News
MSc in HPC industrial placements: Mallzee
All our MSc students are given the opportunity to work on a project with a company or academic group.
ARCHER Image Competition 2016: winner announced
We are delighted to announce the winner of the ARCHER Image Competition 2016 is Dr Peter Falkingham, Natural Sciences & Psychology Department, Liverpool John Moores University for his imag
Fortissimo Marketplace makes access to advanced computing services easier for SMEs
New cloud-based marketplace offers small manufacturing businesses fast and convenient access to supercomputing services.
Women In HPC wins 3 HPCwire awards
Women in High Performance Computing (WHPC) has been recognised in the annual HPCwire Readers’ and Editors’ Choice Awards, presented at the 2016 International Conference for High Performance Co
EPCC at SC'16, Salt Lake City, Utah
EPCC will be based in booth 701 during the Supercomputing conference(link is external). You can also meet our colleagues at the following events.
ePython: supporting Python on many core co-processors
Supercomputing, the biggest conference in our calendar, is on next week and one of the activities I am doing is presenting a paper at the workshop on Python for High-Performance and Scientific
How do you solve a problem like Sierpinski?
I promised in a post last month that I'd write some more about the PrimeGrid project, and it so happened this week that we made a discovery which gives me a good excuse to blog!
Nektar++ IO Performance for Aorta test case on ARCHER Cray XC-30
Nektar++ [1] is an open-source MPI-based spectral element code that combines the accuracy of spectral methods with the geometric flexibility of finite elements, specifically, hp-version FEM.
ARCHER gains parallel Knights Landing capability
The ARCHER national service is being enhanced by the addition of a parallel Knights Landing (KNL) system that will be available to all ARCHER users.
Testing code
It's always a bit of an embarrassment when talking about your code tests. I think most developers know that they don’t have enough tests or that their tests are not good enough.