In the context of the CERN openlab collaboration, Tim Mattson,
an applications programmer from Intel will give an IT computing
seminar at CERN on Monday 15 March. His talk will focus on
OpenCL, Design Patterns and Software for heterogeneous many core
platforms.
The lecture will start at 2PM in the IT Auditorium and is
chaired by Sverre Jarp, CERN openlab CTO.
The biography of Tim Mattson and the abstract of his lecture are
available to you below.
Mélissa Le Jeune,
CERN openlab
Abstract of the lecture:
Future computer
systems will build on a many core foundation. The quest to
optimize performance per watt will push these cores to
specialize, so these will be heterogeneous many core systems.
The hardware trends are clear; it’s the software response that
is a bit murky. Software must change to take advantage of these
new platforms. This is a technical problem, but it’s also a
social problem as the software must address the needs of
different application and programmer communities. Standards such
as OpenCL are a critical part of the solution. This new
programming language lets programmers write software that runs
on CPUs, GPUs or combinations thereof. A long term solution,
however, will only emerge from a clear understanding of how
programmers architect parallel software. This is the focus of my
research on Design Patterns carried out in collaboration with
the ParLab at UC Berkeley. In this talk, I will describe these
two projects and how they work together to address many core
programming challenges.
Biography of the speaker:
Tim Mattson is
an applications programmer (Ph.D. Chemistry, UCSC, 1985). He
does linear algebra, finds oil, shakes molecules, solves
differential equations, and models electrons in simple atomic
systems. He has spent his career working with computer
scientists to make sure the needs of parallel applications
programmers are met. Dr. Mattson is also engaged in a long term
research program with UC Berkeley’s ParLab on abstractions that
bridge across parallel system design, parallel programming
environments, and application software. This work builds on his
book "Design Patterns in Parallel Programming" (written with
Professors Beverly Sanders and Berna Massingill). The patterns
provide the "human angle" and help keep his research focused on
technologies that help general programmers solve real problems.
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