Showing posts with label Liquid Cooling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Liquid Cooling. Show all posts

Monday, March 9, 2020

Let's Learn Deeply about Extreme Weather

This week we have Dan, Jessi, and Shahin on the call. Henry is off in Los Cruces overseeing construction of what can only be called a bunker. Why? Its main feature is 21-inch rammed earth walls, guaranteed to withstand withering heat waves, cold snaps, and probably any high caliber round. We speculate on the exact configuration of the home, wondering if Henry is running wild with the rammed earth and concrete theme, with concrete chairs and tables, plus rammed earth interior walls.

Applying Deep Learning to Extreme Weather

Dan deftly moves us on to the main topic of this show, how researchers are using supercomputers to apply deep learning to extreme weather. A research team from Rice University utilized three supercomputers (TACC’s Stampede 2, Wrangler, and Pittsburg Supercomputing Center’s Bridges system) to see if data on heat waves and cold spells could be predicted by analysis of atmospheric circulation and prior surface temperature. The results of these tests indicated that this deep learning approach is more accurate at predicting extreme weather.

In the call, we discuss the computational difficulty of weather forecasting and the use case that the Rice researchers are testing. This promising research can pay great dividends in terms of  giving early warning to hazardous weather, saving crops and perhaps saving lives in the process.  As promised in the podcast, here’s a link to the paper. We also have a short discussion of what motivates Dan to read a particular paper and what turns him off. Jessi’s main standard in papers is that it has to be able to be printed in black and white and remain legible and understandable. So if you want to attract Jessi’s attention for your paper, make sure your charts don’t use color.

Things You Think You Know, But Maybe Don't.

The question this week is why Cray computers were horseshoe shaped.  One of the reasons was wire length and this shape puts the components closely together to reduce the length of the wires needed to connect them. It also gave them enough room for a person to get their hands inside to weave the wires. So the key was minimal, uniform, and accessible wire length. There are also a couple of other explanations, one is that it gave room for the liquid cooling pipes necessary to cool the box, another is that the system forms a capital “C” shape, which stands for, of course, Cray.

Catch of the Week



Henry: is away this week. (We know some of you don't read this all and come straight here!)

Jessi:  Tells us that the US might want to take a close look at Estonia as a model to overcome cybersecurity. The country has put together a civilian cybersecurity force and instituted mandatory cyber classes in schools. This is a response to massive cyberattacks launched against Estonia in 2007 that took down much of their digital infrastructure for weeks.

Shahin:  Discusses how Justine Haupt came up with a way to keep her cell phone from distracting her – she built a rotary dial interface for it. Along with helping save her from using the most time-wasting features on her phone, it will also confound an entire generation of folks who have never seen a rotary phone dialer. Justine also is working in robotics and has a page of her inventions and thoughts.

Dan:  Brings up a story about a man convicted of murder mainly on the basis of DNA evidence, although that evidence was shaky, mainly saying that they couldn’t exclude him. His case was reopened by the Innocence Project who reached out to a company called Cybergenetics for further analysis. Cybergenetics ran samples through their 170,000 line AI algorithm and found that there was zero chance that the convicted man’s DNA was present in the sample. So the man will be released, which is great. The problem is that the Cbyergenetics code is a black box and the company, citing competitive advantage, will not release the code.  How should we deal with situations like this in the future?

Listen in to hear the full conversation

* Download the MP3 
* Sign up for the insideHPC Newsletter
* Follow us on Twitter
Subscribe on Spotify 
Subscribe on Google Play 
Subscribe on iTunes 
RSS Feed
* eMail us

Wednesday, January 15, 2020

2020 Predictions, Get it?!

Shiny Crystal Ball

It’s our first episode of 2020, yay! The first that was recorded in 2020 anyway.  It's a predictable 20/20 joke (more of a meh comment really) but the topic today is... PREDICTIONS. More specifically, it's our predictions of what’s going to happen in the next year. We may not always be correct, but we think maybe we’re always certain. We look at compute, interconnects, security, and general innovations:

Compute

Dan says that we’re going to have more of it. Henry predicts that we’ll see a RISC-V based supercomputer on the TOP500 list by the end of 2020 – gutsy call on that.  This is a double down on a bet that Dan and Henry have, so he’s reinforcing his position. Dan also sees 2020 as the “Year of the FPGA” when we start to see more and more HPC boxes fueled by FPGA, which is something Shahin mostly agrees with while Henry disputes it. We also touch on liquid cooling and process size as part of this topic.

Interconnects

Dan thinks that InfiniBand will announce 400 GBs interconnect by the end of this year – a bold prediction. On a communications note, Henry says that 20% of the US user base will have access to 5G phone coverage by the end of the year. Shahin asserts that only 3% of the market will actually buy it, but Dan and Henry say not so fast – it’ll be closer to 10%. Shahin is looking for a 5G connection for servers. Not as an interconnect, but more as a WAN or a cluster that spans an entire county. On another note, Shahin believes that HPE will formally get into the interconnect business, selling the Slingshot interconnect.

Security Trends

Dan says we need more of it but doesn’t see anything that’s going to move the needle back towards the users. Jessi thinks that security education has improved things security-wise and that will continue in 2020. Henry and Dan disagree. Jessi is adamant.

Innovation/Trends

Dan pegs in-memory computing as a field that will blossom over the coming year(s). Shahin agrees that in-memory is very interesting and ripe for innovation as well. But he also sees a lot of developments in the AI processor space. Henry talks about a new application workflow that will go something like this:  Object > MemMap > Compute on the MemMap file/data > back to Object, with no POSIX in the way. Shahin also sees more quantum supremacy in the news in the coming year.

Letter(s) to the Editor!

We discuss our first letter to the editor, from a listener who wasn’t a fan of the episode where we answered Jessi’s question about why tape is still used. His term for that feature? “Poor.” This prompted Shahin to quip, “I’m surprised we don’t get more of these…..”  Please keep those comments (good, indifferent, or critical) coming, our email is podcast@radiofreehpc.com.

Why Nobody Should Ever be Online. Ever.

This week, Henry doesn’t have a “Reason Why No One Should Ever Be Online. Ever.” He was offline all week, so thus doesn’t have anything to scare us with.

Catch of the Week



Henry:  has no catch, his net came up empty.

Shahin:  was practicing Catch & Release this week, so his creel is fishless.

Jessi:  discusses her new phone. She lost her old one in a Czech toilet (nasty, yikes). This is her first phone upgrade since junior high school – probably 6-7 years – and she’s agog at how the phones have advanced. She can now take pictures and use apps. Yay Jessi!

Dan:   Encourages listeners to have a good year and to let us know what you think via email (podcast@radiofreehpc.com) and twitter (@radiofreehpc). He also highlights the new RadioFreeHPC logo along the way.

Listen in to hear the full conversation

* Download the MP3 
* Sign up for the insideHPC Newsletter
* Follow us on Twitter
Subscribe on Spotify 
Subscribe on Google Play 
Subscribe on iTunes 
RSS Feed
* eMail us

Monday, August 5, 2019

Is Our Future Liquid Cooled? Also: Provenance of Surveillance Data!

The Veracity and Provenance of Surveillance Data

Controversy strikes when news breaks that "Amazon's home security company Ring has enlisted local police departments around the country to advertise its surveillance cameras in exchange for free Ring products and a "portal" that allows police to request footage from these cameras, a secret agreement obtained by Motherboard shows."
The nature of such agreements can, well, garner national attention, as we see here (and do our part). That kind of attention led to the PD cited in the news in Lakeland, FL, to clarify its relationship with Ring, saying "their agreement isn't about fostering a particular brand of doorbell, but rather any tool that helps crime-fighting." Several important topics come up which can easily kindle, if not ignite, passions, and they do here also.
All of this is because the evidentiary benefits of actual images is not in doubt. Or is it?! An important issue in this day and age is the veracity and provenance of video feeds, which are liable to be complete fabrications. Welcome to the digital age!


New Supercomputer in Austria

A new system built by Lenovo checks in at #82 on the TOP500 list and is liquid cooled, leading to a debate on the future of cooling and various forms of liquid-cooling: direct contact, immersion, phase chance. Dan puts Henry and Shahin on the spot to look in the crystal ball and see if they can see it as clearly as he does. He thinks they failed.


Catch of the Week


Henry:

Apple looks ahead to 5G with purchase of Intel’s smartphone-modem unit

Apple is paying Intel $1 billion for the chip maker’s smartphone-modem division in a deal driven by the upcoming transition to the next generation of wireless technology.
The agreement announced Thursday comes three months after Apple AAPL, -2.12%   ended a long-running dispute with one of Intel’s rivals, Qualcomm QCOM, -0.07%  . That ensured Apple would have a pipeline of chips it needs for future iPhones to work on ultrafast wireless networks known as 5G.
The Apple-Qualcomm truce prompted Intel INTC, -1.91%   to abandon its attempts to make chips for 5G modems, effectively putting that part of its business up for grabs.

 

Shahin:

Shahin talks about Stephen Wolfram's blog describing his appearance before a US Senate committee.

Testifying at the Senate about A.I.-Selected Content on the Internet

Three and a half weeks ago I got an email asking me if I’d testify at a hearing of the US Senate Commerce Committee’s Subcommittee on Communications, Technology, Innovation and the Internet. Given that the title of the hearing was “Optimizing for Engagement: Understanding the Use of Persuasive Technology on Internet Platforms” I wasn’t sure why I’d be relevant.
But then the email went on: “The hearing is intended to examine, among other things, whether...

Dan:

An entire nation just got hacked

(CNN) - Asen Genov is pretty furious. His personal data was made public this week after records of more than 5 million Bulgarians got stolen by hackers from the country's tax revenue office.
In a country of just 7 million people, the scale of the hack means that just about every working adult has been affected.  

Listen in to hear the full conversation

Download the MP3 * Subscribe on iTunes * RSS Feed
Sign up for our insideHPC Newsletter