Change in Leadership Slated for San Diego Supercomputer Center
released
February 27, 2001
Contacts
Winifred Cox
UC - San Diego
wcox@ucsd.edu
858.534.0363
Ann Redelfs
SDSC
redelfs@sdsc.edu
858.534.5032
SAN DIEGO, CA Sid Karin, founding director of the San Diego
Supercomputer Center (SDSC) and the National Partnership for Advanced
Computational Infrastructure (NPACI), will assume a new role as Senior
Strategic Advisor to the SDSC director. Internationally recognized computer
scientist Francine Berman will become director of SDSC and NPACI, UCSD
Chancellor Robert Dynes announced today. The appointments will take effect
February 23, 2001.
As director for the past 16 years, Karin transformed SDSC from a resource
for high-performance technology to a national computational science and
engineering laboratory with a broad research agenda in computer science,
scientific applications and education. In 1997, Karin spearheaded UCSD's
successful proposal to lead NPACI, one of only two National Science
Foundation-funded partnerships of their kind in the nation. Having
shepherded SDSC through this evolution, Karin requested the opportunity to
return to hands-on computing and communications research and development. In
his new position, Karin will be a strategic adviser to the SDSC director and
consultant to Chancellor Dynes on computing and communications issues; he
also will continue as a professor of computer science and engineering at the
UCSD Jacobs School of Engineering.
Berman, a UCSD professor of Computer Science and Engineering since 1984, was
involved in the early development of both SDSC and NPACI and has worked in
high-performance computing for 20 years. She is a pioneer in parallel
distributed computing in which networks of computers work together to
process complicated scientific problems. Berman developed software that
enables users to take full advantage of the computing power available
through networks of computers. The founder of UCSD's Parallel Computation
and Grid Computing Laboratories, her research has focused on developing
adaptive applications and middleware that promotes performance in dynamic,
networked multi-user environments. A Fellow of the Association for
Computing Machinery, Berman is a leader in NPACI's Metasystems research and
the California Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology's
software research.
"The coming decade will be an exciting and revolutionary time for the field
of high-performance computing," Berman said. "We will build on the existing
strengths of SDSC and NPACI, including data-intensive computing,
high-performance computing, and networking, while supporting the national
research community. I look forward to working with the highly talented
researchers and staff of SDSC, my fellow UCSD faculty members, and NPACI's
network of partners to move our research information infrastructure into the
future."
"Under Sid's extraordinary direction and leadership, SDSC and NPACI have
become national leaders in computational science and engineering," said
Dynes. "His accomplishments have shaped the field of high-performance
computing and fostered academic research in all fields. Fran has the
remarkable combination of expertise and vision needed to build on this
legacy and help shape the future of computational science and engineering."
"Fran's prominence in both high performance computing and grid
infrastructure makes her an ideal choice to lead SDSC and the NPACI program
as they meet the continuing challenges of the Internet age," said Robert
Conn, Dean of the UCSD Jacobs School of Engineering.
"The NSF salutes Sid Karin for his many years of national leadership and
vision for high-performance computing and computational science," said Bob
Borchers, Director of the National Science Foundation's Advanced Computing
Infrastructure Research Division. "And we are looking forward to working
closely with Fran Berman in the coming years."
"It has been my great pleasure to work with the world-renowned professionals
at SDSC and NPACI. Their work in computational and computer science has
contributed to significant progress in many scientific disciplines," said
Karin. "I look forward to staying involved with the program while
recharging my technical batteries. I am delighted to hand the leadership to
Fran Berman, who will continue the growth and success of SDSC and NPACI in
the new millennium."
Karin, a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science,
predicts that the coming years hold great promise for SDSC and NPACI. He
foresees that initiatives in scientific data management and analysis,
petaflops scale computing, computational biology and bioinformatics, and
extreme networking are just a few areas in which SDSC will play a key role.
A research unit of UCSD, SDSC is leading the effort by NPACI to deploy the
national computational environment that will foster tomorrow's scientific
discovery.
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