When 10,000 high performance computing experts from around the world convene every November at the annual SC conference, the Invited Talks are a popular venue for learning about topics ranging from high-level policy to improved supercomputer performance. Now, for the first time ever, SC is releasing the full-length version of many of these talks.
“The quality and depth of these talks should benefit not only those in attendance at SC15, but also the entire globe,” says Bernd Mohr, SC15 Invited Talks Chair from Jülich Supercomputing Centre. “Nowhere else but at an SC conference can you experience such a wide range of global experts under one roof. This is part of our initiative to look for new ways to expand SC’s impact globally and hopefully inspire the next wave of researchers and scientists.”
Here’s a list of the Invited Talks now available online as well as links to their more descriptive blog profiles and full-length SC15 videos.
Superscalar Programming Models: Making Applications Platform Agnostic
Rosa M. Badia, Barcelona Supercomputing Center
The National Strategic Computing Initiative
Randal E. Bryant, William T. Polk, Executive Office of the President, Office of Science and Technology Policy
Revealing the Hidden Universe with Supercomputer Simulations of Black Hole Mergers
Manuela Campanelli, Rochester Institute of Technology
Fast and Robust Communication Avoiding Algorithms: Current Status and Future Prospects
Laura Grigori, INRIA
System Software in Post K Supercomputer
Yutaka Ishikawa, RIKEN AICS
Societal Impact of Earthquake Simulations at Extreme Scale
Thomas H. Jordan, Southern California Earthquake Center, University of Southern California
2015 Quadrennial Technology Review
Franklin M. Orr, Under Secretary for Science and Energy at the U.S. Department of Energy
Reproducibility in High Performance Computing
Victoria Stodden, Graduate School of Library and Information Science, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
LIQUi|> and SoLi|>: Simulation and Compilation of Quantum Algorithms
Dave Wecker, Quantum Architectures and Compilation (QuArC), Microsoft Research
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