NVIDIA Corporation (Nasdaq: NVDA), the worldwide leader in visual
computing technologies, and the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
(UIUC) today announced that UIUC has been named as the world's first CUDA
Center of Excellence. In addition to the appointment, NVIDIA has donated
$500,000 to UIUC for the development of parallel computing facilities and
the continuation of its research programs.
"The CUDA Center of Excellence program rewards schools that truly
embrace the concept of parallel processing as the future of computing,"
said Dr. David Kirk, chief scientist at NVIDIA. "Schools receiving this
accreditation integrate the CUDA software environment into their curriculum
to help their students harness the capabilities of these new parallel
processing architectures. As one of the country's leading schools in this
field, I am personally delighted to appoint UIUC as our first CUDA Center
of Excellence."
The Theoretical and Computational Biophysics Group at UIUC was one of
the first research groups to leverage the parallel architecture of the GPU
to accelerate their research in the field of computational biophysics. They
have successfully accelerated NAMD/VMD -- a popular parallel molecular
dynamics application that analyzes large biomolecular systems. It is hoped
that this donation will aid this group, and others at the university, to
further their work and speed them down the path to great discovery.
"We're very excited to partner with NVIDIA and anticipate that together
we will achieve breakthroughs in biomedicine, leading to a better
understanding of disease and more effective treatments," said Klaus
Schulten, Swanlund Professor of Physics and director of the Theoretical and
Computational Biophysics Group at Illinois (http://www.ks.uiuc.edu). "This
generous gift will be a great stimulus for Illinois' team of outstanding
young programmers. It will help to extend their ranks and equip them with
the necessary tools to advance computing in decades to come."
Universities wishing to become CUDA Centers of Excellence must teach a
CUDA(TM) class and use CUDA technology in their research, usually across
several labs. In return, NVIDIA supports the school through funding and
equipment donations, including help to set up a GPU computing cluster. The
appointment of UIUC follows on from the donation last year of 32 QuadroPlex
model 4 systems, containing 64 GPUs for a 16-node CUDA technology cluster.
The Principal Investigator of the first CUDA Center of Excellence is
Prof. Wen-mei Hwu, Sanders-AMD Endowed Chair in Electrical & Computer
Engineering at Illinois. Prior to this appointment, Prof. Hwu and Dr. Kirk
collaborated to teach one of the nation's first courses for advanced
students in massively parallel processing. According to Hwu, "Future
increases in computational performance are directly rooted in massively
parallel hardware such as many-core GPUs. The biggest challenge today is in
parallelizing code to take advantage of the hardware most successfully.
NVidia's groundbreaking CUDA solution is a significant step in this
direction. We are very proud to host the first CUDA Center of Excellence at
Illinois and to be able to partner with an industry leader like NVidia as
we move forward."
NVIDIA(R) CUDA technology is an award-winning C-compiler and software
development kit (SDK) for developing computing applications on graphics
processing units (GPUs).
NVIDIA
NVIDIA (Nasdaq: NVDA) is the world leader in visual computing
technologies and the inventor of the GPU, a high-performance processor
which generates breathtaking, interactive graphics on workstations,
personal computers, game consoles, and mobile devices. NVIDIA serves the
entertainment and consumer market with its GeForce(R) products, the
professional design and visualization market with its Quadro(R) products,
and the high-performance computing market with its Tesla(TM) products.
NVIDIA is headquartered in Santa Clara, California, and has offices
throughout Asia, Europe, and the Americas. NVIDIA's inaugural NVISION 08
conference will be held August 25-27, 2008 in San Jose, California.
The Coordinated Science Laboratory
The Coordinated Science Laboratory at the University of Illinois is one
of the nation's premier, multidisciplinary research laboratories, focusing
on information technology at the crossroads of computing, control and
communications. Created by NASA nearly 60 years ago, CSL continues to
transform society by developing and deploying new technologies in areas
such as defense, medicine, environmental sciences, robotics,
life-enhancement for the disabled and aeronautics.
SOURCE NVIDIA Corporation