Page 1,731«..1020..1,7301,7311,7321,733..1,7401,750..»

Banking Encryption Software Market Report 2022: Growing Partnerships Between Key Players Facilitating Further Expansion – Yahoo Finance UK

Company Logo

Global Banking Encryption Software Market

Global Banking Encryption Software Market

Dublin, Oct. 12, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The "Banking Encryption Software Market Size, Share & Trends Analysis Report by Component, by Deployment, by Enterprise Size, by Function (Cloud Encryption, Folder Encryption), by Region, and Segment Forecasts, 2022-2030" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering.

The global banking encryption software market size is expected to reach USD 5.03 billion by 2030, expanding at a CAGR of 13.0% from 2022 to 2030, according to this study conducted. The growing need for modern security solutions worldwide is anticipated to drive the growth of the industry. In addition, the rising incidences of cyber-attacks also bode well for growth.

Banking encryption software facilitates the confidential exchange of vital data by encrypting the data at the sender's end in a form not readable without a proper authentication key, which is usually in the form of a password. The receiver can use the authentication key to decrypt the data and read it. The strong emphasis banks and other financial institutions are putting on securing data transactions is driving the adoption of banking encryption software.

The growing partnerships among the encryption software providers are expected to drive market growth. For instance, In April 2021, Google Cloud and Broadcom collaborated. This collaboration increased the integration of cloud services into Broadcom's primary software franchises. In this partnership, Broadcom was able to make enterprise operations software and its security suite available on Google Cloud, enabling organizations to encrypt and decrypt data at the column level.

Banking Encryption Software Market Report Highlights

The software segment is expected to dominate the segment over the forecast period. This is due to its offered benefits such as security and privacy protection to the financial institutes

The cloud segment is anticipated to witness the fastest growth over the projection period. The growth of the segment can be attributed to the inexpensive deployment and customization options

The large enterprise segment dominated the market in 2021. Large organizations are adopting encryption solutions to meet the changing security needs owing to the rising incidences of cybercrimes

The cloud encryption segment is anticipated to witness the fastest growth because of its capability to facilitate a cost-effective and scalable encryption model

The Asia Pacific regional market is expected to witness the fastest growth over the projection period due to an increase in demand for encryption software among banks in developing countries in the Asia-Pacific, including China and India, to safeguard and ensure the privacy of data

Story continues

Key Topics Covered:

Chapter 1 Methodology and Scope

Chapter 2 Executive Summary

Chapter 3 Banking Encryption Software Industry Outlook

Chapter 4 Investment Landscape Analysis

Chapter 5 FinTech Industry Highlights

Chapter 6 Banking Encryption Software Component Outlook

Chapter 7 Banking Encryption Software Deployment Outlook

Chapter 8 Banking Encryption Software Enterprise Size Outlook

Chapter 9 Banking Encryption Software Function Outlook

Chapter 10 Banking Encryption Software Regional Outlook

Chapter 11 Competitive Analysis

Chapter 12 Competitive Landscape

Companies Mentioned

Broadcom

ESET North America

IBM Corporation

Intel Corporation

McAfee, LLC

Microsoft

Sophos Ltd.

Thales Group

Trend Micro Incorporated

WinMagic

For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/y97abs

Attachment

Read more:
Banking Encryption Software Market Report 2022: Growing Partnerships Between Key Players Facilitating Further Expansion - Yahoo Finance UK

Read More..

Google To Enable ‘Client-Side Encryption’ In Gmail By 2023 | All You Need To Know – Jagran English

Google has revealed a new security feature for its Gmail in the companys annual cloud computing showcase Google Cloud Next. The new feature will help users all around the world to block the attackers who can get access to the data. The client-side encryption will be applied to Gmail by the start of next year.

Client-side encryption was previously only available for Google Meet and Docs data. The company is now extending this functionality to other tools in its Workspace productivity suite. Stores encrypted data on the end-user device before it is sent to our data center servers. This means that even Google doesn't have the encryption keys needed for access.

After Google enables client-side encryption next year, only the user who has sent the mail and the user who has received the mail can read it. This feature will also limit others to read messages that are going in the mail.

CSE allows every user including businesses to have direct control of the encryption keys. Google says it uses "modern encryption standards",to encrypt data sent to its servers, making it impossible for hackers to access sensitive information.

The tech giant aims to help users with enhanced data confidentiality while meeting data sovereignty and compliance requirements.

On the other hand, Google Chat is also expected to get this data loss prevention feature to protect the data from real-time leaks. Moreover, the tech giant also mentioned that it will look for data-sharing options for Google Drive that will let businesses decide how to share their files.

Read the original here:
Google To Enable 'Client-Side Encryption' In Gmail By 2023 | All You Need To Know - Jagran English

Read More..

Ford Wont Give Unauthorized Tuners Access To The 2024 Mustang S650 – CarScoops

Muscle cars are as American as apple pie or road trips. Modifying and customizing ones muscle car is also a very traditional move but now were learning that such tweaking will be considerably harder on Americas newest muscle car, the S650 Ford Mustang. Heres why those who seek to pull more power out of the latest pony car will find it harder to do so.

Advancements in technology have made many tuning strategies safer and more powerful than ever before. Despite that, the chief engineer of the all-new Mustang, Ed Krenz, recently told Ford Authority that tuning the new pony car would be much more difficult. Ultimately, that result is more collateral than it is intentional.

More: 2024 Ford Mustang Lands With BMW-Style Digital Dash, Manual Box And A 5.0 V8 You Can Rev From The Keyfob

Encryption on the full stack or the complete package of electronic hardware and software in the S650 Mustang is the barrier. Ford claims that the encryption isnt the product of wanting to keep extra power from owners but rather the ongoing battle against the dangers of hacking. Hackers have already proven that vulnerabilities in software can be dangerous for owners. Now that the S650 uses Fords Fully-Networked Vehicle (FNV) electrical architecture, it says that the need for cybersecurity is paramount.

On top of that, Ford plans to offer the most tailored experience ever to new Mustang owners and it wants to ensure that any personal user data stored in the cars memory is kept safe and secure. The result of that intention is a car that could limit functions if it experiences what the software sees as a break in authentication from a third party.

NO To Unauthorized Tuners

At the same time, Ford has worked with aftermarket tuners in many different instances over the years. And while we expect that same spirit of collaboration to continue, when asked by Musclecarsandtrucks if just any 3rd party would be able to tune the S650s new engines, Krenz responded with a resounding NO.

There are new requirements within the software. Regulatory driven. That is going to restrict access to aftermarket tunes. This is cross OEM, which has to do with CAN message authentication, Krenz explained.

It is likely that we will continue to make available tunes for the ECUs, he added. There will be tunes, both Ford and outside of Ford. But youll probably see a reduced variety of them, based on constraints that cyber security, CAN message authentication, and all of that put into the software.

What that means is that youll only be able to get a performance upgrades for your new 5.0-liter Coyote V8 or revised 2.3-liter turbocharged four pot from the Blue Opels trusted tuners / partners and no one else. Its never fun to lose access to customization but theres no doubt that hacking of modern cars is a credible threat.

More:
Ford Wont Give Unauthorized Tuners Access To The 2024 Mustang S650 - CarScoops

Read More..

B.S. in Computer Science Degree – University of Cincinnati

As a student in the Computer Science B.S.program at the University of Cincinnati, you will gain the skills to design, analyze, and develop technology to improve and modernize life for all.

Some important areas of computer science are: the design of more powerful or more easily used computer languages; the design of more powerful compilers,which translate programs written in computer languages into machine-executable code; the design of operating systems; and the design of networks and methodologies for computing over multiple distributed machines.

At UC College of Engineering and Applied Science (CEAS), its all about you we strive to help develop you into the person employers want to hire. Throughout your time with us, you will:

Admission criteria for this program vary based on a comprehensive review of the relative strength of test scores, class rank and GPA, and co-curricular activities.

First-year students applying to this program should also have completed the following college preparatory subjects:

First-year students must begin the program during fall semester. Applications are accepted on a rolling basis. High school students who wish to be considered for scholarships must apply by December1 of their senior year in high school.

Read the rest here:

B.S. in Computer Science Degree - University of Cincinnati

Read More..

Pioneering computer science alumnus battles bankruptcy and more on road to graduation – Oklahoma State University

Wednesday, October 12, 2022

Media Contact: Elizabeth Gosney | CAS Marketing and Communications Manager | 405-744-7497 | egosney@okstate.edu

Miguel Pineda Soto graduated in July as one of the first to earn an online computer science degree from Oklahoma State University. The recent graduate credits the CS program for helping him get to where he is now working full time at Goldman Sachs but it wasn't an easy journey.

Originally from Venezuela, Soto and his family were forced to move to Kuwait when he was 8 due to tightening governmental restrictions.

While it was a tough thing to deal with, moving was a blessing in disguise, said Soto, whose fathers career as a petroleum engineer prompted his early interest in STEM. I learned English and a lot of Arabic and French, and I also got to grow up with an entirely different perspective of the world.

Soto finished high school in Kuwait and followed his dads footsteps, enrolling in pre-engineering at Northeastern A&M College in Miami, Oklahoma. He was able to finish his associate degree there, but during his first year of community college, his parents went bankrupt.

I reached out to hundreds of universities trying to find a way to get enough financial aid to finish my studies given my situation, Soto said. Sadly, none were able to offer enough aid to cover the cost of a foreign student looking to study engineering.

Although Soto did receive a few financial aid offers from a couple of universities, none of them had an engineering program. He took advantage of the opportunities anyway and ended up getting associate degrees in business administration and chemistry at Rogers State University in Claremore, Oklahoma.

After marrying the girl I had been dating for basically the entire time I had been in the U.S., I had the chance to continue pursuing my dream of being in a STEM field, Soto said. I spent all summer researching the best program for me and I decided to go with OSUs online computer science program. I learned an immense amount from the online faculty while living and working full time in OKC and I am honestly so grateful for the fact that this program was available to me.

Soto expressed his gratitude for the programs dynamic and challenging coursework, and the opportunities hes received as a result. Soto also said that regardless of the fact that he was in a different city, he always felt he had immediate access to his professors.

I had him as a student in a couple of my classes, said Dr. Blayne Mayfield, interim head of the Department of Computer Science. He was very enthusiastic and very involved in the class. Some students I dont hear from them all semester long, but I would hear from him quite frequently. He was a very pleasant student to work with.

The CS online program has been progressively implementing online classes for the bachelor's degree for the past four years. Now published and available, students have the ability to work for their degree anywhere they can.

To learn more about the CS online program, visit the Department of Computer Science website here.

Story By: Bella Vu, CAS student intern | bella.vu@okstate.edu

Read the rest here:

Pioneering computer science alumnus battles bankruptcy and more on road to graduation - Oklahoma State University

Read More..

3 Big Challenges to Expanding Computer Science Classes and How to Overcome Them – Education Week

Big-name companies like Delta Airlines, UPS, and Starbucks are clamoring for expanding computer science education at the K-12 level. But according to a recent report from the nonprofit Code.org, just 6 percent of high schoolers are enrolled in foundational computer science classes, and only a little more than half of high schools offer the courses.

Experts have identified major hurdles to expanding computer science, including finding and training teachers; big gender and racial disparities in course enrollment; and keeping up with a fast-changing field.

While there are no easy fixes, heres how schools could begin addressing those challenges, according to educators and experts who participated in an Oct. 6 Education Week webinar.

Its a misconception that K-12 curriculum needs to mirror exactly where the technology is at any given moment, said Pat Yongpradit, the chief academic officer at Code.org.

Core concepts like algorithms, programming, data, data science, ethics around technology, artificial intelligence, theyre all the same, no matter the technology, he said.

Its a great problem, because who wants a static curriculum like we see in other subjects? where students often dont grasp the relevance of what they are learning, he said. A fast-changing curriculum keeps things exciting for students.

There are a lot of free resources for teaching computer science, he added. Many are created by Yongpradits own organization, Code.org, but others come from big tech players, like Amazon, Microsoft, Google, and more.

This is a tough one, especially given that there are teacher shortages across the board, said Charity Freeman, the associate director of teacher training for the Discovery Partners Institute at the University of Illinois.

We are looking for a teacher that can stand in front of a classroom and can support students who are already learning computer science, but we also need math teachers and English teachers and social studies teachers, she said. Its kind of hard to prioritize computer science when its acknowledged as an elective when youre still trying to fill vacancies in core subjects.

The Chicago school district, which made computer science a graduation requirement several years ago, has worked with research institutions to develop a sequence of courses to help teachers feel comfortable leading introductory classes. Issues remain, however, because the training doesnt prepare educators to teach more advanced computer science classes, said Kristan Beck, the director of computer science in the districts office of early college and career education.

Whats more, the coursework to obtain a computer science endorsement is rigorous and time consuming. The school district is working with Discovery Partners Institute and others to make it more teacher friendly, Beck said. DPI received a grant from Amazon to provide tuition support for teachers who want to get the endorsement.

Despite these efforts, teacher training remains a struggle for districts, Beck said.

At the elementary level though, teachers may not need extensive training, said Rebecca Gratz, an instructional facilitator in computer science for elementary schools in Loudoun County, Va. Gratz herself has zero background in the subject, she said.

Instead, she used resources like YouTube, Code.org, and BrainPOP, to figure out the basics. Helping elementary teachers offer computer science in their classes is about showing them those resources and helping them develop the confidence that they can do this, Gratz said.

One of the reasons Chicago made computer science a graduation requirement was that the district was looking to change the face of who was in computer science classes, Beck said, to include more females and students of color.

There are now more girls taking the first of two AP Computer Science courses, she said, though the district is still working to get more female students into the second, more rigorous AP class. But the district struggles with getting Black and brown young men into computer science class, Beck said. Were really working hard to really invite those students into this space and show them that they belong here, that theyre welcome, that this is cool.

Students need to be able to see the connection between a career they are interested in that doesnt necessarily seem to involve computer sciencesay, agricultureand computer science topics, Freeman said.

Research shows that familiarizing students with computer science topics in elementary school can smooth the way for participation later on, Gratz said.

If we dont expose them by a certain point in their elementary career, theyre significantly less likely to go into these different courses, and to go into these different paths, she said.

Read the rest here:

3 Big Challenges to Expanding Computer Science Classes and How to Overcome Them - Education Week

Read More..

Computer science teachers need better pay to avert crisis – Buckeye Institute

This opinion piece was first published by Crains Cleveland Business.

Ohio currently ranks in the bottom half of the country in nearly every relevant computer science metric. That abysmal showing must change and quickly to give today's students a fighting chance as tomorrow's employees in the 21st century economy.

Businesses across the state need employees with computer skills, and the significant gap between available computer-skilled workers and employer demand is only expected to widen over the next decade. To help meet that demand and prepare students for the digital workplace, Ohio elementary and secondary schools need to dramatically improve their computer science curricula.

Studies show that computer science classes help with creative, cognitive thinking and complement math and science coursework. Reforming policy so students can more easily access computer science education would help them perform better in traditional school subjects like math, while preparing them for the jobs of the future that will require computer science skills.

Fortunately, the State Committee on Computer Science recently released 10 recommendations for improving Ohio's computer skills training and education. Among other proposals, the committee suggests requiring high school students to complete at least one computer science course before graduating, changing occupational licensing laws for computer science teachers, and directing education funds to support more computer classes.

All commendable. And if adopted, these recommended steps would improve upon the status quo and further improve on Ohio's revised model curriculum for computer science which was recently updated to help students apply the skills learned in the classroom to jobs in the workforce.

Unfortunately, the State Committee on Computer Science stopped short of proposing the one change that might improve Ohio's K-12 computer programs the most: attracting more computer science teachers statewide by allowing schools to pay them more.

Collective bargaining agreements negotiated between teachers' unions and local school districts determine teacher pay in Ohio public schools. Those agreements designed to ensure fair compensation for teachers have instead contributed to a computer science teacher shortage by preventing computer science teachers from being compensated relative to their private-sector value and employment alternatives.

Akron Public Schools, for example, has already been bitten by the teacher shortage bug across many subject areas and has turned to long-term substitute teachers and social media campaigns to fill the void. These shortages will only become more acute as more students are required to take computer science before graduating.

But better pay will yield more qualified computer science teachers, and a model for allowing higher pay already exists under state law. Ohio currently authorizes school districts to increase compensation for some teachers when local school boards determine that the teachers' subject area suffers a shortage.

Instead of waiting for individual local school districts to recognize the computer science teacher shortage, Ohio lawmakers should proactively expand this authority statewide. Acknowledging a statewide computer science teacher shortage and allowing all public school districts to raise salaries for computer science teachers as needed would help attract and retain more qualified teachers, avert a looming crisis in the classroom, and better prepare Ohio students for successful careers in the digital age.

Taking bold preemptive action now to help our schools hire the teachers they need to teach will help our businesses hire employees with the knowledge and skills they need to do the job. Computer science in school today really will determine the Ohio we have tomorrow.

Kolas is an economic policy analyst with the Buckeye Institutes Economic Research Center.

Excerpt from:

Computer science teachers need better pay to avert crisis - Buckeye Institute

Read More..

Computer Science, Visiting Professor job with NORWEGIAN UNIVERSITY OF SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY – NTNU | 312629 – Times Higher Education

Description

TheDivision of Scienceat NYU Abu Dhabi is searching for accomplished visiting faculty inComputer Scienceto educate the next generation of global thinkers.Multidisciplinary research and exceptional teaching in a highly diverse and inclusive campus community are hallmarks of the Universitysmission.

NYUAD values diversity, inclusion, belonging, and equity; such principles are fundamental to the university's commitment to excellence. Our faculty are the engines that sustain our inclusive environment; NYUAD students come from more than 115 countries, with no single one nationality exceeding more than 15 percent of the total student population. Likewise, our faculty are highly diverse and community-minded: our modern campus is home to over 320 faculty who represent more than 45 different nationalities, all of whom bring a global perspective to their classrooms and research projects. Research is advanced by over 400 highly qualified research staff, who are likewise drawn from all over the world.

Applicants should have a relevant PhD and demonstrate an outstanding track record for their career stage in both research and teaching. The visiting position isfor one academic year and the expected teaching load is four courses with relatively small class sizes.

Successful candidates may receive some research funding for conference travel and/or minor equipment, and will also have access to internal competitive funds. Additional research support includes access tohigh-performance computing facilities.

There are many collaboration opportunitieswithin NYUAD, which already houses a number of interdisciplinary research centers, including the Center for Cyber Security, the Center for Interacting Urban Networks (CITIES), Center for Artificial Intelligence and Robotics (CAIR), Center for Genomics and Systems Biology, Center for Quantum and Topological Systems, as well as with faculty in NYU New Yorks Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences and Tandon School of Engineering.

About NYU Abu Dhabi

Established in partnership between New York University (NYU) and the emirate of Abu Dhabi, over the last decade, NYUAD has assembled a remarkable community of scholars, students, researchers, artists, inventors, and others who have contributed to the growth of the UAEs capital as a global hub of knowledge and culture while establishing a new model of higher education for todays complex world.

NYUAD is animated by inspiring and diverse faculty, students, and staff working together in an exciting and dynamic city. As an international center of excellence in teaching and research, our goal is to attract outstanding faculty who are leaders in their fields, encouraging them to create programs that draw outstanding students and provide an intellectually rich environment.

YUAD students come from more than 126 countries, with no single nationality exceeding more than 15 percent of the total student population. Likewise, our over 320 faculty members represent more than 45 nationalities and bring a global perspective to their classrooms and research projects. NYUAD is committed to building and strengthening a university-wide culture of inclusion, diversity, belonging and equity (IDBE), which is fundamental to the Universitys commitment to excellence. Visitour website for more information on NYUADs commitment to IDBEand how these values are fundamental to our mission.

Students are drawn from among the worlds best. They are bright, intellectually passionate, and committed to building a campus environment anchored in mutual respect, understanding, and care. The NYUAD undergraduate student body has garnered an impressive record of scholarships, graduate-school admissions, and other global honors. Graduate education is an area of growth for the University; the current graduate student population of over 100 students is expected to expand in the next decade as we develop new graduate programs.

Working for NYUAD

At NYUAD, we recognize that Abu Dhabi is more than where you work; its your home. In order for faculty to thrive, we offer a comprehensive benefits package. This starts with a generous relocation allowance; educational assistance for your dependents; access to health and wellness services; and more. NYUAD is committed to faculty success throughout the academic trajectory, providing support for ambitious and world-class research projects and innovative, interactive teaching approaches. Support for dual-career families is a priority.Visit our website for more information on benefits for you and your dependents.

Qualifications

This position requires a Ph.D. in Computer Scienceor a closely related area.

Application Instructions

To apply for this position, please submit the following items:

We will begin reviewing applications on December 15, 2022, and will continue until the position is filled. Shortlisted candidates are expected to be invited for campus visits in Abu Dhabi early Spring 2023. We anticipate that successful candidates can start the appointment and relocate to Abu Dhabi in the academic year 2023-2024.

For questions about this position, please emailnyuad.science@nyu.edu.

If this sounds like you, apply now.

Join NYU Abu Dhabi, an exceptional place for exceptional people.

NYUAD values diversity, inclusion, belonging, and equity; such principles are fundamental to the university's commitment to excellence. NYUAD is an equal opportunity employer. We particularly welcome applications from members of traditionally underrepresented groups, women, and UAE nationals. Multidisciplinary research and exceptional teaching in a highly diverse and inclusive campus community are hallmarks of the Universitys mission.

@WorkAtNYUAD#nyuadfacultycareers

Equal Employment Opportunity Statement

For people in the EU, click here for information on your privacy rights under GDPR:www.nyu.edu/it/gdpr

NYU is an equal opportunity employer committed to equity, diversity, and social inclusion.

Read the rest here:

Computer Science, Visiting Professor job with NORWEGIAN UNIVERSITY OF SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY - NTNU | 312629 - Times Higher Education

Read More..

TARS Work Accepted to ECCV, One of The Top Three Venues in Computer Vision – Clarkson University News

Nikolas Lamb, Dr. Sean Banerjee, Dr. Natasha Banerjee

Terascale All-sensing Research Studio (TARS) PhD student Nikolas Lamb will be presenting his accepted paper at the 2022 European Conference on Computer Vision (ECCV), one of the top three highest ranking venues for research in computer vision.

Lamb is advised on his research on repairing damaged objects by Dr. Natasha Banerjee and Dr. Sean Banerjee, Associate Professors in the Department of Computer Science and co-directors of TARS. Lambs paper will be published in the proceedings of the conference. Lambs paper is the first from Clarkson to be published at ECCV, a venue dominated by researchers from large technology companies such as Amazon, Google, Meta/Facebook, Microsoft, Adobe, and Apple, and top-tier research institutions such as Harvard, Stanford, MIT, Columbia, Yale, Princeton, UC Berkeley, Carnegie Mellon, Oxford, Cambridge, and Max Planck Institute to name a few.

Given the rapidity with which knowledge changes in computer science, conferences are the standard for immediate information dissemination, and as such are peer-reviewed and held to similar standing as journals in other fields. ECCV is globally known as one of the three highest-ranking peer-reviewed venues in computer vision, and is held once every two years, making it one of the toughest venues for computer vision to be published in.

As noted onGoogle Scholar, ECCV has an h5-index of 186 and ranks third among computer vision conferences in h5-index, the other two being Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR) and International Conference on Computer Vision (ICCV). The conference also demonstrates the ubiquitous scientific impact of computer vision, in that it is currently the40thranked publication venue (conference and/or journal) overall in h5-index, and15thin Engineering & Computer Science. Lamb is one of few ECCV attendees who have been awarded a Student Grant by ECCV that covers his registration and travel to the conference from October 23-27, 2022.

In July 2022, Lamb presented MendNet, a then state-of-the-art method to repair damaged objects at the Symposium on Geometry Processing by using deep neural networks to represent the structure of damaged, complete, and repaired objects. Just a few months later, Lambs ECCV paper has contributed a new algorithm, DeepMend, that overcomes the limitations of his prior work, by tying a mathematical representation of occupancy of damaged and repaired objects to complete objects and the fracture surface, enabling a compact representation of shape via deep networks and establishing a new state-of-the-art.

Lambs rapid and even now ongoing release of new state-of-the-art algorithms is in line with the accelerated rate of research in computer science. As Alexei Efros, winner of the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) Prize in Computing and Computer Science Professor at the University of California, Berkeley,saysThe half-life of knowledge in computer science is quite short. In machine learning, it is about three months.

Lambs research brings repair of damaged objects within the hands of the average consumer, enabling us to move closer to sustainable use of items. It also bridges the gap between research in material science and computer science by tying artificial intelligence to the definition of damaged object geometry, enabling in-the-wild repair. By using deep learning to hypothesize what a repair part should look like, Lambs work also contributes to the restoration of objects of cultural heritage and items of personal significance, for instance, a precious piece of pottery.

TARS, of which Lamb is a member, conducts research on making next-generation artificial intelligence and robotic systems human-aware. Research at TARS spans fields such as computer vision, computer graphics, human-computer interaction, robotics, virtual reality, and computational fabrication. TARS supports the research of 15 graduate students and nearly 20 undergraduate students every semester. TARS has one of the largest high-performance computing facilities at Clarkson, with 275,000+ CUDA cores and 4,800+ Tensor cores spread over 50+ GPUs, and 1 petabyte of (nearly full!) storage. TARS houses the Gazebo, a massively dense multi-viewpoint multi-modal markerless motion capture facility for imaging multi-person interactions containing 192 226FPS high-speed cameras, 16 Microsoft Azure Kinect RGB-D sensors, 12 Sierra Olympic Viento-G thermal cameras, and 16 surface electromyography (sEMG) sensors, and the Cube, a single- and two-person 3D imaging facility containing 4 high-speed cameras, 4 RGB-D sensors, and 5 thermal cameras. The team thanks the Office of Information Technology for providing access to the ACRES GPU node with 4 V100s containing 20,480 CUDA cores and 2,560 Tensor cores.

View original post here:

TARS Work Accepted to ECCV, One of The Top Three Venues in Computer Vision - Clarkson University News

Read More..

What Is Green Computing? – Nvidia

Everyone wants green computing.

Mobile users demand maximum performance and battery life. Businesses and governments increasingly require systems that are powerful yet environmentally friendly. And cloud services must respond to global demands without making the grid stutter.

For these reasons and more, green computing has evolved rapidly over the past three decades, and its here to stay.

Green computing, or sustainable computing, is the practice of maximizing energy efficiency and minimizing environmental impact in the ways computer chips, systems and software are designed and used.

Also called green information technology, green IT or sustainable IT, green computing spans concerns across the supply chain, from the raw materials used to make computers to how systems get recycled.

In their working lives, green computers must deliver the most work for the least energy, typically measured by performance per watt.

Green computing is a significant tool to combat climate change, the existential threat of our time.

Global temperatures have risen about 1.2C over the last century. As a result, ice caps are melting, causing sea levels to rise about 20 centimeters and increasing the number and severity of extreme weather events.

The rising use of electricity is one of the causes of global warming. Data centers represent a small fraction of total electricity use, about 1% or 200 terawatt-hours per year, but theyre a growing factor that demands attention.

Powerful, energy-efficient computers are part of the solution. Theyre advancing science and our quality of life, including the ways we understand and respond to climate change.

Engineers know green computing is a holistic discipline.

Energy efficiency is a full-stack issue, from the software down to the chips, said Sachin Idgunji, co-chair of the power working group for the industrys MLPerf AI benchmark and a distinguished engineer working on performance analysis at NVIDIA.

For example, in one analysis he found NVIDIA DGX A100 systems delivered a nearly 5x improvement in energy efficiency in scale-out AI training benchmarks compared to the prior generation.

My primary role is analyzing and improving energy efficiency of AI applications at everything from the GPU and the system node to the full data center scale, he said.

Idgunjis work is a job description for a growing cadre of engineers building products from smartphones to supercomputers.

Green computing hit the public spotlight in 1992, when the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency launched Energy Star, a program for identifying consumer electronics that met standards in energy efficiency.

A 2017 report found nearly 100 government and industry programs across 22 countries promoting what it called green ICTs, sustainable information and communication technologies.

One such organization, the Green Electronics Council, provides the Electronic Product Environmental Assessment Tool, a registry of systems and their energy-efficiency levels. The council claims its saved nearly 400 million megawatt-hours of electricity through use of 1.5 billion green products its recommended to date.

Work on green computing continues across the industry at every level.

For example, some large data centers use liquid-cooling while others locate data centers where they can use cool ambient air. Schneider Electric recently released a whitepaper recommending 23 metrics for determining the sustainability level of data centers.

Wu Feng, a computer science professor at Virginia Tech, built a career pushing the limits of green computing. It started out of necessity while he was working at the Los Alamos National Laboratory.

A computer cluster for open science research he maintained in an external warehouse had twice as many failures in summers versus winters. So, he built a lower-power system that wouldnt generate as much heat.

He demoed the system, dubbed Green Destiny, at the Supercomputing conference in 2001. Covered by the BBC, CNN and the New York Times, among others, it sparked years of talks and debates in the HPC community about the potential reliability as well as efficiency of green computing.

Interest rose as supercomputers and data centers grew, pushing their boundaries in power consumption. In November 2007, after working with some 30 HPC luminaries and gathering community feedback, Feng launched the first Green500 List, the industrys benchmark for energy-efficient supercomputing.

The Green500 became a rallying point for a community that needed to reign in power consumption while taking performance to new heights.

Energy efficiency increased exponentially, flops per watt doubled about every year and a half for the greenest supercomputer at the top of the list, said Feng.

By some measures, the results showed the energy efficiency of the worlds greenest systems increased two orders of magnitude in the last 14 years.

Feng attributes the gains mainly to the use of accelerators such as GPUs, now common among the worlds fastest systems.

Accelerators added the capability to execute code in a massively parallel way without a lot of overhead they let us run blazingly fast, he said.

He cited two generations of the Tsubame supercomputers in Japan as early examples. They used NVIDIA Kepler and Pascal architecture GPUs to lead the Green500 list in 2014 and 2017, part of a procession of GPU-accelerated systems on the list.

Accelerators have had a huge impact throughout the list, said Feng, who will receive an award for his green supercomputing work at the Supercomputing event in November.

Notably, NVIDIA was fantastic in its engagement and support of the Green500 by ensuring its energy-efficiency numbers were reported, thus helping energy efficiency become a first-class citizen in how supercomputers are designed today, he added.

Today, GPUs and data processing units (DPUs) are bringing greater energy efficiency to AI and networking tasks, as well as HPC jobs like simulations run on supercomputers and enterprise data centers.

AI, the most powerful technology of our time, will become a part of every business. McKinsey & Co. estimates AI will add a staggering $13 trillion to global GDP by 2030 as deployments grow.

NVIDIA estimates data centers could save a whopping 19 terawatt-hours of electricity a year if all AI, HPC and networking offloads were run on GPU and DPU accelerators (see the charts below). Thats the equivalent of the energy consumption of 2.9 million passenger cars driven for a year.

Its an eye-popping measure of the potential for energy efficiency with accelerated computing.

Because AI represents a growing part of enterprise workloads, the MLPerf industry benchmarks for AI have been measuring performance per watt on submissions for data center and edge inference since February 2021.

The next frontier for us is to measure energy efficiency for AI on larger distributed systems, for HPC workloads and for AI training its similar to the Green500 work, said Idgunji, whose power group at MLPerf includes members from six other chip and systems companies.

The public results motivate participants to make significant improvements with each product generation. They also help engineers and developers understand ways to balance performance and efficiency across the major AI workloads that MLPerf tests.

Software optimizations are a big part of work because they can lead to large impacts in energy efficiency, and if your system is energy efficient, its more reliable, too, Idgunji said.

In PCs and laptops, weve been investing in efficiency for a long time because its the right thing to do, said Narayan Kulshrestha, a GPU power architect at NVIDIA whos been working in the field nearly two decades.

For example, Dynamic Boost 2.0 uses deep learning to automatically direct power to a CPU, a GPU or a GPUs memory to increase system efficiency. In addition, NVIDIA created a system-level design for laptops, called Max-Q, to optimize and balance energy efficiency and performance.

When a user replaces a system, the standard practice in green computing is that the old system gets broken down and recycled. But Matt Hull sees better possibilities.

Our vision is a cyclical economy that enables everyone with AI at a variety of price points, said Hull, the vice president of sales for data center AI products at NVIDIA.

So he aims to find the system a new home with users in developing countries who find it useful and affordable. Its a work in progress seeking the right partner and writing a new chapter in an existing lifecycle management process.

Energy-efficient computers are among the sharpest tools fighting climate change.

Scientists in government labs and universities have long used GPUs to model climate scenarios and predict weather patterns. Recent advances in AI, driven by NVIDIA GPUs, can now help model weather forecasting 100,000x quicker than traditional models. Watch the following video for details:

In an effort to accelerate climate science, NVIDIA announced plans to build Earth-2, an AI supercomputer dedicated to predicting the impacts of climate change. It will use NVIDIA Omniverse, a 3D design collaboration and simulation platform, to build a digital twin of Earth so scientists can model climates in ultra-high resolution.

In addition, NVIDIA is working with the United Nations Satellite Centre to accelerate climate-disaster management and train data scientists across the globe in using AI to improve flood detection.

Meanwhile, utilities are embracing machine learning to move toward a green, resilient and smart grid. Power plants are using digital twins to predict costly maintenance and model new energy sources, such as fusion-reactor designs.

Feng sees the core technology behind green computing moving forward on multiple fronts.

In the short term, hes working on whats called energy proportionality, that is, ways to make sure systems get peak power when they need peak performance and scale gracefully down to zero power as they slow to an idle, like a modern car engine that slows its RPMs and then shuts down at a red light.

Long term, hes exploring ways to minimize data movement inside and between computer chips to reduce their energy consumption. And hes among many researchers studying the promise of quantum computing to deliver new kinds of acceleration.

Its all part of the ongoing work of green computing, delivering ever more performance at ever greater efficiency.

Read this article:

What Is Green Computing? - Nvidia

Read More..