HPRCTA 2008

From OPENRESEARCH fixed Wiki
Revision as of 01:18, 5 October 2021 by Th (talk | contribs) (modified through wikirestore by Th)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search


Event Rating

median worst
Pain2.svg Pain7.svg

List of all ratings can be found at HPRCTA 2008/rating

HPRCTA 2008
Second International Workshop on High-Performance Reconfigurable Computing Technology and Applications
Dates 2008/11/17 (iCal) - 2008/11/17
Homepage: www.ncsa.uiuc.edu/Conferences/HPRCTA08
Location
Location: US/TX/Austin, US/TX, US
Loading map...

Important dates
Submissions: Sep 15, 2008
Notification: Oct 15, 2008
Camera ready due: Nov 1, 2008
Table of Contents


Second International Workshop on High-Performance Reconfigurable Computing Technology and Applications (HPRCTA'08)

Held in conjunction with SC08
Nov. 17, 2008
Austin, TX

High-performance reconfigurable computing (HPRC) based on the combination of conventional microprocessors and field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs) is a rapidly evolving computing paradigm that offers the potential to accelerate computationally intensive scientific applications beyond what is possible on today's HPC systems. The academic community has been actively investigating this technology for the past decade, and the technology has proven itself to be practical for a number of HPC applications. Many HPC vendors are now offering or are planning to offer various HPRC solutions. The goal of this workshop, co-located with SC08, is to provide a forum for academic researchers and industry to discuss the latest trends and developments in the field, and to set a research agenda for the upcoming years on the use of FPGA technology in high-performance computing.

Important dates

Papers due: Sept. 15, 2008 -- firm deadline, cannot be extended!
Notification of acceptance: Oct. 15, 2008
Final camera-ready manuscripts due: Nov. 1, 2008
Workshop: Nov. 17, 2008

Program committee

Volodymyr Kindratenko (workshop co-chair), NCSA
Tarek El-Ghazawi (workshop co-chair), George Washington University
Dave Bennett, Xilinx
Duncan Buell, University of South Carolina
Roger Chamberlain, Washington University
Katherine Compton, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Aravind Dasu, Utah State
Matthias Fouquet-Lapar, SGI
Kris Gaj, George Mason University
Alan D. George, University of Florida
Maya Gokhale, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
Martin Herbordt, Boston University
Stefan Möhl, Mitrionics
Mark Parsons, Edinburgh Parallel Computing Centre
David Pellerin, Impulse
Gregory Peterson, University of Tennessee
Craig Petrie, Nallatech
Dan Poznanovic, SRC Computers
Melissa C. Smith, Clemson University
Eric Stahlberg, OpenFPGA
Craig Steffen, NCSA
Olaf Storaasli, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Dave Strenski, Cray
Tom VanCourt, Altera
	

This CfP was obtained from WikiCFP