DENVER--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Eight student teams from universities in the United States, Germany, China and Australia have been selected to compete in the Standard Track of the Student Cluster Competition to be held at the SC13 conference, Nov. 17-22, 2013, in Denver, Colorado.
This year’s teams include the first-ever team from Australia, who will be traveling nearly 9,000 miles from Perth for the competition. The roster of teams will represent the following institutions:
- Boston University (USA)
- IVEC, a joint venture between CSIRO, Curtin University, Edith Cowan University, Murdoch University and the University of Western Australia (Australia)
- National University of Defense Technology (China)
- The University of Colorado, Boulder (USA)
- The University of the Pacific (USA)
- The University of Tennessee, Knoxville (USA)
- The University of Texas, Austin (USA)
- Friedrich-Alexander University of Erlangen-Nuremberg (Germany)
The Student Cluster Competition showcases student expertise in a friendly yet spirited competition held in conjunction with SC13, the premier international conference on high-performance computing, networking, storage and analysis. The teams slated to compete in the Commodity Track of the competition have not yet been announced.
This real-time, 48-hour non-stop challenge will feature teams of undergraduate and/or high school students building, tuning and racing HPC clusters of their own design on the SC13 exhibit floor. The teams will race against each other and the clock to run the greatest number of applications. An added catch is that teams will be required to run workloads on the same power needed to run only three coffee makers. Now in its seventh year, the Student Cluster Competition serves to showcase young computing talent and foster HPC education development.
“We received 13 proposals for the Student Cluster Competition and planned to select six teams to compete, but the caliber of the proposals was so high we decided to go with eight teams,” said Student Cluster Competition Chair Dustin Leverman of Oak Ridge National Laboratory. “Though the selection process was very difficult, it makes me confident that it will be a good competition this year. It’s always exciting to watch the students as they apply what they’ve learned in this hands-on race to the finish.”
“Cluster computing has arrived and is now an important part of the computing science curriculum at leading universities,” said Brent Gorda, General Manager of the High Performance Data Division at Intel and originator of the competition. “The participants are the future rock stars of HPC. By showcasing the work of these students, we are seeding the computing community with new talent.”
The Student Cluster Competition is part of SC13 HPC Interconnections, which provides programs for everyone interested in building a stronger HPC community, including students, educators, researchers, international attendees and underrepresented groups. For more information, visit the Student Cluster Competition web page.
About SC13
SC13, sponsored by the ACM (Association for Computing Machinery) and the IEEE Computer Society, offers a complete technical program, programs for students and educators in HPC, and an exhibition that together showcase the many ways high performance computing, networking, storage and analysis lead to advances in scientific discovery, research, education and commerce. This premier international conference includes a globally-attended technical program, workshops, tutorials, a world-class exhibit area, demonstrations and opportunities for hands-on learning.