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Andrew Lumsdaine, Chief Scientist at Northwest Institute for Advanced Computing, shares his journey in parallelism, from the HPC community’s early skepticism of and eventual move to C++ to build large systems, to his pursuit to develop a series of C++ [See the full post…] |
Listen/download audio 28:37
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Categories: Audio Podcast, Code Together, Intel Tags: C++, deep neural network, DPC++, heterogeneous, high performance computing, hipSYCL, HPC, Intel DevCloud, libraries, Math Kernel Library, MPI, oneAPI, oneDNN, oneMKL, Open Standards, parallel programming, parallelism, portability, Standards, SYCL, Threading Building Blocks, triSYCL
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Denisa Constantinescu, a PhD student in Mechatronics, and a researcher in the Computer Architecture Department at the University of Malaga, and Maura Tokay, a lead software programmer at Science Systems and Applications, Inc., and a computer scientist within the Department [See the full post…] |
Listen/download audio 19:26
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Categories: Audio Podcast, Code Together, Intel Tags: Agriculture, AI, artificial intelligence, C++, climate change, CPU, crop yield, Diversity, DPC++, emergency response, GPU, heterogeneous, inclusion, Intel, Intel DevCloud, machine learning, medical, meteorological data, oneAPI, OpenCL, programming, Science Systems and Applications Inc., STEM, SYCL, TBB, unified shared memory, University of Malaga, USM
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Dr. Tom Deakin, senior research associate and lecturer in the High-Performance Computing Research Group at the University of Bristol, and Dr. James Brodman, software engineer at Intel, unpack the tricky topic of performance portability to reveal what this concept truly [See the full post…] |
Listen/download audio 21:39
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Categories: Audio Podcast, Code Together, Intel Tags: C++, compiler, CPU, developers, DPC++, Dr. James Brodman, exascale, GPU, heterogeneous, high performance computing, HPC, Intel, Intel DevCloud, modern C++, oneAPI, Open Standards, OpenCL, OpenMP, parallel programming, parallelism, performance, portability, programming, Supercomputer, Supercomputing, Supercomputing 2020, SYCL, SYCL 2020, Tom Deakin, University of Bristol