Open & High-Performance Computing by Hugh Blemings
Explore open hardware for embedded and general-purpose applications with low to medium compute capabilities. ๐

linux.conf.au
1.3K views โข Jan 16, 2020

About this video
Hugh Blemings
https://lca2020.linux.org.au/schedule/presentation/60/
Open hardware for embedded and general purpose applications with low to medium compute performance requirements has become almost commonplace, a response to a growing understanding of the need for solutions that embrace librรฉ principles.
Open hardware for server class/high performance computing requirements is a relatively new concept but is, appropriately, becoming an area of focus for data centres, supercomputers, and security conscious workstation/end users alike. Contributors to the OpenPOWER project have been working together to create an open ecosystem based around the POWER Instruction Set Architecture that enables truly open -and- high performance compute solutions.
The resultant systems extend from high performance embedded systems, desktop workstations up to the worlds fastest supercomputers and have an entirely open software stack - firmware to remote management to hypervisor to OS to applications. Many of the systems have hardware that is likewise entirely open source at the schematic, PCB and, increasingly component level.
Put colloquially: OpenPOWER systems are the only commodity high performance systems out there that donโt have any funny hidden management engines, or binary blobs of executable code in their firmware. Some even ship with a recovery DVD that in addition to the full source code for everything running on the machine, include the schematics and other technical drawings too.
This session will explain the importance of open hardware and software at all levels of the compute environment - embedded/IoT to desktop to hyperscale systems. From here a brief introduction to OpenPOWER and the OpenPOWER Foundation as well as an update on the ecosystem, the status of the hardware and software stacks in question as well as an overview of some of the OpenPOWER hardware out there. There will be at least one system of great interest to LCA attendees that will have it's Oceania debut at this talk.
This will be a technical/community/ecosystem talk, not a โsales pitchโ :)
linux.conf.au is a conference about the Linux operating system, and all aspects of the thriving ecosystem of Free and Open Source Software that has grown up around it. Run since 1999, in a different Australian or New Zealand city each year, by a team of local volunteers, LCA invites more than 500 people to learn from the people who shape the future of Open Source. For more information on the conference see https://linux.conf.au/
Produced by NDV: https://youtube.com/channel/UCQ7dFBzZGlBvtU2hCecsBBg?sub_confirmation=1
#linux.conf.au #linux #foss #opensource
Wed Jan 15 16:40:00 2020 at Room 5
https://lca2020.linux.org.au/schedule/presentation/60/
Open hardware for embedded and general purpose applications with low to medium compute performance requirements has become almost commonplace, a response to a growing understanding of the need for solutions that embrace librรฉ principles.
Open hardware for server class/high performance computing requirements is a relatively new concept but is, appropriately, becoming an area of focus for data centres, supercomputers, and security conscious workstation/end users alike. Contributors to the OpenPOWER project have been working together to create an open ecosystem based around the POWER Instruction Set Architecture that enables truly open -and- high performance compute solutions.
The resultant systems extend from high performance embedded systems, desktop workstations up to the worlds fastest supercomputers and have an entirely open software stack - firmware to remote management to hypervisor to OS to applications. Many of the systems have hardware that is likewise entirely open source at the schematic, PCB and, increasingly component level.
Put colloquially: OpenPOWER systems are the only commodity high performance systems out there that donโt have any funny hidden management engines, or binary blobs of executable code in their firmware. Some even ship with a recovery DVD that in addition to the full source code for everything running on the machine, include the schematics and other technical drawings too.
This session will explain the importance of open hardware and software at all levels of the compute environment - embedded/IoT to desktop to hyperscale systems. From here a brief introduction to OpenPOWER and the OpenPOWER Foundation as well as an update on the ecosystem, the status of the hardware and software stacks in question as well as an overview of some of the OpenPOWER hardware out there. There will be at least one system of great interest to LCA attendees that will have it's Oceania debut at this talk.
This will be a technical/community/ecosystem talk, not a โsales pitchโ :)
linux.conf.au is a conference about the Linux operating system, and all aspects of the thriving ecosystem of Free and Open Source Software that has grown up around it. Run since 1999, in a different Australian or New Zealand city each year, by a team of local volunteers, LCA invites more than 500 people to learn from the people who shape the future of Open Source. For more information on the conference see https://linux.conf.au/
Produced by NDV: https://youtube.com/channel/UCQ7dFBzZGlBvtU2hCecsBBg?sub_confirmation=1
#linux.conf.au #linux #foss #opensource
Wed Jan 15 16:40:00 2020 at Room 5
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Views
1.3K
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15
Duration
46:46
Published
Jan 16, 2020
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