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TechTalks Event

Research Computing and Linux Clusters

with guest expert Kevin Morooney

March 16, 2000

Audio
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Transcript

Why does our expert say that Linux is creeping in everywhere because it "unburdens what are normally the shackles on creativity?" Is Linux creeping into your research org? How does Linux let you repurpose older, otherwise antiquated hardware? Does Linux offer a cost-effective way to achieve general purpose parallel computing cycles with high performance and high reliability? What is Beowulf? Why Linux? Who is trying this? How is it working? Is it hard to do? Should you consider it? How would you get started?

Plan now to send in your questions to expert@cren.net and join our co-hosts on March 16 as they quiz Kevin Morooney about his work regarding "Research Computing and Linux Clusters." We think this is going to be a "hot" session, we're already receiving questions!

Guest Expert

PenguinsKevin Morooney is Director, Graduate Education and Research Services, Center for Academic Computing, Pennsylvania State University where, among other things, he is involved with the work of the Numerically Intensive Computing Group on the Lion-X high speed Linux cluster.

Co-Hosts

Howard Strauss, Manager of Academic Applications at Princeton University, is TechTalk's Technology Anchor.

Co-Host Judith Boettcher is CREN's Executive Director. Together, Howard and Judith will ask the really tough questions—and relay the questions you email to them at expert@cren.net.

Background & Resources

Here are some links to basic Linux resources:

Here are some advanced computational systems resources: Here are annotated links to some very specific resources: If you really want to dig deep and go the full book route, here are a couple of recent books available from Amazon.com: Running Linux by Matt Welsh, Matthias Kalle Dalheimer, Lar Kaufman, and Matthew Welsh; and Beginning Linux Programming (2nd Ed) by Richard Stones and Neil Matthew.