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You are here: Home / Archives for Rob Farber

NVIDIA HBAO+ and TXAA Enhanced Gaming Video

May 7, 2014 by Rob Farber Leave a Comment

A fun video showing the progress being made in near photo realistic gaming imagery. THe big news in this video is the use of  HBAO+ (for ambient occlusion) and TXAA (anti-aliasing) technologies. I imagine such video platforms can be used for small studio animation projects as well. The Watchdog game highlighted in the video will be released May 27, … [Read more...]

OpenCL + Java Acceleration on Mobile Promises 8x speedup with 3x Less Power

May 6, 2014 by Rob Farber Leave a Comment

In what will certainly become a flood of papers about GPU acceleration of Java applications on mobile devices, a masters theses by Iype P. Joseph at the University of Ottawa claims 8x performance gains and 3x reductions in power consumption through the use of Java binding with OpenCL 1.1 on a a Freescale i.MX6Q SabreLite board. With NVIDIA entering the programmable mobile GPU … [Read more...]

GTC 2014 Presentations Now Available Online to All

May 5, 2014 by Rob Farber Leave a Comment

The NVIDIA GTC presentations are now available for all to view at http://www.gputechconf.com/gtcnew/on-demand-gtc.php. Of-course, I recommend my 30 minute presentation, "S4178: Killer-app Fundamentals: Massively-parallel data structures, Performance to 13 PF/s, Portability, Transparency, and more " [pdf][video]. My talk covers: Deep-learning to 13 PF/s on the ORNL … [Read more...]

Understanding the Rational behind 400 GB Flash-based DIMM Memory

May 3, 2014 by Rob Farber Leave a Comment

On January 24th, SanDisk announced shipments of ULLtraDIMM SSD storage in concert with an IBM announcement rebranding the SanDisk ULLtraDIMMs as eXFlash DIMMs. On March 21, SanDisk's stocks  hit a 14-year high. ULLtraDIMM SSD storage puts Flash memory in a standard DIMM form factor that can be plugged into a memory socket. The Linux, Windows, or VMware UEFI/BIOS … [Read more...]

NERSC to Procure “Cori” a Knights Landing Based Cray XC Supercomputer

May 2, 2014 by Rob Farber Leave a Comment

Scheduled for delivery in mid-2016, NERSC's next-generation supercomputer, a Cray XC, will be named after Gerty Cori, the first American woman to be honored with a Nobel Prize in science. The Cory supercomputer will use Intel’s next-generation Intel® Xeon Phi™ processor –- code-named “Knights Landing” -- a self-hosted, manycore processor with on-package high bandwidth memory … [Read more...]

ExaFMM: An Exascale-capable, TF/s per GPU or Xeon Phi, Long-Range Force Library for Particle Simulations

May 1, 2014 by Rob Farber Leave a Comment

Rio Yokota has implemented exaFMM, a Fast Multipole Method library to speed applications that must quickly calculate the effects of long-range forces such as gravity or magnetism on discrete particles in a simulation. Based on work he performed as a post-doc with Lorena Barba, the open-source FMM library runs on GPUs, multicore, and Intel Xeon Phi plus most of the … [Read more...]

Opportunities to Run on Jetson, the Latest Tegras, and ORNL Titan

April 30, 2014 by Rob Farber Leave a Comment

Following Jen-Hsun's strategy to enable those who wish to use NVIDIA chips, developers can win a Jetson K1, get free access to the latest Tegra GPUs. Also those with big computations can submit INCITE proposals to run on the ORNL Titan supercomputer. Ends today (4/30/14) to possibly win a Jetson K1 (link) merely by submitting an idea via … [Read more...]

GaussianFace: Computers Claimed to Beat Humans in Recognizing Faces

April 29, 2014 by Rob Farber Leave a Comment

In a human vs. computer test on 13k photos of 6k public figures, the GaussianFace project claims to identify human faces better than humans (97% human accuracy vs. 98% computer accuracy). The authors claim their model can adapt automatically to complex data distributions, and therefore can well capture complex face variations inherent in multiple sources. The reporters at The … [Read more...]

Run CUDA without Recompilation on x86, AMD GPUs, and Intel Xeon Phi with gpuOcelot

April 28, 2014 by Rob Farber Leave a Comment

Various pathways exist to run CUDA on a variety of different architectures. The freely available gpuOcelot project is unique in that it currently allows CUDA binaries to run on NVIDIA GPUs, AMD GPUs, x86 and Intel Xeon Phi at full speed without recompilation. It works by dynamically analyzing  and recompiling the PTX instructions of the CUDA kernels so they can run on the … [Read more...]

Enablement to Save Lives

April 27, 2014 by Rob Farber Leave a Comment

Take the time to learn to save a life and be an asset to your family and community in the case of disaster! Take a class in first aid or become a CERT (Community Emergency Response Team) memberr. Find the training in your country or community to turn yourself into an asset that can respond without adding to the problem in a disaster situation. The TechEnablement site is … [Read more...]

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Farewell to a Familiar HPC Friend

May 27, 2020 By Rob Farber Leave a Comment

TechEnablement Blog Sunset or Sunrise?

February 12, 2020 By admin Leave a Comment

The cornerstone is laid – NVIDIA acquires ARM

September 13, 2020 By Rob Farber Leave a Comment

Third-Party Use Cases Illustrate the Success of CPU-based Visualization

April 14, 2018 By admin Leave a Comment

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Learn how to program IBM’s ‘Deep-Learning’ SyNAPSE chip

February 5, 2016 By Rob Farber Leave a Comment

Free Intermediate-Level Deep-Learning Course by Google

January 27, 2016 By Rob Farber Leave a Comment

Intel tutorial shows how to view OpenCL assembly code

January 25, 2016 By Rob Farber Leave a Comment

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