SCIENCE
Rensselaer Supercomputer Director Named to National Initiative on High Performance Computing: Cyberinfrastructure Expert James Myers To Join U.S. Council on Competitiveness HPC Advisory Committee
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.
"Understanding and overcoming the barriers to greater use of
high-performance computing in industry, particularly at the scale required to
drive innovation and the creation of new products and new jobs, is critical for
our national competitiveness," Myers said. "I'm excited to be able to
bring the experiences and lessons-learned from our public-private partnership
and successful industry projects in New York into this important national discussion."
CCNI, in partnership with the Rensselaer Scientific Computation Research Center
(SCOREC) and New York state's High Performance
Computing Consortium (HPC2), 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 Gould 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.
The Council on Competitiveness is a non-partisan, non-governmental group of
corporate CEOs, university presidents, and labor leaders working to ensure U.S. prosperity and enhanced U.S.
competitiveness in the global economy. The organization generates innovative
public policy solutions aimed at creating of high-value economic activity in
the United States.
Rensselaer President Shirley Ann Jackson currently serves as university vice
chair for the Council on Competitiveness, and is a member of the leadership
council of the Council's United States Manufacturing Competitiveness
Initiative.
The Rensselaer supercomputing center, CCNI, is a $100 million partnership
between Rensselaer, IBM, and New York
state. CCNI is among the world's most powerful university-based supercomputers,
and is considered a top academic supercomputer center internationally. 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.
Computational resources at CCNI support at-scale modeling, simulation, and
analysis in a broad spectrum of computational science and engineering
disciplines. CCNI systems consist of massively parallel IBM Blue Gene
supercomputers, POWER-based Linux clusters, and AMD Opteron processor-based
clusters, together providing more than 100 teraflops of computing power.
CCNI partners closely with SCOREC and HPC2. SCOREC is focused on the
development of the technologies necessary to enable multiscale systems
engineering. The center endeavors to create reliable simulation technologies
for engineers, scientists, medical professionals, and other practitioners. Key
research areas for SCOREC include nanocomposites design and vascular disease
modeling.
HPC2 is a partnership between NYSERNet and supercomputing centers at
Rensselaer, Stony Brook University,
Brookhaven National Laboratory, and the University at Buffalo. Its goal is to increase New York state's
competitiveness and foster economic development by providing industry and
academic institutions with high-performance computing resources, including
staff with expertise in modeling and simulation. The partnership, funded by the
New York State Foundation for Science, Technology and Innovation (NYSTAR),
often connects small and local businesses to leverage the computing power of
CCNI.