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| [November 07, 2012] |
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Teams of Computer Science Students from around the Globe Prepare for Supercomputing's Endurance Competition -- SC12 Student Cluster Challenge
SALT LAKE CITY --(Business Wire)--
A highlight of SC12 will be the grueling 47-hour Cluster Challenge
during which teams of students from around the world will compete to
build and run a small supercomputer cluster of their own design.
The competition has become a feature attraction of SC, the premier
international conference for high performance computing, networking,
storage and analysis. http://sc12.supercomputing.org/
In this intense around-the-clock race, eight teams of up to six students
will assemble their cluster in the lobby of the convention center and
demonstrate real scientific and industrial applications, while staying
within a strict power requirement - roughly equivalent to several coffee
makers.
For the first time at SC, competition will be in two tracks: the
well-established standard cluster challenge track and a new pilot
'LittleFe' track using a LittleFe computer platform available online at http://littlefe.net/home.
"The Student Cluster Challenge and now the pilot LittleFe competition
showcase young supercomputing talent from around the world in a
spirited, yet friendly, contest," says Peter Molnar, chair of the SC12
student competitions. "Besides dispaying their creativity and technical
skills, these students demonstrate how cluster computing makes high
performance computing more accessible to the broader academic and
research community."
Prior to coming to SC teams of students competing in the cluster
challenge work with vendor sponsors and institutional advisers to design
their computer cluster. At SC they assemble their designs and run a
suite of scientific applications chosen by contest organizers.
Teams competing in the cluster challenge this year include:
Massachusetts Green High Performance Computing Center, US; National
Tsing Hua University, Taiwan; National University of Defense Technology,
China; Purdue University (News - Alert), US; Texas Tech University, US; University of
Science and Technology of China, China; University of Texas at Austin,
US; and University of the Pacific, US.
Once competition gets underway Monday, Nov. 12, teams will compete to
achieve the best high performance computing cluster (HPCC) benchmark
performance and maximum throughput of accurate applications runs, all
while remaining at or below their energy budget. Teams also compete to
impress SC participants and judges with visualizations, presentations,
and interviews.
In the new pilot track, teams of students will assemble and test a
LittleFe system, a small educational high-performance computing
appliance, and then compete to be the first to solve a set of traveling
salesman problems. Teams score points for the time their solution is in
the lead. Team scores and standing can be monitored in real time on the
web.
Competing in this new track will be teams representing: CUNY-College of
Staten Island, N.Y.; Skyline High School, Salt Lake, UT; Slippery Rock
University, PA; and the University of Utah, UT.
The Student Cluster Competition is part of SC Communities, which brings
together programs designed to support emerging leaders and groups that
have traditionally been under-represented in computing. This program
provides opportunities for students, faculty, early-career
professionals, and international attendees to participate in the SC
Conference through our Ambassadors, Broader Engagement, Education
Program, Student Cluster Competition, and Student Volunteers activities.
For more about the cluster competition see the SC12 Website: http://sc12.supercomputing.org/content/student-cluster-competition
About SC12
SC12, sponsored by the ACM (Association for Computing Machinery) and the
IEEE (News - Alert) Computer Society, offers a complete technical education program and
exhibition to showcase the many ways high performance computing,
networking, storage and analysis lead to advances in scientific
discovery, research, education and commerce. This premier international
conference includes a globally attended technical program, workshops,
tutorials, a world class exhibit area, demonstrations and opportunities
for hands-on learning.

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