Conference 10th May 2016 9 a.m. Informatics Forum, Edinburgh
7th UK Many-Core Developer Conference
Andrew Richards
Codeplay Software
- Web page
- http://conferences.inf.ed.ac.uk/UKMAC2016/
- Categories
- ARCHER, C, C++, CUDA, CUDA Fortran, Distributed computing, Emerald, Fortran, FPGA, GPU, GPU-libs, HECToR, HPC, HPCx, Iridis, Jaguar, Monte Carlo, MPI, Multi-core, OpenACC, OpenCL, Scientific Computing, Software Engineering, Xeon Phi
- Submitter
- Jess Jones
The UK Many-Core Computing Conference is an informal day of talks spanning the whole landscape of accelerated, heterogeneous and many-core computing. The goal of the event is to develop and bring together the UK community of developers, both industrial and academic. Previous meetings have taken place at the University of Cambridge (2010 and 2014), University of Oxford (2009 and 2013), Imperial College (2011) and the University of Bristol (2012). 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.
Call for Presentations
We would be grateful to receive offers of 30 minute long presentations on all topics of many-core computing including software, hardware and applications from high-performance computing, embedded and mobile systems, computational science, finance, computer vision and beyond.
To offer a presentation please send an abstract describing the presentation to: michel.steuwer@ed.ac.uk.
The deadline for submitting abstracts is Friday the 1st April.
Keynote
The Keynote will be held by Andrew Richards, CEO of Codeplay Software.
Posters
All attendees are welcome to display a poster at the event.
Registration
Details of how to register will be available from the events website shortly.
Local Organisation
Michel Steuwer, School of Informatics, University of Edinburgh
Murray Cole, School of Informatics, University of Edinburgh Alan Gray, EPCC, University of Edinburgh
UKMAC Steering Committee
- Prof. Mike Giles, Mathematical Institute, University of Oxford
- Prof. Paul H J Kelly, Department of Computing, Imperial College London
- Dr. Graham Pullan, Department of Engineering, University of Cambridge
- Simon McIntosh-Smith, Department of Computer Science, University of Bristol