Rebooting Computing—The Search for Post-Moore's Law Breakthroughs
The field of high-performance computing (HPC) or supercomputing refers to the building and using computing systems that are orders of magnitude faster than our common systems. The top supercomputer, Summit, can perform 148,600 trillion calculations in one second (148.6 PF on LINPAC). The top two supercomputers are now in the USA followed by two Chinese supercomputers. Many countries are racing to break the record and build an ExaFLOP supercomputer that can perform more than one million trillion (quintillion) calculations per second. In fact, the USA is planning two supercomputers in 2021 one of which, when fully operational (Frontier), will perform at 1.5 EF. Scientists however are concerned that we are reaching many physical limits and we need new innovative ideas to make it to the next generation of computing. A comparative understanding of Nuromorphic and Brain-Inspired Computing, Quantum Computing and innovative computing paradigms will be provided in the talk along with an assessment of progress so far and the road ahead. Further, it will cover some of the progress on Nanophotnonic PostMoore's law processing efforts.
Date and Time
Location
Hosts
Registration
-
Add Event to Calendar
- University of Albany
- 1400 Washington Ave
- Albany, New York
- United States 12222
- Room Number: Lecture Center 20
- Contact Event Host
- Co-sponsored by Jonathan Muckell
Speakers
Tarek El Ghazawi
Biography:
Tarek El-Ghazawi is a Professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at The George Washington University, where he leads the university-wide Strategic Academic Program in High-Performance Computing. He is the founding director of The GW Institute for Massively Parallel Applications and Computing Technologies (IMPACT) and was a founding Co-Director of the NSF Industry/University Center for High-Performance Reconfigurable Computing (CHREC), established with funding from NSF, government and industry. El-Ghazawi's research interests include high-performance computing, computer architectures, reconfigurable and embedded computing, nano-photonic based computing, and computer vision and remote sensing. He is one of the principal co-authors of the UPC parallel programming language and the first author of the UPC book from John Wiley and Sons. El-Ghazawi is also one of the pioneers of the area of High-Performance Reconfigurable Computing (HPRC).
Dr. El-Ghazawi was also one of the early researchers in Cluster Computing and has built the first GW cluster in 1995. At present he is leading efforts for rebooting computing based on new paradigms including analog, nano-photonic and neuromorphic computing. He has served on many boards and served as a consultant for organizations like CESDIS and RIACS at NASA GSFC and NASA ARC, IBM and ARSC. He has received his Ph.D. degree in Electrical and Computer Engineering from New Mexico State University in 1988. El-Ghazawi has published over 250 refereed research publications in his area and his work was funded by government and industry. His research was funded extensively by such government organizations like DARPA, NSF, AFOSR, NASA, DoD and industrial organizations such as Intel, AMD, HP, SGI. Dr. El-Ghazawi has served in many editorial roles including an Associate Editor for the IEEE Transactions Parallel and Distributed Computing and the IEEE Transaction on Computers. He has chaired and co-chaired many IEEE international conferences and symposia, including IEEE PGAS 2015, IEEE/ACM CCGrid2018, IEEE HPCC/SmartCity/DSS 2017 to name a few. Professor El-Ghazawi is a Fellow of the IEEE and selected as a Research Faculty Fellow of the IBM Center for Advanced Studies, Toronto. He was also awarded the Alexander von Humboldt Research Award, from the Humboldt Foundation in Germany (given yearly to 100 scientists across all areas from around the world), the Alexander Schwarzkopf Prize for Technical Innovation, and the GW SEAS Distinguished Researcher Award. El-Ghazawi has served as a senior U.S. Fulbright Scholar.