Lightwave Fabrics: At-Scale Optical Circuit Switching for Datacenter and Machine Learning Systems

#optical #switches #datacenters #machine-learning
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Hybrid presentation by Dr. Kevin Yasumura, Principal Engineer/Director in Google’s Platforms Optics Team


Abstract

We describe our experience developing what we believe to be the world’s first large-scale production deployments of lightwave fabrics used for both datacenter networking and machine-learning applications.  Optical circuit switches and optical transceivers developed in-house have produced a lightwave fabric that is reconfigurable, low latency, rate agnostic, and highly available.  These fabrics have provided substantial benefits for long-lived traffic patterns in tightly-coupled machine learning clusters.  We also report results for a large-scale ML superpod with 4096 tensor processing unit chips that has more than one exaflop of computing power.



  Date and Time

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  • Date: 18 Dec 2024
  • Time: 06:30 PM to 08:00 PM
  • All times are (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada)
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  • Northeastern University Welcome Center Space
  • 75 E Santa Clara Street
  • San Jose, California
  • United States 95113

  • Contact Event Host
  • Jeronimo Segovia-Fernandez

    IEEE SFBA MEMS & Sensors Chapter, Chair

    http://sites.ieee.org/scv-mems/ 

  • Starts 04 December 2024 07:16 AM
  • Ends 18 December 2024 12:00 AM
  • All times are (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada)
  • Admission fee (optional) ?


  Speakers

Dr. Kevin Yasumura

Biography:

Kevin Yasumura is a Principal Engineer/Director in Google’s Platforms Optics Team. At Google he is the Technical Lead for MEMS and optical switching development.  His optical switches are used worldwide for both datacenter networking and machine-learning applications and are critical to Google’s entire business model.  He has over 25 years of experience developing MEMS-based products and systems.  Before joining Google, he was a founding member and Manager of Micro-machining Development at Iolon Corporation where they developed MEMS tunable lasers, tunable filters, and optical switches.  He was also Senior Director of Product Development at Formfactor where he led the development of MEMS-based integrated circuit test solutions.  He holds a bachelor’s degree in physics from U.C. Berkeley and an M.S. and Ph.D. in applied physics from Stanford University.





Agenda

6:30 – 7:00 PM Registration & Networking

7:00 – 7:45 PM Invited Talk

7:45 – 8:00 PM Questions & Answers