Archive for March, 2009

The TeraGrid is Transforming Research

teraIt’s easy to forget that Pittsburgh is home to the Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center (PSC). This is one of the most powerful assets in the world and we have it right here in our own backyard. I’m telling you, other tech centers are green with envy. The PSC sent this interesting wrap up of  the American Physical Society Meeting last week. It’s a bit long, but well worth the read. Check it out:

“High-performance computing is transforming physics research,” said Ralph Roskies, co-scientific director of the Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center (PSC), during a presentation at the American Physical Society Meeting, held in Pittsburgh, March 16-20.

“The Impact of NSF’s TeraGrid on Physics Research” was the topic of his talk, which led off a panel of physicists who have made major strides in their work through the TeraGrid, the National Science Foundation’s cyberinfrastructure program. “These world-class facilities,” said Roskies, “on a much larger scale than ever before, present major new opportunities for physics researchers to carry out computations that would have been infeasible just a few years ago.”

To an audience of about 50, he emphasized that users do not pay to use the TeraGrid. The resources are provided by NSF and made available to researchers who write a proposal, which is reviewed by a committee drawn from the user community as a whole. While proposals often aren’t granted their full request of computational time, said Roskies, almost every proposal gets some access to TeraGrid, and it’s free.

He briefly explained how TeraGrid, a rich aggregation of diverse resources at multiple sites, nevertheless provides users with an integrated view — a single sign-on, single application form, single ticket system, coordinated user support, and simplified data movement that makes data sharing easy.

Roskies touched on TeraGrid’s diversity of resources, which now includes two powerful distributed-memory systems, Ranger at the Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC) and Kraken at National Institute of Computational Science (NICS), University of Tennessee, each comprising more than 60,000 cores and providing capability in excess of 500 teraflops, with Kraken scheduled to go over a petaflop later this year. Shared-memory resources at the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA), University of Illinois, Champaign, Urbana (UIUC) and at PSC complement these systems, with tightly coupled clusters at several sites and a Condor pool at Purdue University that facilitates loosely coupled computations.  Major resources on the way include a large shared-memory system at PSC, and Blue Waters, a 10-petaflop system at NCSA that will be available in 2011.

Before ceding the floor to four physicists whose work spans a range of physics domains — materials science (Axel Kohlmeyer, University of Pennsylvania); astrophysics (Tiziana Di Matteo, Carnegie Mellon University); quantum phenomena (Steven G. Johnson, MIT); and biophysics (Aleksei Aksimentiev, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign) — Roskies highlighted several other examples of physics research on which the TeraGrid has had significant impact.

Simulations in quantum chromodynamics have used large allocations at several TeraGrid resource-provider sites, said Roskies, to study implications of the “standard model” of particle physics. Such simulations, he noted, are the only way to identify the experimental consequences of the theory. The computational complexity grows as one needs ever-smaller spacing on the lattices employed in the calculations (to approximate the continuum), larger lattices to encompass more space, and convergence with respect to quark masses, which are very small and still require extrapolations to compare physical and theoretical values.  “Moreover, once you put in virtual quarks,” said Roskies, “the agreement between theory and experiment is wonderful, giving a lot of confidence that the simulations capture the essential physics.”  Nevertheless, even with continual algorithmic improvements, virtual quarks greatly complicate the computations.

The results of these lattice computations, noted Roskies, are stored in an internationally agreed-upon format, so that physicists worldwide get the benefit of TeraGrid’s contribution in this field.

In astrophysics, Roskies cited Mike Norman’s group at the University of California, San Diego. The goal of their simulations is to evolve the cosmos from initial conditions and capture the physics of how very small spatial inhomogeneities (one part in 100,000) 380,000 years after the Big Bang get transformed by gravity into the severe inhomogeneities of today — galaxies, stars and voids. Uniform meshes aren’t adequate to the task, and Norman’s team has used sophisticated adaptive-mesh techniques (seven levels of mesh refinement) to zoom in on dense regions where key physical processes occur. Because of the extreme challenges of load balancing, TeraGrid’s mix of large shared-memory — for initial conditions and data analysis — and powerful distributed memory systems, with fast data movement among systems and to storage, is essential. TeraGrid staff, said Roskies, has helped with major improvements in code efficiencies and visualization tools. 

In materials science, Roskies described the TeraGrid’s NanoHUB Science Gateway developed at Purdue (in work led by Gerhard Klimeck), which provides an interface that non-experts can use for a set of modeling and simulation tools to address challenges of designing nanoscale components. In 2008, NanoHUB had more than 6,200 users, who ran more than 300,000 simulations, and supported 44 university classes.

In biophysics, Roskies described work by Klaus Schulten’s group at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign on aquaporin, explaining how this channel protein — ubiquitous in the body — conducts large volumes of water through cell walls while, at the same time, filtering out charged particles such as hydrogen ions (protons). Roskies showed a clip from Schulten’s animation, which was cited by the 2003 Nobel chemistry prize to Peter Agre for the structure of aquaporins, work that provided the starting place of Schulten’s simulations. This kind of simulation, molecular dynamics, noted Roskies, makes it possible to start from a known protein structure and see how that structure implies function.

Breaking down 2008 TeraGrid-enabled research by discipline, Roskies observed, shows that physics, including materials and astronomical sciences, comprised 39-percent of all usage.  Add chemistry, and research in the physical sciences accounted for 52-percent of TeraGrid usage.

He cited rapid growth in TeraGrid usage — from 80-million to 300-million units in one year — with a near 50-percent increase in quantity of users, and he mentioned TeraGrid’s extensive training programs and its Campus Champions program, which facilitate access by entry-level computational researchers. “It’s free,” he iterated, “and we’ll even help you with coding and optimization. Think about problems you want to solve and talk to us. Don’t be constrained by what appears possible today.”

“Blue, Gold and Green” Festival Planned for Next Week

festival1Hey, Spring’s in the air — sort of. It was pretty chilly this morning, but it’s time to be thinking about the great outdoors and sustainability and all that good stuff. Seems like we’re over due for a festival of some kind. So check this out:

The public’s embrace of sustainability in recent years has delighted the environmentally conscious, but green ideas in action can seem elusive in day-to-day life. To spotlight sustainable lifestyles and innovations in Pittsburgh, the University of Pittsburgh will showcase the businesses, artists, and thinkers that help bring green to fruition with the “Blue, Gold, and Green” sustainability festival to be held April 9 at the William Pitt Student Union at Bigelow Blvd. and Fifth Ave., Oakland, and in nearby Schenley Plaza.
 
The festival features local artists and food vendors, live music, and expositions by companies actively reducing the human footprint. Speakers from local organizations and government such as Pittsburgh “bike czar” Stephen Patchan and Mayor Luke Ravenstahl will join Pitt Chancellor Mark A. Nordenberg in exploring large-scale efforts to shape Pittsburgh’s environmental awareness.

Students, staff, and faculty members from local universities will create art from trash, exhibit biofueled cars, and build bicycles for underprivileged children, among other activities. A full schedule and event details are available on the festival Web site at www.bluegoldandgreen.pitt.edu

Mobile Workforce Solution Enables Pittsburgh’s Attack on Blight

Using hand-held computers and software developed by B-Three Solutions, Pittsburgh’s building inspectors will be moving out of their central office and working from offices in the city’s six neighborhood police stations.  A pilot version of this plan began March 17 at the Zone 5 police station on Washington Boulevard.  The Bureau of Building Inspections (BBI) intends to scale up the program as the year goes along.

In a March 17 press release, Mayor Luke Ravenstahl explained, “The purpose of this initiative is two-fold:  to increase public safety by creating a direct line of communication between the Police Bureau and BBI, and to provide the community with better access to BBI personnel.  The Zone 5 neighborhood BBI office will make this neighborhood cleaner and safer and help our police prevent crime.”

In September 2008, Mayor Luke Ravenstahl demonstrated the new technology at a media event in Bloomfield.  Calling the City’s 311 Response Line, the Mayor reported an apparent violation.  Within seconds, the complaint appeared on the BBI inspector’s handheld device.  From the field, the inspector could then check on the violation, retrieve ownership information from the City’s property database, and transmit a completed report back to BBI headquarters.  This mobile workforce solution from B-Three cuts the processing time on violations from four days to one.

Read more right here.

Pittsburgh Tech News Hot Off the Grill

Hey yinz guys, it’s Friday! Everyone’s favorite day of the week. And at Techburgher, time for a smattering of news nuggest from around Pittsburgh’s tech industry. Here it is, hot off the grill:

Cellumen Appoints Dr. Jack A. Reynolds to its Board of Directors

Cellumen, Inc., a discovery toxicology company, announced that industry veteran and former Pfizer executive Dr. Jack A. Reynolds has joined Cellumen’s board of directors. With more than 30 years of experience in the pharmaceutical industry, Dr. Reynolds is founder and Principal at JAReynolds & Associates, which is focused on defining new paradigms for improving safety testing and decision making in the pharmaceutical industry.

NeuroKinetics to Release Latest Version of VEST

NeuroKinetics (NKI) , manufacturers of noninvasive medical evaluation equipment used worldwide for balance, vestibular and neurological disorder tests, said today that it will release version 6.7 of its proprietary VEST™ control and analysis software at the upcoming Audiology Now! 2009 – the annual conference of the American Academy of Audiology to be held next month in Dallas. Get more details here.

ANSYS NAMED TO CRO’S 100 BEST CORPORATE CITIZENS LIST; EXPANDS HPC CAPACITY FOR ENHANCED R&D

 ANSYS, Inc., a global innovator of simulation software and technologies designed to optimize product development processes, was named one of the “100 Best Corporate Citizens®” by CRO (Corporate Responsibility Officer). The 2009 ranking analyzes the efforts of companies on the Russell 1000® index in bringing shareholders more value and making employees proud. ANSYS was one of only two engineering simulation organizations that made the list.

Also, ANSYS announced the addition of large-scale high-performance computing (HPC) systems from HP that will enhance the company’s software research and development efforts. The new HP solution expands the organization’s computing capacity and is key to ensuring the continued leadership position of ANSYS in engineering software for HPC scalability.

GSP CONSULTING LAUNCHES NEWLY DESIGNED WEBSITE

GSP Consulting launched their newly constructed website this week, www.gspconsulting.com. The modernized website was designed by Pittsburgh-based Zoltun Design. The expanded site provides easier navigation by establishing separated areas of locations, professionals, practice areas and service offerings. Other updated areas on the website include downloadable literature and reports, news features, press releases and upcoming events. Additionally, a more contemporary color scheme of blue and gray that incorporates GSP’s current brand identity enhances the new site’s appearance.

AlphaLab is Accepting Applications for the Summer/Fall 2009 Session

Have an idea for a software, entertainment technology and Internet-related company? Maybe you’re just getting that company off the ground and need a little help and resources moving it forward. There’s an excellent place to help you. It’s the AlphaLab.

AlphaLab is now accepting applications for its Summer/Fall 2009 session that officially starts on June 15th, 2009! Here are some important changes to note for this new application cycle: 

- The lab is  introducing an Early Action portion to the application period where applicants can be apply and be accepted early for the AlphaLab program.

- Early Action applicants will be invited to a meet-n-greet event with AlphaLab staff where they can interact and ask questions.

- Early Action candidates that are accepted to AlphaLab will be able to get an early start on working on their companies and have early access to AlphaLab resources.

- If an applicant is not accepted as part of AlphaLab Early Action, they will still be considered as part of the general application period.

-The Early Access deadline is April 17th, 2009. The general application deadline is May 15th, 2009. For more information about the application process (including Early Action) and to access the AlphaLab application, visit: http://www.alphalab.org.

AlphaLab is a catalyst for launching the next generation of software, entertainment technology and Internet-related companies. Created by Innovation Works, one of the nation’s most active seed-stage investors, AlphaLab provides funding, free office space, expert business advisors and services through an intensive program in Pittsburgh. AlphaLab helps companies rapidly develop their technology, gain user feedback from early product releases, develop go-to-market strategies, and move toward successful commercial launch.

ReGear Closes Series A Funding Deal!

regearReGear Life Sciences, makers of the ReBound™ Therapeutic Warming System, a revolutionary form of radio-frequency (RF) diathermy, closed a $2.5M Series A financing round following a $1M investment by Stonewood Capital Management, Inc.

“Given the current condition of the financial markets and the economy we are fortunate to have been able to attract such a great group of angel investors and close out the round with an investor as respected as Stonewood,” said James (Chip) Hanlon, ReGear’s President and CEO.  “Participation by such a group of sophisticated investors is a testament to the potential of our products, the strength of our target markets and the abilities of our team.” 

ReGear received its early financial backing from the Pittsburgh Life Sciences Greenhouse and Innovation Works, opened the A round in July of 2008, and began realizing revenue late in the fourth quarter of 2008.

The funds will be used to drive growth and further expansion into the global sports medicine, physical medicine, rehabilitation, and chiropractic markets, and develop products for the home care markets.  ReBound is rapidly gaining acceptance and is currently under evaluation by many major professional sports, physical therapy and rehabilitation organizations. ReBound is also being distributed by Game Ready, an industry leader in cold and compression products through a strategic alliance.

“We are delighted to be an investor in ReGear,” said Stonewood Managing Director John Tippins, who has joined ReGear’s board of directors.  ”The market for pain management products is growing every day due to the aging of the baby boomers.  ReGear’s diathermy technology has shown great promise in relieving pain and improving quality of life and the company is perfectly positioned to provide future therapeutic products into its target markets.”

ReBound is a compact, portable, and simple-to-use therapeutic warming system that utilizes patented ReGear Diathermy™ technology. ReBound can be used to treat virtually any condition for which thermotherapy is indicated, including muscle spasms, joint contractures and pain associated with a variety of conditions such as osteoarthritis, soft tissue injuries, back disorders and more.  No other method of thermotherapy targets deep tissue or provides sustained therapeutic warming over a broad targeted region as effectively as ReBound.

Tune In to TechVibe Radio 1360 AM Today from 3-6 PM

Don’t miss a second of TechVibe Radio on 1360 AM today from 3-6 p.m. as hosts Jonathan Kersting and Audrey Russo interview business folks, professionals, entrepreneurs and pretty much anyone else in between those technology cracks. Today, they’ll be interviewing:

 

- Domenic Verdini of Corporate Performance Services

- Chris Simchick and Scott Barnyak of SDLC Partners

- Dennis Gilfoyle of Junior Achievement

- Andy Masich of the Heinz History Center

- Abbie Lundberg Former Editor of CIO Magazine

Tune in our stream it from Pittsburgh Business Radio or Talkshoe.com (search for “Pittsburgh Business Radio”).

4INFO and Songwhale Partner to Expand Distribution of Mobile Entertainment Media

The folks at Songwale are finding some serious success since they set up a Pittsburgh office over the past year. They’re working with the Steelers and picking up new business left and right. Check out this exciting news:

 4INFO, a mobile media company and pioneer of SMS (short message service) advertising and publishing services, announced today a partnership with Songwhale, a free entertainment service that delivers premium digital content directly to consumer’s handheld devices. Songwhale allows fans at venues such as concerts and sporting events to receive event-specific content such as interviews, music files or scores on their mobile devices.

Through the partnership, Songwhale expands their portfolio of offerings with SMS powered by 4INFO. Simultaneously, 4INFO will be able to provide its advertising customers a more integrated mobile campaign offering by partnering with Songwhale for its breadth of cutting-edge mobile technologies like Wi-Fi, Bluetooth and direct-to-device consumer outreach.

“Songwhale wanted to expand the reach of our mobile entertainment offerings and we believe SMS is crucial to that growth,” said Songwhale President Ty Morse. “We chose to partner with 4INFO because they offer media expertise, integrated ad serving, and demonstrated success at serving the largest number of text messages in the industry today.”

“We are excited to bring our expertise in SMS message delivery to an exciting and cutting edge mobile multimedia platform such as Songwhale,” said 4INFO’s vice president of business development, Rich Qiu. ”By expanding the reach of their content through 4INFO’s industry leading platform, a new and growing audience will see first hand the meaningful and engaging connections possible with SMS.”

Ignoring Military Leave Laws is Risky Business for Tech Companies and Entrepreneurs

Fox Rothschild is always on the leading edge of technology and entrepreneurial isues. They’ve been regular contributors to Techburgher since we first fired up the grill. Here’s some tight information on how military leave impacts entrepreneurs:

Despite the Obama Administration’s objective to withdraw U.S. troops from Iraq, it appears clear that sizeable deployments of American troops will continue to be stationed in Iraq, Afghanistan and other hot spots for the foreseeable future.

This continued commitment of American military power is taking a toll on technology and entrepreneurial companies, as deployments of employees in the reserves and National Guard units will remain high. As a result, businesses are exposed to greater risks because of their legal obligations to meet those servicemembers’ employment rights upon their return. The balancing act between the needs of employers and the rights of uniformed personnel returning from service is tricky at best, and at worst can lead to fines and other penalties for businesses that ignore the law. Read more about this issue right here.

Ye Old Technology News Round Up!

All kinds of things are cooking here at the Techburgher. It’s time to see what didn’t make it on the grill earlier this week, and here we have our Friday sepcial of hot news nuggets ready for your enjoyment.

Jeff McGraw of The Callos Companies Nominated to Board of Directors of International Recruiting Network

Jeff McGraw, vice president for the Pennsylvania Region of The Callos Companies, has been nominated for a two-year term on the board of directors of NPA, The Worldwide Recruiting Network. NPA  is a member-owned split placement network of independent recruiters on six continents. Officers and directors are elected by the membership; each director also owns and operates a member recruiting firm. Jeff will join other directors from around the world to provide leadership and direction to NPA.

i-Squared Announces a New Performance Measurement Tool for SharePoint
i-Squared Inc., a Pittsburgh based consultancy specializing in Enterprise Content Management (ECM) released a new performance measurement tool called the Collaboration Performance Report or “CPR Report” for SharePoint sites.

“SharePoint has two distinct design components, a Technical Architecture and an Information Architecture. Most SharePoint assessments focus on the technology but fail to measure the key Information Architecture factors critical to SharePoint’s success – leaving them very much in need of CPR” (pun intended).

“We’ve developed a methodology that analyizes the key (and often overlooked) Information Architecture components. We measure and rank success factors like, budget vs. objectives, adherence to strategy, cross-department governance, content structure, taxonomy and metadata design, and many other factors. The results are delivered in an Executive report we call the “CPR Report”, said Joyce Query, President of i-Squared.

Carnegie Mellon’s Manuela Veloso Wins Autonomous Agents Research Award
Manuela M. Veloso, a professor of computer science at Carnegie Mellon University who studies how robots can learn, plan and work together to accomplish tasks, is the winner of the 2009 Autonomous Agents Research Award from the Association for Computing Machinery’s Special Interest Group on Artificial Intelligence (ACM/SIGART).

The award, presented annually in collaboration with the International Conference on Autonomous Agents, recognizes researchers who are doing influential work in the area of autonomous agents — robots, software agents or any other system that can sense its environment and act on that information in pursuit of its own goals.

Veloso, who holds the Herbert A. Simon Chair in Computer Science, is known for her research in artificial intelligence and robotics, and her pioneering work on robot soccer, which has emerged as an important research tool for studying how autonomous agents can work cooperatively in complex, uncertain environments. She is president of the International RoboCup Federation, which sponsors annual world championships in robot soccer. She and her students have fielded RoboCup teams since 1997, and have been international champions several times.

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