Difference between revisions of "NSCI"

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# Increasing the capacity and capability of an enduring national HPC ecosystem by employing a holistic approach that addresses relevant factors such as networking technology, workflow, downward scaling, foundational algorithms and software, accessibility, and workforce development.
 
# Increasing the capacity and capability of an enduring national HPC ecosystem by employing a holistic approach that addresses relevant factors such as networking technology, workflow, downward scaling, foundational algorithms and software, accessibility, and workforce development.
 
# Developing an enduring public-private collaboration to ensure that the benefits of the research and development advances are, to the greatest extent, shared between the United States Government and industrial and academic sectors.
 
# Developing an enduring public-private collaboration to ensure that the benefits of the research and development advances are, to the greatest extent, shared between the United States Government and industrial and academic sectors.
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== 2017 NCSI and ECP Developments ==
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*[https://www.hpcwire.com/2017/05/29/doug-kothe-race-build-exascale-applications/ Exascale Computing Project]
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*[https://www.nextplatform.com/2017/05/23/surprises-2018-doe-budget-supercomputing/ DOE Supercomputing Plan]
  
 
== Executive Branch Announcement ==
 
== Executive Branch Announcement ==

Revision as of 18:09, 5 June 2017

National Strategic Computing Initiative (NCSI)

NSCI Objectives

  1. Accelerating delivery of a capable exascale computing system that integrates hardware and software capability to deliver approximately 100 times the performance of current 10 petaflop systems across a range of applications representing government needs.
  2. Increasing coherence between the technology base used for modeling and simulation and that used for data analytic computing.
  3. Establishing, over the next 15 years, a viable path forward for future HPC systems even after the limits of current semiconductor technology are reached (the “post- Moore’s Law era”).
  4. Increasing the capacity and capability of an enduring national HPC ecosystem by employing a holistic approach that addresses relevant factors such as networking technology, workflow, downward scaling, foundational algorithms and software, accessibility, and workforce development.
  5. Developing an enduring public-private collaboration to ensure that the benefits of the research and development advances are, to the greatest extent, shared between the United States Government and industrial and academic sectors.

2017 NCSI and ECP Developments

Executive Branch Announcement

NCSI Press

See Also