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PrimeurWeekly 08 September 2008
>Special
>First PRACE Industry Seminar redefines century-old 'mercator sapiens' tradition
>PRACE HPC infrastructure aims to foster competitiveness in Europe
>Need for faster, larger simulations is stretching the supercomputer realm
>Don't worry too much about technology, mind the legal issues
>EDF in search of petaflop performance for problems concerning us all
>Kaleidoscopic seismic imaging "down from Mississippi to the Gulf of Mexico"
>EuroFlash
>Ancient musical instruments play again through ASTRA project
>DNS Europe to offer Grid/Utility computing services using 3Tera
>OptimaNumerics partners with NVIDIA to support NVIDIA Tesla GPU platform
>4th Pan-Galactic BOINC Workshop issues Call for Participation
>CoreGRID - Sustainable European project in the international Grid research arena
>USFlash
>SDSC and Interactive Supercomputing Inc. to host advanced Star-P parallel programming workshop on October 6
>Pioneer of volunteer computing urges its adoption at University of Delaware
>3Tera takes cloud computing global
>Grid MP saves millions, independent report reveals
>Kotura awarded $14M silicon photonics contract with Sun Microsystems and DARPA
>Multi-core chip research to lead to performance gains and power reduction for high- and low-end
>Dot Hill in negotiations with Ciprico Inc. to acquire certain intellectual property assets
>Telx launches 10 Gigabit Ethernet peering services powered by Force10 Networks
>HP encourages CIOs to rethink virtualization in business terms
>IBM introduces first blade server to reduce security threats and optimize network traffic
>MIT probe could aid quantum computing
>Sun unveils xVM VirtualBox 2.0 and new enterprise support subscription
>Oracle buys ClearApp
>SGI and Verari Systems sign Service Provider agreement
Multi-core chip research to lead to performance gains and power reduction for high- and low-end
Arlington 02 September 2008 The Us National Science Foundation (NSF) and Semiconductor Research Corporation (SRC), have set up a major joint initiative for multi-core chip design and architecture. The three-year programme, funded by the two organisations, will focus on several components of multi-core system architecture design that can significantly enhance and accelerate solutions for advancing semiconductor performance. About $6 million in funding is available to U.S. universities, who have been invited to submit research proposals in key areas.
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Programme research will lead to significant advances in state-of-the-art multi-core chip design and architecture, bringing about system-level performance improvements and establishing new and innovative research areas critical to future computing. Specific areas of research for the program include computer-aided design for multi-core systems, such as acceleration of design automation tools via multi-core platforms; interconnect, packaging and circuit techniques for multi-core; and low-power innovations.

"As Moore's Law scaling becomes more difficult, researchers must explore new means to insure continued technological advances in computing", stated Sankar Basu, NSF programme director. "CMOS scaling is increasingly limited by the realities imposed by physics, making architectural innovations critical to achieving increased computational performance. Multi-core-based systems promise computational performance enhancements and power reduction for both high- and low- end computing platforms."

"This partnership of government, industry and academia helps expose our universities to critical computing challenges", stated Dr. Steven Hillenius, SRC executive vice president. "Co-operative programmes with NSF help SRC to deliver value to its industrial members' capabilities while allowing universities to continue to improve their understanding of the needs of the semiconductor industry. The work benefits several sectors of the research, design and manufacturing environment."

"This new collaborative research programme addresses compelling research needs in multi-core-based systems that are of paramount importance to industry, academia and society at large", added Jeannette Wing, assistant director for Computer and Information Science and Engineering at NSF. "We welcome industry-based partnerships that offer the academic research community an opportunity to do ground-breaking, basic, long-term research inspired by problems faced by industry."

Per its charter, SRC will continue to take a lead role in collaborating on enhancements brought about by academic research associated with semiconductor design and manufacturing.
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Source: National Science Foundation

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