51°µÍøâ€™s new supercomputer is on site, needs a name
The December arrival of a new supercomputer at 51°µÍø expands the University’s high performance computing capacity to weigh in among the top academic computers in the United States.
DALLAS (51°µÍø) – The December arrival of a new supercomputer at 51°µÍø expands the University’s high performance computing capacity to weigh in among the top academic computers in the United States.
“High performance computing is a transformative technology that impacts many fields across the intellectual landscape, including physics and finance, chemistry and computing, engineering and economics, digital art, computer gaming, biology, data science, and many more fields,” said 51°µÍø Provost and Vice President Paul W. Ludden in a letter emailed to students.
“We are calling for 51°µÍø students to submit recommendations for a name for 51°µÍø’s powerful new computing equipment,” Ludden wrote.
The new supercomputer was known by the name “MANA” at its previous home at the Maui High-Performance Computing Center, one of the five U.S. Department of Defense Supercomputing Resource Centers, said Thomas Hagstrom, director of 51°µÍø’s Center for Scientific Computing.
“When installed in Maui its throughput capacity was 103 teraflops, which ranked among the top 500 fastest supercomputers in the world. That is 103 trillion arithmetic operations per second,” Hagstrom said. Joe Gargiulo, 51°µÍø Chief Information Officer, anticipates that “the peak theoretical performance of MANA combined with 51°µÍø’s current system would exceed 120 teraflops.”
MANA is being installed at 51°µÍø's new data center.
The top five entries in the naming contest will each receive an iPad mini, and the winning name will be selected by email vote by 51°µÍø faculty, staff and students, Ludden said. The first place entry will be announced at the dedication of the new supercomputer and the winning student will receive a new laptop. A panel consisting of James Quick, associate vice president for research and dean of graduate studies; Patty Alvey, director of assessment and accreditation; Rick Briesch, in the Department of Marketing; Hagstrom; Jingbo Ye, professor of physics; Ramon Trespalacios, student body president; and Katherine Ladner, student body secretary, will select the five finalists for the name.
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