View allAll Photos Tagged distributedcomputing
Here's where all the RAW crunching gets done. For those of you who are tech-heads, I'll list the specs: Quad G5/4GB/750GBx2/2x30" (right), Dual G5/3GB/750GBx2/1x30" (left,upper)/G4-1.33/120GB/2GB/17" (left, lower). For my uber geek friends -- center lower - Sony wireless 15" tv; Sonos wireless remote; and about 6TB of portable drives, oh, and the two G5's are connected via GigE so they share drives and data in as near real time as possible, and there are six CF card readers, three FW400 Lexar's, two FW800 Sandisk's, and one USB2 Sandisk - sweet for the redundant ingest of up to 24GB of images (with 4GB cards) unattended, meaning I can go to sleep after starting the ingest!
Running BOINC attached to SETI@Home on my Raspberry Pi Cluster. (Terminal console on the iPad is an app called Cathode.)
Distributed Programming the Google Way
Google is known to operate one of the largest civilian computing infrastructures. These hardware resources are managed by a vast collection of software frameworks and tools, which form the basis for highly parallelized, reliable, low-latency, high-throughput applications. They also provide useful programming abstractions that speed up development and debugging. Some parts of this infrastructure, such as MapReduce, GFS, Sawzall, Chubby, Protocol Buffers, are available as open source projects or published in academic papers, while others are proprietary. Rather than dive into the dark corners of each of these tools, this talk tries to distill key design themes and patterns, which enable these unique capabilities, and can be re-used in other contexts.
Keywords: CloudComputing, DistributedComputing, Concurrency, BigTable, MapReduce
Gregor Hohpe
Author "Enterprise Integration Patterns"
Software Engineer and Architect
Google, Japan
Website: www.hohpe.com/Gregor/Work/index.html
Books: Enterprise Integration Patterns
Presentations: Hooking Stuff Together - Programming the Cloud
---
The YOW! 2010 Australia Software Developer Conference is a unique opportunity for you to listen to and talk with international software experts in a relaxed setting.
Here's why you should want to attend:
* concise, technically-rich talks and workshops delivered
without the usual vendor-hype and marketing spin
* broad exposure to the latests tools and technologies,
processes and practices in the software industry
* "invitation only" speakers selected by an independent
international program committee from a network
of over 400 authors and experts
* a relaxed conference setting where you get the rare opportunity
to meet and talk with world-reknowned speakers face-to-face
* an intimate workshop setting where you are able
to benefit from an in-depth learning experience
* a truly unique opportunity to make contacts and network
with other talented Australian software professionals
* you'll be supporting a great charity. Ten dollars from every registration will be donated to the Endeavour Foundation.
website: YOW! 2010 Melbourne
venue: Jasper Hotel, Melbourne
Distributed Programming the Google Way
Google is known to operate one of the largest civilian computing infrastructures. These hardware resources are managed by a vast collection of software frameworks and tools, which form the basis for highly parallelized, reliable, low-latency, high-throughput applications. They also provide useful programming abstractions that speed up development and debugging. Some parts of this infrastructure, such as MapReduce, GFS, Sawzall, Chubby, Protocol Buffers, are available as open source projects or published in academic papers, while others are proprietary. Rather than dive into the dark corners of each of these tools, this talk tries to distill key design themes and patterns, which enable these unique capabilities, and can be re-used in other contexts.
Keywords: CloudComputing, DistributedComputing, Concurrency, BigTable, MapReduce
Gregor Hohpe
Author "Enterprise Integration Patterns"
Software Engineer and Architect
Google, Japan
Website: www.hohpe.com/Gregor/Work/index.html
Books: Enterprise Integration Patterns
Presentations: Hooking Stuff Together - Programming the Cloud
---
The YOW! 2010 Australia Software Developer Conference is a unique opportunity for you to listen to and talk with international software experts in a relaxed setting.
Here's why you should want to attend:
* concise, technically-rich talks and workshops delivered
without the usual vendor-hype and marketing spin
* broad exposure to the latests tools and technologies,
processes and practices in the software industry
* "invitation only" speakers selected by an independent
international program committee from a network
of over 400 authors and experts
* a relaxed conference setting where you get the rare opportunity
to meet and talk with world-reknowned speakers face-to-face
* an intimate workshop setting where you are able
to benefit from an in-depth learning experience
* a truly unique opportunity to make contacts and network
with other talented Australian software professionals
* you'll be supporting a great charity. Ten dollars from every registration will be donated to the Endeavour Foundation.
website: YOW! 2010 Melbourne
venue: Jasper Hotel, Melbourne
Distributed Programming the Google Way
Google is known to operate one of the largest civilian computing infrastructures. These hardware resources are managed by a vast collection of software frameworks and tools, which form the basis for highly parallelized, reliable, low-latency, high-throughput applications. They also provide useful programming abstractions that speed up development and debugging. Some parts of this infrastructure, such as MapReduce, GFS, Sawzall, Chubby, Protocol Buffers, are available as open source projects or published in academic papers, while others are proprietary. Rather than dive into the dark corners of each of these tools, this talk tries to distill key design themes and patterns, which enable these unique capabilities, and can be re-used in other contexts.
Keywords: CloudComputing, DistributedComputing, Concurrency, BigTable, MapReduce
Gregor Hohpe
Author "Enterprise Integration Patterns"
Software Engineer and Architect
Google, Japan
Website: www.hohpe.com/Gregor/Work/index.html
Books: Enterprise Integration Patterns
Presentations: Hooking Stuff Together - Programming the Cloud
---
The YOW! 2010 Australia Software Developer Conference is a unique opportunity for you to listen to and talk with international software experts in a relaxed setting.
Here's why you should want to attend:
* concise, technically-rich talks and workshops delivered
without the usual vendor-hype and marketing spin
* broad exposure to the latests tools and technologies,
processes and practices in the software industry
* "invitation only" speakers selected by an independent
international program committee from a network
of over 400 authors and experts
* a relaxed conference setting where you get the rare opportunity
to meet and talk with world-reknowned speakers face-to-face
* an intimate workshop setting where you are able
to benefit from an in-depth learning experience
* a truly unique opportunity to make contacts and network
with other talented Australian software professionals
* you'll be supporting a great charity. Ten dollars from every registration will be donated to the Endeavour Foundation.
website: YOW! 2010 Melbourne
venue: Jasper Hotel, Melbourne
Distributed Programming the Google Way
Google is known to operate one of the largest civilian computing infrastructures. These hardware resources are managed by a vast collection of software frameworks and tools, which form the basis for highly parallelized, reliable, low-latency, high-throughput applications. They also provide useful programming abstractions that speed up development and debugging. Some parts of this infrastructure, such as MapReduce, GFS, Sawzall, Chubby, Protocol Buffers, are available as open source projects or published in academic papers, while others are proprietary. Rather than dive into the dark corners of each of these tools, this talk tries to distill key design themes and patterns, which enable these unique capabilities, and can be re-used in other contexts.
Keywords: CloudComputing, DistributedComputing, Concurrency, BigTable, MapReduce
Gregor Hohpe
Author "Enterprise Integration Patterns"
Software Engineer and Architect
Google, Japan
Website: www.hohpe.com/Gregor/Work/index.html
Books: Enterprise Integration Patterns
Presentations: Hooking Stuff Together - Programming the Cloud
---
The YOW! 2010 Australia Software Developer Conference is a unique opportunity for you to listen to and talk with international software experts in a relaxed setting.
Here's why you should want to attend:
* concise, technically-rich talks and workshops delivered
without the usual vendor-hype and marketing spin
* broad exposure to the latests tools and technologies,
processes and practices in the software industry
* "invitation only" speakers selected by an independent
international program committee from a network
of over 400 authors and experts
* a relaxed conference setting where you get the rare opportunity
to meet and talk with world-reknowned speakers face-to-face
* an intimate workshop setting where you are able
to benefit from an in-depth learning experience
* a truly unique opportunity to make contacts and network
with other talented Australian software professionals
* you'll be supporting a great charity. Ten dollars from every registration will be donated to the Endeavour Foundation.
website: YOW! 2010 Melbourne
venue: Jasper Hotel, Melbourne
ASUS P5N32-E SLI Plus mainboard, Intel Core 2 Quad Q6600 CPU @ 2,4 Ghz, 2GB OCZ DDR2 800 RAM, crunching BOINC 24/7. Visit boinc.berkeley.edu to know why one man needs 6 computers... ;)
This is the first time I've gotten to see a molecular structure this complex without the GPU choking up. What a lovely sight. Also a lovely sight is that I'm rank 22,271 of 2,932,121. That literally puts me in the top 0.75% (99.25% of people sequence less than I do)
I might be poor as fuck in money, but when it comes to sequencing, I'm a 1%er!
ASUS P5N32-E SLI Plus mainboard, Intel Core 2 Quad Q6600 CPU @ 2,4 Ghz, 2GB OCZ DDR2 800 RAM, crunching BOINC 24/7. Visit boinc.berkeley.edu to know why... ;)
After testing the CPU under stress, it really doesn't perform well. The CPU thermals are pretty bad. I wonder how well it will behave with flight simulator, that said the GPU is cool as a cucumber even while hammering on COVID data.
The CPU finally cooled off to tolerable limits and the GPU couldn't care less. COVID sequencing may as well be gaming to it.
ZoomCharts for DeveloperWeek: February 6-12, 2015
ZoomCharts is offering data visualization tools to support presenters at DeveloperWeek 2015, taking place from February 6th to 12th, 2015 at Pier 27 at the Embarcadero in San Francisco, California.
Check out what you can do with ZoomCharts charts and graphs at zoomcharts.com
ZoomCharts’ line of advanced data visualization software is fully interactive, supports big data, works on all modern devices including touch screens, and does it all at incredibly fast speeds. These tools are being discovered by a growing number of clients in a variety of fields as the best way to analyze and present data. Don’t be among the last to discover the exciting potential that ZoomCharts tools can open up for your data.
DeveloperWeek is San Francisco’s largest technology event series. Covering new dev technologies, DeveloperWeek includes over 60 events, some of which include the Conference & Expo, the Accelerate 2015 hackathon, GirlDevWeek events, the Robotics Dev Summit, the DevOps Summit, workshops, and open houses.
Introductory lessons, advanced tips, and tricks are offered on technologies like HTML5, WebRTC, Full-Stack JavaScript development, mobile web design, Node.js, data science, distributed computing, and more. Hosts and supporters of last year’s event include a number of major technology industry players, including Google, Facebook, IBM, Blackberry, and Microsoft.
Check out ZoomCharts products:
Network Chart
Big network exploration
Explore linked data sets. Highlight relevant data with dynamic filters and visual styles. Incremental data loading. Exploration with focus nodes.
Time Chart
Time navigation and exploration tool
Browse activity logs, select time ranges. Multiple data series and value axes. Switch between time units.
Pie Chart
Amazingly intuitive hierarchical data exploration
Get quick overview of your data and drill down when necessary. All in a single easy to use chart.
Facet Chart
Scrollable bar chart with drill-down
Compare values side by side and provide easy access to the long tail.
ZoomCharts
The world’s most interactive data visualization software
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When Folding@home was integrated into Life with PlayStation yesterday, a leaderboard for PS3 work units was added. As shown here, the leaderboard is a little deceptive.
Going by PS3 contribution points, I should be ranked second in the world for completed folds. I actually couldn't care less that I'm not listed; what burns my bristles is that the ranking system is either broken or going off additional data without letting us know.
The logo I created for the Huntington's Disease Support Club's (HDSC) Folding @ Home Team's new forum/Yahoo group.
This poster is actually 40"x 32", but this picture is big enough that you can read the actual descriptions and whatnot about the program
Go join at www.grid.org.
Volunteer your SPARE clock-cycles here: www.grid.org/download/gold/download.htm
Thank you.