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The keynotes for the second day of the conference were by Vassil Alexandrov of the BSC and Mark Ragan. I have suggested that Vassil and John Gustafon share some information on their related interests of extreme scale mathematical methods and the ubox number format. Afterwards attended what was largely the education stream of the conference, including a presentation on collaborative learner-driven education Nia Alexandrova, also the Barcelona Supercomputing Center. My own presentation had quite an unexpected turnout and was apparently was well-received, at least from what I've heard from third parties. I am concerned that I tried to put too much in. That evening was the conference dinner at the Tjapukai Aboriginal Cultural Park which included a great performance and facilities. For my own part, I ended up in an audience participation scene where I helped make fire by rubbing sticks together (or, helped summon a small fire elemental, depending on your point of view) and received a boomerang for my efforts. The final day of the conference included keynotes from Dan Fay from Microsoft on The Fourth Paradigm, an argument I've heard before, I've read the book, and I do not find convincing. The last keynote by Bob Pressey on conservation and computational science indicated a very practical implementation.

Having accumulated several weeks of leave it was appropriately suggested that perhaps I should at least take one week off which begins on Monday. Post-conference it seems a good time to do so, providing an opportunity for both some reflection on the material presented and preparation for upcoming conferences and other academic papers (e.g., eResearch Australasia 2014), along with some reflection on where I'm up to in this current career. After several years in the field of high performance computing and especially with a well-suited tangent of adult and tertiary education in that field, I am getting some subtle hints that I am just on verge of making a significant contribution to this field. I don't want to spend the entire week just doing "basic research" on this particular subject, but I do think that it is going to take up some of the time. I can forsee several long walks around Willsmere and the Yarra Bend parklands as I consolidate my thoughts on these matters and a number of emails to potential collaborators.
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Arrived in Cairns on Monday for the International Conference on Computational Science (which, we've been informed is a "class A conference", according to international rankings). Feeling quite exhausted spent a good part of the afternoon resting, and then walked around the warf and foreshore area before attending the pre-conference drinks. The conference and my accomadation is at the Pullman International which is pretty swank (well above what I would settle for), and almost stylish. The view from the 11th floor isn't too bad either; Cairns is quite an interesting town geographically, existing between the Coral Sea Trinity Bay harbour and the Great Dividing Range and with a tropical climate and ecology. There seems to be a genuine effort on the part of the local government to provide some decent facilities as well, at least in the central district and foreshore region which I've explored.

As for the conference itself, I have some fairly mixed feelings so far. Luis Berrencourt provided a reasonably good presentation on the science of cities, although it was also - perhaps inadvertantly - an argument for land taxes. Warren Kaplan and Andrew Lonie both provided excellent overviews of developments in genomics, especially with the use of cloud computing. Whilst the science is grand, I have been increasingly wondering whether the economics of using cloud computing is a cost-effective way to conduct parallel processing. Two options to me seem available either (a) raise the skillset of research scientists to a usable level to use various job submission tools effectively or (b) provide a user interface that reduces the skillset needed to utilise the system. Increasingly, I am of the considered opinion that (a) is the better option. It is an issue which should be raised today after I present my paper (yes LJ/DW, you get a preview before the conference).

Had a very strange dream last night that Mac the cat had died due to accidental poisoning on the estate grounds. However, in my dream I recalled that [livejournal.com profile] caseopaya had shown me Mac through a Google hangout video call from last night. But then I was told, no that was just a dream and that the cat really was dead. This was a little disconcerting, and I woke up slightly unsure whether the cat was alive or not (shades of Schrodinger!). The only thing that acted as strong confirmation of the cat's state was that [livejournal.com profile] caseopaya would have been a lot more upset. Merrily, merrily, merrily, life is but a dream.
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Spent the first three days of the week running the usual trilogy of courses in Linux and High Performance Computing for researchers, including a head of department. It was a difficult group in some ways with highly disparate background abilities and my tiredness didn't help. Following this spent some time putting the finishing touches on my up-coming presentation in Cairns next week at the International Conference on Computer Science as well as putting together a related paper for eResearch Australasia, as well as an initial investigation for the education workshop for the world supercomputing conference. In between all convened an excellent meeting of Linux Users Victoria on OpenStack and Docker.

Last Sunday played in Karl's Space 1889 Ubuquity game which involved some fine stealth by the good British imperialists against the dastardly Hun imperialists in the Victorian-fantasy concept of Venus. The game is going quite well, especially for an episodic story that lacks an overarching narrative. Despite the setting-centered orientation the Ubiquity component has added a lot for character focus as well. On Thursday night ran Masks of Nyarlathotep (excellent fan trailer linked) which featured a classic set-piece scene in the Egyptian scenario, involving a grand rescue of NPCs from the midst of massive cultist ritual (think of the Indianna Jones Kali Ma scene), followed by a chase scene underneath the pyramids of Giza and the Sphinx. This rather epic set piece is derived from H.P. Lovecraft's Underneath the Pyramids, and despite a little bit of help from the Goddess Bast, it really was their own bravado, planning, and luck. Lovecraft's story describes well the "Children of the Sphinx" who gave chase:


I would not look at the marching things. That I desperately resolved as I heard their creaking joints and nitrous wheezing above the dead music and the dead tramping. It was merciful that they did not speak . . . but God! their crazy torches began to cast shadows on the surface of those stupendous columns. Heaven take it away! Hippopotami should not have human hands and carry torches . . . men should not have the heads of crocodiles. . . .

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Diary of a B+ Grade Polymath

May 2025

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