Chromebooks can now run Linux without dual-booting via Crouton (ChRomium Os Universal chrooT envirONment)! A big advantage of Crouton is that users don't have to reboot their machine to switch operating systems. Moving to Linux can be as simple as using a keyboard shortcut. Crouton can be downloaded from github (). Crouton is a set of scripts that act as an easy-to-use, … [Read more...]
ORNL Introductory Tutorials On Concurrent Kernels
The OLCF at Oakridge National Laboratory (ORNL) is working to educate users about how to best use their computing resources. As part of that process, the OLCF has published two very introductory tutorials to teach how to utilize concurrent kernels on their systems. Part 1 (concurrent kernels) and Part 2 (batched library calls) teach how to launch concurrent kernels using CUDA … [Read more...]
Implications of OS Jitter on Real-Time Applications for FPGAs, GPUs, and Intel
FPGAs, GPUs, and Intel Xeon Phi coprocessors can all offer superb performance at low watt/flop and high flop/dollar ratios for real-time computing. To promote real-time FPGA development, several Altera Engineers (Chee Nouk Phoon,Chei Siang Ng, Steve Jahnke, plus Findlay Shearer, Linux Marketing Manager) examined the impact of operating system jitter on real-time performance in … [Read more...]
Nine NSF Funding Opportunities
A data-intensive effort: Resource Implementations for Data Intensive Research in the Social Behavioral and Economic Sciences (RIDIR) Full Proposal Deadline Date: February 23, 2015 As part of NSF’s Cyberinfrastructure Framework for 21st Century Science and Engineering (CIF21) activity, the Directorate for Social, Behavioral and Economic Sciences (SBE) seeks to … [Read more...]
Speed Python Numerical Applications by 2x – 120x With HOPE
HOPE is an open source specialized method-at-a-time JIT compiler written in Python. It translates Python source code into C++ and compiles the generated code at runtime to achieve a 2x - 120x performance speedup over interpreted Python code. HOPE is published under the GPLv3 license. It can be downloaded from it's GitHub repository. It was written by Joel Akeret, Lukas Gamper, … [Read more...]
Trend – Web And Big-Box Retailers the Future of Primary Medical Care
To reduce costs, a number of health organizations like Kaiser-Permanente, Bellin Health, PinnicleHealth, QualMed, and others are teaming with big-box retailers like Target, Safeway, Giant and other big-box retailers to create in-store medical clinics for primary care. The model is web-based where nurses and nurse practitioners staff the in-store location to screen patients. If … [Read more...]
Caffinate Your Startup Like eDiscoverySquad with 1 Million Cups of Coffee
Million Cups (1MC) is a simple way to engage entrepreneurs in communities around the world. Each week, the 1MC program offers two local entrepreneurs an opportunity to present their startups to a diverse audience of mentors, advisors, and entrepreneurs. Presenters prepare a 6 minute educational presentation and engage in 20 minutes of feedback and questioning after they … [Read more...]
Apache Spark Claims 10x to 100x Faster than Hadoop MapReduce
Apache Spark is a fast and general-purpose cluster computing system that claims 10x to 100x performance improvements over Hadoop. It runs "everywhere" from standalone to EC2 and runs on Hadoop, Mesos, standalone, or in the cloud. Spark runs provides high-level APIs in Java, Scala and Python, and an optimized engine that supports general execution graphs. It also supports … [Read more...]
NVIDIA 32GB Shield LTE Holiday Bundle With Lots of Games
Good Dec. 20 12:01am PST – Dec. 24 11:59pm PST only, NVIDIA is offering a 32GB Shield LTE Holiday Bundle with Half-Life Episode, Half-Life 2, and Portal plus a host of games on the NVIDIA Grid on-demand game streaming service through the end of June 2015: Astebreed Alan Wake American Nightmare Batman: Arkham Asylum Batman: Arkham City Batman: Arkham … [Read more...]
MIT Study Finds Computer Neural Networks Identify Visual Objects As Well As The Primate Brain
A new study from MIT neuroscientists has found that one of the latest generation of so-called “deep neural networks” matches the object recognition ability of the primate brain. This improved understanding of how the primate brain works could lead to better artificial intelligence and, someday, new ways to repair visual dysfunction, notes Charles Cadieu, a postdoc at the … [Read more...]









