This workshop will focus on approaches to porting Matlab applications to a supercomputer environment such as that of ASU's Agave supercomputer. This is not an intro to Matlab course. The intended audience member will have developed Matlab code that runs on a desktop machine but now would like to run this code in a parallel environment. This may be implemented through either:

This workshop teaches beginners on how to utilize the ASU Research Computing supercomputer. This workshop will cover the supercomputer's configuration, batch and interactive access, and available software packages. Access has been greatly simplified with the web portal, a browser-based interface to the supercomputer which supports command-line shell, drag and drop file transfer, job submission, and MATLAB, RStudio, Jupyter, and other applications.

This workshop will focus on best practices, profiling, and benchmarking in R. This workshop will also introduce how to submit R jobs to ASU’s supercomputers through the use of batch submissions, parameter sweeps, and SLURM job arrays.

Join Research Computing for: Data Transfers with ASU Research Computing.

The ASU Research Computing supercomputer hosts a high-speed scratch filesystem to quickly compute results in addition to 100 GB of storage in users' own personal home directories. When these filesystems become full, the performance of the supercomputer is impacted which can potentially cause system outages. Using Globus and other data transfer tools, this workshop will interactively teach users how to transfer data from their scratch or home directories.

Introduction to using the popular high-level language Python on the Sol supercomputer. Python has seen rapid growth in Scientific Computing over the last decade most likely due to the powerful expressions the language provides. The popular scientific notebook provided by Jupyter will be utilized to demonstrate how Python may be leveraged to infer, compute, and conduct research on modern HPC environments.

This workshop teaches beginners on how to utilize the ASU Research Computing supercomputer. This workshop will cover the supercomputer's configuration, batch and interactive access, and available software packages. Access has been greatly simplified with the web portal, a browser-based interface to the supercomputer which supports command-line shell, drag and drop file transfer, job submission, and MATLAB, RStudio, Jupyter, and other applications.

These sessions will provide a broad introduction to a variety of major fellowships that provide funding for graduate or professional study, both domestically and abroad. Key programs include the Marshall, Rhodes, Gates Cambridge, and Knight-Hennessy Scholarships, among many others. Ideal for current juniors or graduating seniors, but open to any current ASU student or recent graduate.

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