tAdd abstract to brcon2020 post - adamsgaard.dk - my academic webpage
 (HTM) git clone git://src.adamsgaard.dk/adamsgaard.dk
 (DIR) Log
 (DIR) Files
 (DIR) Refs
 (DIR) README
 (DIR) LICENSE
       ---
 (DIR) commit 31178f9f60bb33ba83999c532047ef4cc4ef754e
 (DIR) parent 7e752e7ec175e07d9ee806f65c750773bab7e22f
 (HTM) Author: Anders Damsgaard <anders@adamsgaard.dk>
       Date:   Tue,  2 Jun 2020 11:42:43 +0200
       
       Add abstract to brcon2020 post
       
       Diffstat:
         M pages/005-energy-efficient-program… |      17 ++++++++++++++++-
         M pages/005-energy-efficient-program… |      17 ++++++++++++++++-
       
       2 files changed, 32 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)
       ---
 (DIR) diff --git a/pages/005-energy-efficient-programming.html b/pages/005-energy-efficient-programming.html
       t@@ -22,7 +22,22 @@ href="gopher://bitreich.org/1/scm/sacc">sacc(1)</a>.</p>
        my thougts on scientific software development during the <a
        href="gopher://bitreich.org/1/con/2020">2020 brcon</a>, and how
        consistent use of low-level programming languages can benefit
       -scientific model development and energy efficiency.</a></p>
       +scientific model development and energy efficiency. Full abstract:</a></p>
       +
       +<blockquote>Numerical models are used extensively for simulating
       +complex physical systems including fluid flows, astronomical events,
       +weather, and climate.  Many researchers struggle to bring their
       +model developments from single-computer, interpreted languages to
       +parallel high-performance computing (HPC) systems.  There are
       +initiatives to make interpreted languages such as MATLAB, Python,
       +and Julia feasible for HPC programming.  In this talk I argue that
       +the computational overhead is far costlier than any potential
       +development time saved.  Instead, doing model development in C and
       +unix tools from the start minimizes porting headaches between
       +platforms, reduces energy use on all systems, and ensures reproducibility
       +of results.</blockquote>
       +
       +<p>You can check out the slides and audio here:</p>
        
        <ul>
        <li><a href="https://adamsgaard.dk/pub/energy-efficient-programming.md">slides (markdown)</a></li>
 (DIR) diff --git a/pages/005-energy-efficient-programming.txt b/pages/005-energy-efficient-programming.txt
       t@@ -16,7 +16,22 @@ choice is [6]sacc(1).
        I presented my thougts on scientific software development during
        the [7]2020 brcon, and how consistent use of low-level programming
        languages can benefit scientific model development and energy
       -efficiency.
       +efficiency. Full abstract:
       +
       +    Numerical models are used extensively for simulating complex
       +    physical systems including fluid flows, astronomical events,
       +    weather, and climate.  Many researchers struggle to bring their
       +    model developments from single-computer, interpreted languages to
       +    parallel high-performance computing (HPC) systems.  There are
       +    initiatives to make interpreted languages such as MATLAB, Python,
       +    and Julia feasible for HPC programming.  In this talk I argue that
       +    the computational overhead is far costlier than any potential
       +    development time saved.  Instead, doing model development in C and
       +    unix tools from the start minimizes porting headaches between
       +    platforms, reduces energy use on all systems, and ensures
       +    reproducibility of results.
       +
       +You can check out the slides and audio here:
        
        - [8]slides (markdown)
        - [9]audio (ogg)