rkufrin@ncsa.uiuc.edu (Rick Kufrin) (06/26/91)
The Connection Machine Application Workshop October 28-November 1, 1991 The Connection Machine Application Workshop will examine three applications domains: computational fluid dynamics, artificial neural nets, and molecular dynamics. Its purpose is to help participants gain a greater understanding for using the Connection Machine. The Connection Machine Application Workshop is designed along two tracks: % applications and algorithms % performance programming techniques At this one-week workshop, researchers will learn methods to improve their performance on the Connection Machine and attend presentations by scientists and researchers about the development of algorithms and moving applications to the Connection Machine. Participants will be encouraged to contribute codes to NCSA's Connection Machine code library for further distribution and enhancements. The Connection Machine Application Workshop will take place October 28-November 1, 1991 at the National Center for Supercomputing Applications, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Travel, lodging, some meals, and workshop expenses may be provided. The workshop is intended for key members of research groups that are developing codes for the Connection Machine. Participants must have programming experience with the Connection Machine. ===================== To apply for the workshop, a proposal must be received by July 31, 1991. Include a self-addressed stamped postcard if you would like an acknowledgement that your proposal has been received. Late proposals will not be considered. Enrollment is limited to 20 participants. Notification of acceptance will be mailed on Thursday, August 15, 1991. Your proposal must include the following: 1. Your name, affiliation, mailing address, email address, telephone number, and fax number. Please indicate if financial support is needed for participation in the workshop. 2. Describe your current position. 3. Describe your field of research. In an abstract of about 100 words, give information about the problems you address and the methodology you use. If possible, provide a measure of performance for the application or kernel. 4. Describe the stage of development of this project (design, prototyping, implementation), whether or not a user interface or documentation exists, and the programming languages and support libraries you use. 5. Describe the availability of the application or algorithm to the national computational community. 6. List articles, technical reports, conference papers, or any other published material concerning the development of the application. If possible, include reprints or copies of the above articles with your proposal. 7. Indicate the CM site where the development took place; include the minimum hardware requirements (number of processors, memory, floating point, DataVault, and framebuffer). 8. Send proposals to: Michael Welge National Center for Supercomputing Applications 4147 Beckman Institute 405 North Mathews Avenue Urbana, IL 61801 Phone: (217) 244-1999 -- =========================== MODERATOR ============================== Steve Stevenson {steve,fpst}@hubcap.clemson.edu Department of Computer Science, comp.parallel Clemson University, Clemson, SC 29634-1906 (803)656-5880.mabell