Nationality American Name Jack Dongarra | Role University Professor | |
Born July 18, 1950 (age 74) Chicago ( 1950-07-18 ) Citizenship American / United States Institutions University of TennesseeUniversity of New MexicoArgonne National LaboratoryOak Ridge National LaboratoryUniversity of Manchester Thesis Improving the Accuracy of Computed Matrix Eigenvalues (1980) Doctoral students Thara Angskun, Henri Casanova, Zizhong Chen, Camille Coti, Erika Fuentes, Youngbae Kim, Lorie Liebrock, Piotr Luszczek, Antoine Petitet, Jelena Pjesivac-Grbovic, Zhiao Shi, Mohammad Sidani, Fengguang Song, Sathish Vadhiyar, James White, Haihang You Education University of New Mexico (1980), Illinois Institute of Technology (1973), Chicago State University (1972) Books Distributed and Cloud Computin, High Performance Heteroge, Matrix Eigensystem Routines, APPLIED PARALLEL COMPUT, Advanced architecture computers Similar People Kai Hwang, Cleve Moler, Alexey Lastovetsky, Jeff Dean, Simon Peyton Jones |
Professor jack dongarra talks about blas and cuda
Jack J. Dongarra (born July 18, 1950) is an American University Distinguished Professor of Computer Science in the Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Department at the University of Tennessee. He holds the position of a Distinguished Research Staff member in the Computer Science and Mathematics Division at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, and is an Adjunct Professor in the Computer Science Department at Rice University. Dongarra holds the Turing Fellowship in the schools of Computer Science and Mathematics at the University of Manchester. He is a Faculty Fellow at Texas A&M University's Institute for Advanced Study . Dongarra is the founding director of Innovative Computing Laboratory.
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Professor jack dongarra talks about blas and cuda
Education

Dongarra received a Bachelor of Science degree in Mathematics from Chicago State University in 1972 and a Master of Science in Computer Science from the Illinois Institute of Technology in 1973. He received his Doctor of Philosophy in Applied Mathematics from the University of New Mexico in 1980 under the supervision of Cleve Moler. He worked at the Argonne National Laboratory until 1989, becoming a senior scientist.
Research

He specializes in numerical algorithms in linear algebra, parallel computing, the use of advanced computer architectures, programming methodology, and tools for parallel computers. His research includes the development, testing and documentation of high-quality mathematical software. He has contributed to the design and implementation of the following open-source software packages and systems: EISPACK, LINPACK, the BLAS, LAPACK, ScaLAPACK, Netlib, PVM, MPI, NetSolve, TOP500, ATLAS, HPCG and PAPI. With Eric Grosse, he pioneered the open-source distribution of numeric source code via email with netlib. He has published approximately 300 articles, papers, reports and technical memoranda and he is coauthor of several books. He was awarded the IEEE Sid Fernbach Award in 2004 for his contributions in the application of high-performance computers using innovative approaches; in 2008 he was the recipient of the first IEEE Medal of Excellence in Scalable Computing; in 2010 he was the first recipient of the SIAM Special Interest Group on Supercomputing's award for Career Achievement; in 2011 he was the recipient of the IEEE Computer Society Charles Babbage Award; and in 2013 he was the recipient of the ACM/IEEE Ken Kennedy Award for his leadership in designing and promoting standards for mathematical software used to solve numerical problems common to high-performance computing. He is a Fellow of the AAAS, ACM, SIAM, and the IEEE and a foreign member of the Russian Academy of Sciences and a member of the US National Academy of Engineering.