Computational Modelling Group

Conference  15th December 2014 9 a.m.   University Information Service's Norwich Auditorium, University of Cambridge, Cambridge

UK Many-Core Developer Conference 2014

Web page
http://www.many-core.group.cam.ac.uk/ukmac2014/
Categories
ARCHER, C, C++, CUDA, CUDA Fortran, Emerald, Fortran, FPGA, GPU, GPU-libs, HECToR, HPC, HPCx, Iridis, Jaguar, MPI, Multi-core, OpenACC, OpenCL, OpenMP, Scientific Computing, Software Engineering, Xeon Phi
Submitter
Jess Jones

UKMAC 2014

The UK Many-Core Computing Conference is an informal day of talks spanning the whole landscape of accelerated computing and heterogeneous many-core computing. Topics of interest include high-performance computing, embedded and mobile systems, computational science, finance, computer vision and beyond. The goal of the event is to develop and bring together the UK community of developers, both industrial and academic.

The 2014 event is the 6th in the series. Previous meetings have taken place at the University of Oxford (2009 and 2013), Imperial College (2011), University of Bristol (2012) and in Cambridge in 2010. These meetings regularly attract 100 participants and have proved to be invaluable opportunities to meet colleagues and swap stories of many-core successes and challenges. Venue and Registration

The conference will take place in Cambridge, at the University Information Service's Norwich Auditorium, on Monday 15th December 2014. Information on how to reach the venue is available here.

A conference dinner is planned for the evening prior to the conference, Sunday 14th December, and further details will be available when registration opens on 12th November. Call for Talks

Abstracts, of approximately 1 page in length, should be submitted to the UKMAC2014 EasyChair website.

The deadline for the submission of abstracts is Friday 14th November. UKMAC2014 Programme Committee

Prof Mike Giles (Oxford), Prof Paul Kelly (Imperial), Dr Graham Pullan (Cambridge), Simon McIntosh-Smith (Bristol) Local Organisers

Dr Filippo Spiga, Dr Graham Pullan