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HPC Matters: Bill Feiereisen on How Supercomputing Drives Modeling and Simulation

billIn this video, Intel’s Bill Feiereisen discusses the importance of HPC in simulation and modeling. With the SC14 theme of “HPC Matters,” Bill’s message is one all of us in the high performance computing community need to share.

 
Read more at insideHPC

OpenStack’s New Icehouse Version is Coming in April

As we’ve been covering on OStatic, the OpenStack cloud computing platform is poised for implementation at many organizations this year, and the next major version of the platform, dubbed Icehouse, is on deck as well. At the recent Hong Kong summit dedicated to OpenStack, some of the early work on Icehouse was discussed, and now documented release features and status and design summit notes are available, as is a roadmap page. Icehouse is slated for delivery in April.

Rackspace has made available a video on the development of Icehouse, and InfoQ notes the following about how networking services outside the core of the platform are shifting:

 

Read more at Ostatic

Valve Needs Help From OpenGL Game Developers

Valve has issued a call for help to OpenGL game developers, or really anyone who can provide some interesting OpenGL traces, to help test their new tracer/debugger software for Linux…

Read more at Phoronix

Mandriva Celebrates the Unveiling of Pulse’s Latest Version 2.0

2014 marks the inauguration of Mandriva’s 2.0 version of Pulse, the par excellence solution for IT systems management the industry will benefit from. The added functionalities cater to the needs and expectations of IT systems management professionals.

 screenshot-pulse2.0-en          Logo-Pulse-02

A preview of Pulse 2.0 will be made to selected invitees – our industry clients and partners, at the launch of the solution. The seminar has been organized over breakfast (9:30 am- 11:30 am)at the chic hotel-de-ville (French Renaissance) styled conference gallery within the premises of Mandriva headquarters in Paris’ 9th district.

 

Daily LLVM Clang Packages Come For Ubuntu 14.04 LTS

There’s now daily LLVM and Clang compiler packages for Ubuntu 14.04 Linux…

Read more at Phoronix

Road to GNOME 3.12 : Overview of GNOME 3.11.4

Most Linux distros bundle GNOME desktop environment (DE) with even minor version numbers (3.8.x, 3.10.x). Like Fedora was released with GNOME 3.10.3. The version 3.11.2 was available in November but it was not bundled .The reason behind it is that GNOME takes a different approach to their software releases. The odd minor versions (3.9, 3.11) […]

The post Road to GNOME 3.12 : Overview of GNOME 3.11.4 appeared first on Muktware.

Read more at Muktware

If Microsoft Thinks Old Tor Clients are Risky, Why Not Windows XP?

Microsoft has been removing outdated Tor clients, stating that they pose a security threat, but if that’s the case, what about other outdated software? Aren’t they a threat too?

Qt5 Is Still Being Decided Upon For Ubuntu 14.04 LTS

While Qt 5.2 has been out since last month and Qt 5.3 is already well on its way to being released, Canonical is still shipping Qt 5.0 by default in the Ubuntu 14.04 development archive, the first Qt5 release from December 2012. It’s not firmly decided yet what Qt5 version will ship in the final release of Ubuntu 14.04, but it’s looking like Qt 5.2…

Read more at Phoronix

Using preload to Speed up Linux

Preload is an ‘Adaptive Read-ahead Damon’, which is the equivalent to Windows Vista’s Superfetch. Effectively what it does is speeds up application load time by monitoring the software that is loaded and used day to day, the software used most often, and cache them in memory. If you have a lot of memory, you will notice things will improve – for example, my work machine has 20gb of RAM, 7gb of it is used by caches and everything runs nice and smooth. If your computer needs the memory, space is made, so you will not lose out if you have the average 4-8gb. The difference is certainly measurable – from 20% to 60% improvement in startup times.

Installation is simple – its supported on most platforms, and can be installed through your repository, for example, Debian and Ubuntu people can use the simple apt-get install preload to install the software. For the more adventurous, you can grab the source code fromhttp://sourceforge.net/projects/preload/.

Configuration wise, the defaults will work happily enough, but for the people who like to tinker, configuration can be found in /etc/preload.conf.

Information on configuring preload can be found within the documentation the author has written. This can be found at http://techthrob.com/2009/03/02/drastically-speed-up-your-linux-system-with-preload/preload_files/preload.pdf.

HPC Challenge Benchmarks For AMD A10-7850K Kaveri

For those curious how HPC Challenge, the widely-used HPC benchmark, fairs for the AMD A10-7850K Kaveri APU, here’s some HPCC benchmark results…

Read more at Phoronix