On today's show I spoke with Dr. Michael Wrinn, Intel Academic Curriculum Evangelist and Courseware Architect. Michael just returned from the Intel 2008 Asia Academic Forum in Taipei, Taiwan and is schedule to speak in two weeks at Super Computing 2008 in Austin, TX.
More details on events Supercomputing 2008:
Education Program Birds-of-a-Feather “There Is No More Sequential Programming. Why Are We Still Teaching It?”
Monday November 17, 5:30 p.m. - 7 p.m. Room: 10B, Austin Convention Center
Presenters: Professor Wen-Mei Hwu, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; Dr. David Kirk, NVIDIA Chief Scientist; Dr. Christoph Lameter, Kernel Developer, The Linux Foundation; Professor Charlie Peck, Earlham College; Dr. Michael Wrinn, Senior Architect, Intel Software College
Moderator: Professor Tom Murphy, Contra Costa College
There have been urgent voices since at least 1995 calling for the introduction of parallel programming into the undergraduate curriculum, yet academic institutions are still teaching sequential programming. This is true despite the fact that all major manufacturers have moved to a many core architecture and current generation CPU, GPU or ASIC designs cannot be efficiently programmed without knowledge of parallel programming. What should we do to train engineers and scientists to exploit the modern compute platform? This panel debates this issue and kicks off a working group of academic and industry experts that will develop and recommend a practical means for creating an undergraduate curriculum with parallelism at its core. Come to participate in the discussion and to ensure that your voice is heard.
Intel Theater - Intel Software College Multicore Working Group Events
Tuesday, November 18, 4pm - Dr. Tim Mattson, Principal Engineer, Intel Corporation+ Dr. Ben Gaster, Research Scientist, AMD + Dr. Bill Buros, IBM Linux Technology Center + Professor Kathy Yelick, UC Berkeley
Wednesday, November 19, 10am - Dr. Michael Wrinn, Senior Parallel Architect, Intel + Dr. Dan Reed, Director of Scalable and Multicore Computing Strategy at Microsoft + Dr. Steve Heller, Research Director of Sun Microsystems Laboratories + Professor Scott Lathrop, UIUC
Live Webinar from Super Computing 08 in Austin, Texas – Practical Steps for Industry and Academia
Thursday November 20, 9:00 AM PST / 11:00 AM CST Professor Charlie Peck, Associate Professor of Computer Science, Earlham College. Register to attend on the web or come be part of our live audience as Professor Peck leads a discussion with Industry and Academic experts from the show floor of Super Computing 08 on the topic of supporting many cores within the classroom and the enterprise. More details at Intel Booth.
Michael and I will be returning again in two weeks with live broadcast of Parallel Programming Talk at 8:00AM PST on Tuesday November 18th from the Super Computing 2008 show floor. Please plan on listening.
More details on events Supercomputing 2008:
Education Program Birds-of-a-Feather “There Is No More Sequential Programming. Why Are We Still Teaching It?”
Monday November 17, 5:30 p.m. - 7 p.m. Room: 10B, Austin Convention Center
Presenters: Professor Wen-Mei Hwu, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; Dr. David Kirk, NVIDIA Chief Scientist; Dr. Christoph Lameter, Kernel Developer, The Linux Foundation; Professor Charlie Peck, Earlham College; Dr. Michael Wrinn, Senior Architect, Intel Software College
Moderator: Professor Tom Murphy, Contra Costa College
There have been urgent voices since at least 1995 calling for the introduction of parallel programming into the undergraduate curriculum, yet academic institutions are still teaching sequential programming. This is true despite the fact that all major manufacturers have moved to a many core architecture and current generation CPU, GPU or ASIC designs cannot be efficiently programmed without knowledge of parallel programming. What should we do to train engineers and scientists to exploit the modern compute platform? This panel debates this issue and kicks off a working group of academic and industry experts that will develop and recommend a practical means for creating an undergraduate curriculum with parallelism at its core. Come to participate in the discussion and to ensure that your voice is heard.
Intel Theater - Intel Software College Multicore Working Group Events
Tuesday, November 18, 4pm - Dr. Tim Mattson, Principal Engineer, Intel Corporation+ Dr. Ben Gaster, Research Scientist, AMD + Dr. Bill Buros, IBM Linux Technology Center + Professor Kathy Yelick, UC Berkeley
Wednesday, November 19, 10am - Dr. Michael Wrinn, Senior Parallel Architect, Intel + Dr. Dan Reed, Director of Scalable and Multicore Computing Strategy at Microsoft + Dr. Steve Heller, Research Director of Sun Microsystems Laboratories + Professor Scott Lathrop, UIUC
Live Webinar from Super Computing 08 in Austin, Texas – Practical Steps for Industry and Academia
Thursday November 20, 9:00 AM PST / 11:00 AM CST Professor Charlie Peck, Associate Professor of Computer Science, Earlham College. Register to attend on the web or come be part of our live audience as Professor Peck leads a discussion with Industry and Academic experts from the show floor of Super Computing 08 on the topic of supporting many cores within the classroom and the enterprise. More details at Intel Booth.
Michael and I will be returning again in two weeks with live broadcast of Parallel Programming Talk at 8:00AM PST on Tuesday November 18th from the Super Computing 2008 show floor. Please plan on listening.
