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Difference between revisions of "More computing resources"

From Montana Tech High Performance Computing

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== CISL/NCAR ==
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== NCAR/CISL ==
CISL, The Computational and Information Systems Laboratory, and NCAR, National Center for Atmospheric Research offer computing resources[https://www2.cisl.ucar.edu/user-support/allocations] to university researchers with some restrictions:
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NCAR, National Center for Atmospheric Research through CISL, The Computational and Information Systems Laboratory, offers computing resources[https://www2.cisl.ucar.edu/user-support/allocations] to university researchers with some restrictions:
 
*The work must be within the atmospheric, climate, and related science
 
*The work must be within the atmospheric, climate, and related science
 
*Allocations must either be supported by an NSF reward; or to a grad student, post-doc or new faculty without a funded science award
 
*Allocations must either be supported by an NSF reward; or to a grad student, post-doc or new faculty without a funded science award

Revision as of 13:28, 16 January 2018

XSEDE

Funded by NSF, XSEDE[1] stands for The Extreme Science and Engineering Discovery Environment. Per its website, "XSEDE is a single virtual system that scientists can use to interactively share computing resources, data and expertise."

"The XSEDE ecosystem encompasses a broad portfolio of resources operated by members of the XSEDE Service Provider Forum. These resources include multi-core and many-core high-performance computing (HPC) systems, distributed high-throughput computing (HTC) environments, visualization and data analysis systems, large-memory systems, data storage, and cloud systems. "

If you need additional computing resources, you can apply allocations on the XSEDE systems. Montana Tech has also joined the XSEDE's Campus Champions Program[2]. You can test your project on XSEDE through our campus champion allocation.


NCAR/CISL

NCAR, National Center for Atmospheric Research through CISL, The Computational and Information Systems Laboratory, offers computing resources[3] to university researchers with some restrictions:

  • The work must be within the atmospheric, climate, and related science
  • Allocations must either be supported by an NSF reward; or to a grad student, post-doc or new faculty without a funded science award