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 2nd International Workshop on Energy Efficient Supercomputing
 (E2SC)
Nov. 16th, 2014
						
							
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											Held in conjunction with;SC14:  The International Conference for High Performance Computing, Networking, Storage and Analysis
 New Orleans, Louisiana, USA
 November 16 - 21, 2014
 
 
 |  Description
 
					With Exascale systems on the horizon, we have ushered in an era with power and 
					energy consumption as the primary concerns for scalable computing. To achieve 
					viable high performance computing, revolutionary methods are required with a 
					stronger integration among hardware features, system software and 
					applications. Equally important are the capabilities for fine-grained spatial 
					and temporal measurement and control to facilitate energy efficient 
					computing accross alllayers. Current approaches for energy efficient computing rely heavily on 
					power efficient hardware in isolation. However, it is pivotal for hardware to 
					expose mechanisms for energy efficiency to optimize power and energy 
					consumption for various workloads. At the same time, high fidelity measurement 
					techniques, typically ignored in data-center level measurement, are of high 
					importance for scalable and energy efficient inter-play in different layers 
					of application, system software and hardware.
					 
					This workshop seeks to address the important energy efficiency aspects in the 
					HPC community that have not been previously addressed by aspects covered in 
					the data center or cloud computing communities. Emphasis is given to the 
					applications view related to significant energy efficiency improvements and 
					to the required hardware/software stack that must include necessary power and 
					performance measurement and analysis harnesses.  
					 
					Current tools are often limited by hardware capabilities and their lack of 
					information about the characteristics of a given workload/application. In the 
					same manner, hardware techniques, like dynamic voltage frequency scaling, are 
					often limited by their granularity (very coarse power management) or by their 
					scope (a very limited system view). More rapid realization of energy savings 
					will require significant increases in measurement resolution and optimization 
					techniques.  Moreover, the interplay between performance, power and 
					reliability add another layer of complexity to this already difficult group 
					of challenges.
					 
 DATES AND DEADLINES
						          Paper Submission:           August 24, 2014August 29, 2014Author Notification:          September 30, 2014
 Camera-Ready Copy:        October 10, 2014
 
  
 
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