TOPIc AREAS & CONFERENCE
Program
Tutorials
MAY 12
Conference & exhibition
MAY 12-15
Workshops
May 16
KEYNOTES
HIER STEHT EIN KURZER EINLEITUNGSSATZ ZU DEN KEYNOTES …
The three keynote presentations at ISC High Performance are meant to provide the attendees with unique and distinctive moments each conference day. Apart from focusing on HPC, AI and IT, the ISC keynote speakers are
well-recognized individuals with profound knowledge in their area of work.
Conference Keynote & Tuesday Keynote will be announced in early 2024!
WEDNESDAY KEYNOTE
EMERGING CONCEPTS IN SUPERCOMPUTING
Wednesday, May 15 from 5:45 – 6:30 pm
Moderated by Daniel Reed
Rosa M. Badia
Manager of the Workflows and Distributed Computing Research Group, Barcelona Supercomputing Center BSC), Spain
John Shalf
Department Head for Computer Science Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, USA
ROSA M. BADIA
Rosa M. Badia manages the Workflows and Distributed Computing research group at the Barcelona Supercomputing Center (BSC), and she is involved in several notable European projects – AI-Sprint, CALESTIS, ICOS, CEEC CoE, PerMedCoE, and DT-GEO. She is the PI of the EuroHPC eFlows4HPC project. Her current research interest is programming models for complex platforms (from multicore GPUs to Grid/Cloud).
She has published over 200 papers on her research topics at international conferences and journals. She received the Euro-Par Achievement Award 2019 for her contributions to parallel processing, the DonaTIC award, category Academia/Researcher in 2019, and the HPDC Achievement Award 2021 for her innovations in parallel task-based programming models, workflow applications and systems, and leadership in the HPC research community. In 2023, she was nominated as a member of the Institut d’Estudis Catalans.
JOHN SHALF
John Shalf is the Department Head for Computer Science at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. Behind the scenes, Shalf has lent his expertise to lay the groundwork for executing the US government’s exascale ambition since 2009. He also formerly served as the Deputy Director for Hardware Technology on the US Department of Energy (DOE)-led Exascale Computing Project (ECP) before he returned to his department head position at LBNL.
He has co-authored over 100 peer-reviewed publications in parallel computing software and HPC technology, including the widely cited report “The Landscape of Parallel Computing Research: A View from Berkeley” (with David Patterson and others). Before coming to Berkeley Laboratory, John worked at the National Center for Supercomputing Applications and the Max Planck Institute for Gravitation Physics/Albert Einstein Institute (AEI), where he co-created the Cactus Computational Toolkit.