Friday 8 November 2019

Guide to announcements for SC19


(Originally published on my LinkedIn profile: post link)

It's that time of year - yes, the annual fest of press releases and social media deluges in the run up to 'SC'  - the primary annual supercomputing conference, held this year in Denver.


Here is a handy guide for vendor PR teams ...

[company] will be at #SC19!
Yes, along with almost everyone else in #HPC world

[company] will be highlighting products at SC19!
As above

[company] will launch new version of our current product in a slightly different shade of grey at SC19!
We had no actual news


However, the HPC centers are just as bad with "news" for the big annual #Supercomputing conference:

Wednesday 7 November 2018

SC18 preview

I've written my customary preview of SC, which is now published at HPC Wire: https://www.hpcwire.com/2018/11/06/sc18-preview-big-in-dallas/.

Over 10,000 members of the global HPC community will gather in Dallas for the SC18 conference. Even a decent sized team will struggle to attend everything the official program has to offer. On top of this, there will be a plethora of public and private meetings outside the official program, many of which are more valuable than the official program. Plus, there will be the usual flood of press releases, social media blasts, etc.

Out of all of this, what will emerge as the key themes? What are some essential things to do/attend? Read the @hpcnotes SC18 preview to find out!


Tuesday 6 November 2018

SC18 Networking Receptions

Networking Receptions at SC18 Dallas [updated regularly until SC starts]


A huge part of the SC conference (or any HPC conference) is meeting people - from old friends to new contacts. Here is a curated list of networking opportunities (receptions) crowd-sourced from this twitter thread https://twitter.com/hpcnotes/status/1059437643837161474 and other sources:

Sunday 11th
Monday 12th
Tuesday 13th

Wednesday 14th

Tweet me @hpcnotes using hashtag #SC18 to add your reception to this list!







Monday 5 November 2018

SC18 Tutorials

At SC18, I will be leading two tutorials, along with my long-time co-presenter Owen Thomas and new co-presenter for SC18, Ingrid Barcena Roig.


Both tutorials are on Monday 12th November, in room C140 of the Dallas convention center.







Please join us to learn more about how to get investment in HPC, how to spend it wisely, and how to measure the impact.



Saturday 23 June 2018

A useful reading list for travelling to ISC18

Travelling to Frankfurt for ISC? Need to feed your HPC thirst while on planes, trains, or in hotel rooms? Here is my pick of things to download and read so that you are fully informed when you start ISC:

See you in Frankfurt!

Andrew / @hpcnotes

Wednesday 20 June 2018

NAG-TACC HPC Leadership Institute 2018

Just taken over a HPC management or leadership role? Or hoping to soon? Or know someone who could grow into those roles? Or been a HPC director for years but value ongoing personal development?

The HPC Leadership Institute is a partnership between Numerical Algorithms Group (NAG) and Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC) to deliver training on the business aspects of High Performance Computing. The training covers strategy, total cost of ownership (TCO), cloud vs on-site, supercomputer procurement, governance, user services, and much more.

The 2018 course will be held in Austin TX September 11-13. Learn more and register now at:

https://www.tacc.utexas.edu/education/institutes/hpc-leadership-institute


Does it matter whether USA, China, EU, or someone else has the biggest supercomputer?

Much fuss will be made over the ORNL's new Summit supercomputer at the ISC18 event next week - in particular the fact that it means the USA replaces China as the home of world's fastest supercomputer according to www.top500.org. This brings the usual question as to whether it really matters which country has the biggest supercomputer.

Having a supercomputer 20%, or even 2x, faster than a competitor isn’t critical on its own, because it is possible to make up 20% or 2x actual competitive capability through better software, better people, or better service delivery practices.

However, a 10x faster supercomputer would be an issue, because that would typically reflect a political commitment to High Performance Computing (HPC) involving hardware and software and people - and so could mean potential capability dominance.

Of course, if you had the 2x slower supercomputer without investing in people/software/practices to make up the difference, then that would be a meaningful competitive gap and would matter.

Read more in this article at WiredUK: "Why the US and China's brutal supercomputer war matters"


Wednesday 22 November 2017

Benchmarking HPC systems

At SC17, we celebrated the 50th edition of the Top500 list. With nearly 25,000 list positions published over 25 years, the Top500 is an incredibly rich database of consistently measured performance data with associated system configurations, sites, vendors, etc. Each SC and ISC, the Top500 feeds community gossip, serious debate, the HPC media, and ambitious imaginations of HPC marketing departments. Central to the Top500 list is the infamous HPL benchmark.

Benchmarks are used to answer questions such as (naively posed): “How fast is this supercomputer?”, “How fast is my code?”, “How does my code scale?”, “Which system/processor is faster?”.

In the context of HPC, benchmarking means the collection of quantifiable data on the speed, time, scalability, efficiency, or similar characteristics of a specific combination of hardware, software, configuration, and dataset. In practice, this means running well-understood test case(s) on various HPC platforms/configurations under specified conditions or rules (for consistency) and recording appropriate data (e.g., time to completion).

These test cases may be full application codes, or subsets of those codes with representative performance behaviour, or standard benchmarks. HPL falls into the latter category, although for some applications it could fall into the second category too. In fact, this is the heart of the debate over the continued relevance of the HPL benchmark for building the Top500 list: how many real-world applications does it provide a meaningful performance guide for? But, even moving away from HPL to “user codes”, selecting a set of benchmark codes is as much a political choice (e.g., reflecting stakeholders) as it is a technical choice.

Friday 29 September 2017

Finding a Competitive Advantage with High Performance Computing

High Performance Computing (HPC), or supercomputing, is a critical enabling capability for many industries, including energy, aerospace, automotive, manufacturing, and more. However, one of the most important aspects of HPC is that HPC is not only an enabler, it is often also a differentiator – a fundamental means of gaining a competitive advantage.

Differentiating with HPC


Differentiating (gaining a competitive advantage) through HPC can include:
  • faster - complete calculations in a shorter time;
  • more - complete more computations in a given amount of time;
  • better - undertake more complex computations;
  • cheaper - deliver computations at a lower cost;
  • confidence - increase the confidence in the results of the computations; and 
  • impact - effectively exploiting the results of the computations in the business.
These are all powerful business benefits, enabling quicker and better decision making, reducing the cost of business operations, better understanding risk, supporting safety, etc.

Strategic delivery choices are the broad decisions about how to do/use HPC within an organization. This might include:
  • choosing between cloud computing and traditional in-house HPC systems (or points on a spectrum between these two extremes);
  • selecting between a cost-driven hardware philosophy and a capability-driven hardware philosophy;
  • deciding on a balance of internal capability and externally acquired capability;
  • choices on the balance of investment across hardware, software, people and processes.
The answers to these strategic choices will depend on the environment (market landscape, other players, etc.), how and where you want to navigate that environment, and why. This is an area where our consulting customers benefit from our expertise and experience. If I were to extract a core piece of advice from those many consulting projects, it would be: "explicitly make a decision rather than drift into one, and document the reasons, risk accepted, and stakeholder buy-in".

Which HPC technology?


A key means of differentiating with HPC, and one of the most visible, is through the choice of hardware technologies used and at what scale. The HPC market is currently enjoying (or is it suffering?) a broader range of credible hardware technology options than the previous few years.

Monday 31 July 2017

HPC Getting More Choices - Technology Diversity

HPC has been easy for a while ...


When buying new workstations or personal computers, it is easy to adopt the simple mantra that a newer processor or higher clock frequency means your application will run faster. It is not totally true, but it works well enough. However, with High Performance Computing, HPC, it is more complicated.

HPC works by using parallel computing – the use of many computing elements together. The nature of these computing elements, how they are combined, the hardware and software ecosystems around them, and the challenges for the programmer and user vary significantly – between products and across time. Since HPC works by bringing together many technology elements, the interaction between those elements becomes as important as the elements themselves.

Whilst there has always been a variety of HPC technology solutions, there has been a strong degree of technical similarity of the majority of HPC systems in the last decade or so. This has meant that (i) code portability between platforms has been relatively easy to achieve and (ii) attention to on-node memory bandwidth (including cache optimization) and inter-node scaling aspects would get you a long way towards a single code base that performs well on many platforms.

Increase in HPC technology diversity


However, there is a marked trend of an increase in diversity of technology options over the last few years, with all signs that this is set to continue for the next few years. This includes breaking the near-ubiquity of Intel Xeon processors, the use of many-core processors for the compute elements, increasing complexity (and choice) of the data storage (memory) and movement (interconnect) hierarchies of HPC systems, new choices in software layers, new processor architectures, etc.

This means that unless your code is adjusted to effectively exploit the architecture of your HPC system, your code may not run faster at all on the newer system.

It also means HPC clusters proving themselves where custom supercomputers might have previously been the only option, and custom supercomputers delivering value where commodity clusters might have previously been the default.

Tuesday 11 July 2017

SC17 Tutorials - HPC cost models, investment cases and acquisitions

Following our successful HPC tutorials at SC16 and OGHPC17, I'm delighted to report that we've had three tutorials accepted for SC17 in Denver this November, all continuing our mission to provide HPC training opportunities for HPC people other than just programmers.

At SC17, we will be delivering these three tutorials:
  • [Sun 12th, am] "Essential HPC Finance: Total Cost of Ownership (TCO), Internal Funding, and Cost-Recovery Models"
  • [Sun 12th, pm] "Extracting Value from HPC: Business Cases, Planning, and Investment"
  • [Mon 13th, am] "HPC Acquisition and Commissioning"
In a last minute bit of co-ordination, Sharan Kalwani will be following these with his related tutorial "Data Center Design" on Mon 13th pm.

Are these tutorials any good?


The HPC procurement tutorial was successfully presented at SC13 (>100 attendees) and SC16 (~60 attendees). Feedback from the SC16 attendees was very positive: scored 4.6/5 overall and scored 2.9/3 for “recommend to a colleague.

The HPC finance tutorial was successfully presented at SC17 (~60 attendees) and at the Rice Oil & Gas HPC conference 2017 (~30 attendees). Feedback from the SC16 attendees was very positive: scored 4.3/5 overall and scored 2.7/3 for “recommend to a colleague.

The HPC business case tutorial is new for SC17.

What is the goal of the tutorials?


The tutorials provide an impartial, practical, non-sales focused guide to the business aspects of HPC facilities and services (including cloud), such as total cost of ownership, funding models, showing value and securing investing in HPC, and the process of purchasing and deploying a HPC system. All tutorials include exploration of the main issues, pros and cons of differing approaches, practical tips, hard-earned experience and potential pitfalls.

What is in the tutorials?


Essential HPC Finance Practice: Total Cost of Ownership (TCO), Internal Funding, and Cost-Recovery Models
  • Calculating and using TCO models
  • Pros and cons of different internal cost recovery and funding models
  • Updated from the SC16 base, with increased consideration of cloud vs in-house HPC
Extracting Value from HPC: Business Cases, Planning, and Investment
  • Applicable to either a first investment or an upgrade of existing capability
  • Most relevant to organizations with a clear purpose (e.g., industry) or those with a clear service mission (e.g., academic HPC facilities)
  • Identifying the value, building a business case, engaging stakeholders, securing funding, requirements capture, market survey, strategic choices, and more
HPC Acquisition and Commissioning
  • Procurement process including RFP
  • Specify what you want, yet enable the suppliers to provide innovative solutions beyond the specification both in technology and in the price
  • Bid evaluation, benchmarks, clarification processes
  • Demonstrate to stakeholders that the solution selected is best value for money
  • Contracting, project management, commissioning, acceptance testing

Who are the tutors?


Me (Andrew Jones, @hpcnotes), Owen Thomas (Red Oak Consulting), and Terry Hewitt. We have been involved in numerous major HPC procurements and other strategic HPC projects since 1990, as service managers, bidders to funding agencies, as customers and as impartial advisors. We are all from the UK but have worked around the world and the tutorials will be applicable to HPC projects and procurements anywhere. The tutorials are based on experiences across a diverse set of real world cases in various countries, in private and public sectors.

What if you need even more depth?


These SC17 tutorials will deliver a lot of content in each half day. However, if you need more depth, or a fuller range of topics, or are looking for a CV step towards becoming a future HPC manager, then our joint TACC-NAG summer training institute is the right thing for you: "Where will future HPC leaders come from?"



Hope to see you at one (or more!) of our tutorials at SC17 this November in Denver.
@hpcnotes