computing breakthroughs, demos         and presentations.
http://www.gputechconf.cn/home.html

- LibJacket CUDA Library for Maximus — AccelerEyes (Webinar)

Dec. 15, 2011
Learn to integrate computations with visualizations in a         CUDA-based app through simple visualization functions for plotting,         image and volume rendering, and more.
http://bit.ly/rdZ8pH

(To list an event, email: cuda_week_in_review@nvidia.com)

 
Tesla MD SimCluster

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– Tesla MD SimCluster: www.nvidia.com/simcluster
Downloads
– CUDA 4.0: www.nvidia.com/getcuda
– Parallel Nsight: http://developer.nvidia.com/nvidia-parallel-nsight
Webinars
– CUDA: www.nvidia.com/webinars
– Parallel Nsight: http://developer.nvidia.com/developer-webinars
CUDA     Registered Developer Program
– Sign up: www.nvidia.com/paralleldeveloper
CUDA     GPUs
– List of CUDA-enabled GPUs: http://developer.nvidia.com/cuda-gpus
CUDA     on the Web
– See previous issues of CUDA: Week in Review: http://is.gd/cBXbg
– Follow CUDA & GPU Computing on Twitter: www.twitter.com/gpucomputing
– Network with other developers: www.gpucomputing.net
– Stayed tuned to GPGPU news and events: www.gpgpu.org
– Learn more about CUDA on CUDA Zone: www.nvidia.com/cuda
– Check out the NVIDIA Research page: www.nvidia.com/research
CUDA     Recommended Reading
– Future of Computing Performance: http://bit.ly/hYqH2H
– Supercomputing for the Masses, Part 21: http://is.gd/Fj56gf
– CUDA books: http://www.nvidia.com/object/cuda_books.html
CUDA     Recommended Viewing
– The Third Pillar of Science: www.nvidia.com/object/race-for-better-science.html
– GTC 2010 presentations: www.nvidia.com/gtc
– SC10 presentations: www.nvidia.com/object/sc10_theater.html
 
CUDA is NVIDIA’s parallel computing hardware architecture.     NVIDIA provides a complete toolkit for programming on the CUDA     architecture, supporting standard computing languages such as C, C++ and     Fortran as well as APIs such as OpenCL and DirectCompute. Send comments and     suggestions to: cuda_week_in_review@nvidia.com
 
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