College of Computing Hosts Workshop to Drive Innovation in Cell Broadband Engine Processor Research
Georgia Tech Leadership in Cell/B.E. Processor Research Includes Status as One of the First Universities to Receive IBM QS20 Blade Servers
ATLANTA, May 31, 2007 – The College of Computing at Georgia Tech
today announced it will host the Georgia Tech Cell Broadband Engine™
(Cell/B.E.) Processor Workshop from June 18-19, 2007, focusing on
applications for the Cell/B.E. processor, including gaming, virtual
reality, home entertainment, tools and programmability and high
performance scientific and technical computing.
The two-day workshop is sponsored by Sony Computer Entertainment Inc.
(SCEI), Toshiba and IBM and will be held at the Klaus Advanced
Computing Building on Georgia Tech’s campus. Keynote speakers at the
event include Bijan Davari, IBM Fellow and Vice President, Next
Generation Computing Systems and Technology; Dominic Mallinson, Vice
President, US Research and Development, SCEI and Yoshio Masubuchi,
General Manager, Broadband System LSI Development Center, Toshiba’s
semiconductor company. More information on the workshop may be found at
http://sti.cc.gatech.edu/.
“We are very excited to be able to support the growth of this
breakthrough technology by bringing some of the top minds in the
industry together at Georgia Tech to stimulate discussion about the
future of Cell/B.E. technology,” said David A. Bader, Associate
Professor and Executive Director of High-Performance Computing in the
College of Computing at Georgia Tech. “The Cell/B.E. processor
represents the future of computing using heterogeneous multi-core
processors, and we are proud to help drive the continued advancement of
computationally-intensive applications that will directly impact the
global growth of our industry and evolution of our society.”
The revolutionary Cell/B.E. processor is a breakthrough design
featuring a central processing core, based on IBM's industry leading
Power Architecture™ technology, and eight synergistic processors.
Cell/B.E. "supercharges" compute-intensive applications, offering fast
performance for computer entertainment and handhelds, virtual-reality,
wireless downloads, real-time video chat, interactive TV shows and
other "image-hungry" computing environments. The processor was created
through a collaboration of IBM, Sony Corporation, SCEI and Toshiba
Corporation (Toshiba).
The College of Computing also announced today that it is one of the
first universities to deploy the IBM BladeCenter® QS20 Server for
production use. The QS20 uses the same ground-breaking Cell/B.E.
processor appearing in products such as Sony Computer Entertainment’s
PLAYSTATION®3 computer entertainment system, and Toshiba’s Cell
Reference Set, a development tool for Cell/B.E. applications. The
Georgia Tech installation includes a cluster of 28 Cell/B.E. processors
(14 blades) and supports the operation of Cell-optimized multi-core
applications in areas such as digital content creation, gaming and
entertainment, security, scientific and technical computing,
biomedicine, and finance. Georgia Tech will grant users access on the
cluster to test drive the Cell/B.E. processor and support independent
software vendors (ISVs) that develop products and tools for the
Cell/B.E. processor. The Georgia Tech Cell/B.E. processor installation
will use Altair Engineering’s PBS Professional job scheduling software
that increases the utilization of the IBM Blade Center® QS20.
Directed by Bader, the STI Cell Center of Competence at Georgia Tech
has a mission to grow the community of Cell/B.E. processor users and
developers by performing research and service in support of the
Cell/B.E. processor, and further enable students at the College to grow
their skills and experience around Cell/B.E. technology to apply in
future career opportunities. The Center will sponsor discussion forums
and workshops, provide remote access to Cell/B.E processor based blade
hardware installed at Georgia Tech, create and disseminate software
optimized for Cell/B.E. processor based systems, and perform research
on the design of Cell/B.E. processor based systems, algorithms, and
applications. A collaboration with SCEI, Toshiba and IBM supports the
Center’s activities and research efforts in support of broadening the
Cell/B.E. processor’s impact into multiple sectors and industries,
including scientific computing, digital content creation,
bioinformatics, finance, gaming and entertainment.
About the College of Computing at Georgia Tech
The College of Computing at Georgia Tech is a national leader in the
research and creation of real-world computing breakthroughs that drive
social and scientific progress. With its graduate program ranked 11th
nationally by U.S. News and World Report, the College’s unconventional
approach to education is pioneering the new era of computing by
expanding the horizons of traditional computer science students through
interdisciplinary collaboration and a focus on human centered
solutions. For more information about the College of Computing at
Georgia Tech, its academic divisions and research centers, please visit
www.cc.gatech.edu.
For more information, contact:
Stefany Wilson
College of Computing at Georgia Tech
404.894.7253
stefany@cc.gatech.edu
www.cc.gatech.edu