Re: [Beowulf] HPC demo

2020-01-14 Thread Scott Atchley
Yes, we have built a few of them. We have one here, one at AMSE, and one that travels to schools in one of our traveling science trailers. On Tue, Jan 14, 2020 at 10:29 AM John McCulloch wrote: > Hey Scott, I think I saw an exhibit like what you’re describing at the > AMSE when I was on a

Re: [Beowulf] HPC demo

2020-01-14 Thread John McCulloch
Hey Scott, I think I saw an exhibit like what you’re describing at the AMSE when I was on a project in Oak Ridge. Was that it? John McCulloch | PCPC Direct, Ltd. | desk 713-344-0923 From: Scott Atchley Sent: Tuesday, January 14, 2020 7:19 AM To: John McCulloch Cc: beowulf@beowulf.org Subject:

Re: [Beowulf] HPC demo

2020-01-14 Thread John McCulloch
Thank you everyone for the responses; this is a great starting point. The cluster is owned by a customer and it’s their upper management who would like to see a demo. They have asked me to install a few open source packages like Dakota and OpenCV (two GPU nodes) plus some in-house developed

Re: [Beowulf] [External] Re: HPC demo

2020-01-14 Thread Prentice Bisbal via Beowulf
+1 for using a MPI-enabled mandelbrot fractal generator. There should be plenty of examples online you can find with some quick Google searching. -- Prentice On 1/14/20 8:18 AM, Scott Atchley wrote: We still have Tiny Titan even though Titan is gone. It allows

Re: [Beowulf] HPC demo

2020-01-14 Thread Scott Atchley
We still have Tiny Titan even though Titan is gone. It allows users to toggle processors on and off and the display has a mode where the "water" is colored coded by the processor, which has a corresponding light. You can see the frame rate go up as you add processors