In the first week of January 2014 Dagstuhl hosted a Perspectives Workshop on "Connecting Performance Analysis and Visualization to Advance Extreme Scale Computing". The event brought together two previously separate communities - from Visualization and HPC Performance Analysis - to discuss a long term joined research agenda. The goal was to identify and address the challenges in using visual representations to understand and optimize the performance of extreme-scale applications running on today\u27s most powerful computing systems like climate modeling, combustion, material science or astro-physics simulations
For more than a decade single compute core performance is no longer doubling every 18-24months. Phys...
Abstract—This work focuses on tools for investigating algorithm performance at extreme scale with mi...
This report documents the program and the outcomes of Dagstuhl Perspectives Workshop 15342 "Power-Bo...
In the first week of January 2014 Schloss Dagstuhl hosted a Perspectives Workshop on “ConnectingPerf...
In the first week of January 2014 Dagstuhl hosted a Perspectives Workshop on “Connecting Per-formanc...
This Dagstuhl Seminar represented a unique opportunity to bring together international experts from ...
A key trend facing extreme-scale computational science is the widening gap between computational and...
From May 2nd to May 7th, 2010, the Dagstuhl Seminar 10181 ``Program Development for Extreme-Scale Co...
In situ visualization, i.e., visualizing simulation data as it is generated, is an emerging processi...
High performance computing has become accepted as a tool that can be used to solve many large scale ...
We present the results of a series of experiments studying how visualization software scales to mass...
Computational science is well established as the third pillar of scientific discovery and is on par ...
During the past ten years, performance data visualization techniques have evolved from static, twodi...
Exascale supercomputing will embody many revolutionary changes in the hardware and software of high-...
We present the results of a series of experiments studying how visualization software scales to mass...
For more than a decade single compute core performance is no longer doubling every 18-24months. Phys...
Abstract—This work focuses on tools for investigating algorithm performance at extreme scale with mi...
This report documents the program and the outcomes of Dagstuhl Perspectives Workshop 15342 "Power-Bo...
In the first week of January 2014 Schloss Dagstuhl hosted a Perspectives Workshop on “ConnectingPerf...
In the first week of January 2014 Dagstuhl hosted a Perspectives Workshop on “Connecting Per-formanc...
This Dagstuhl Seminar represented a unique opportunity to bring together international experts from ...
A key trend facing extreme-scale computational science is the widening gap between computational and...
From May 2nd to May 7th, 2010, the Dagstuhl Seminar 10181 ``Program Development for Extreme-Scale Co...
In situ visualization, i.e., visualizing simulation data as it is generated, is an emerging processi...
High performance computing has become accepted as a tool that can be used to solve many large scale ...
We present the results of a series of experiments studying how visualization software scales to mass...
Computational science is well established as the third pillar of scientific discovery and is on par ...
During the past ten years, performance data visualization techniques have evolved from static, twodi...
Exascale supercomputing will embody many revolutionary changes in the hardware and software of high-...
We present the results of a series of experiments studying how visualization software scales to mass...
For more than a decade single compute core performance is no longer doubling every 18-24months. Phys...
Abstract—This work focuses on tools for investigating algorithm performance at extreme scale with mi...
This report documents the program and the outcomes of Dagstuhl Perspectives Workshop 15342 "Power-Bo...