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Expand Up @@ -40,10 +40,21 @@ <h1>Advances in Applied Computer Science Invited Speaker Series</h1>
Host: Patrick Diehl<br>
Co-Host: Phillip Edelmann<br>

<h2>Navigating RISC-V in 2024</h2>
<h2>RISC-V HPC Terrain Familiarization</h2>

Speaker: Chris Taylor<br>
Tatical Computing Lab<br>
Principle Research Engineer<br><br>

Abstract:
<p>
The number of RISC-V commerical products increased substantially this past year. This presentation is an orientation to the range of RISC-V hardware, HPC software support, the community, and the current state of HPC-relevant ISA extensions. Acquiring RISC-V hardware is no longer a question of when - it is possible now.
</p>

Bio:
<p>
Chris is a senior principle research engineer at Tactical Computing Labs. His work experience includes compilers, runtime systems, systems level software, numerical libraries, applied math problems, and hardware simulation. He has a Masters Degree in Computer Science from Georgia Tech and an undergraduate degree in Computer Science from Clemson.
</p>

<h2>Asynchronous-Many-Task Systems: Challenges and Opportunities - Scaling an AMR Astrophysics Code on Exascale machines using Kokkos and HPX</h2>

Expand All @@ -63,6 +74,10 @@ <h2>Journal of Open Source Software: bot-assisted open peer review and publicati
The Journal of Open Source Software (JOSS) is an open-access, no-fee scholarly journal that publishes quality open-source research software based on open peer review. JOSS was founded in 2016 with the dual objectives of giving traditional academic publication credit for software work and improving the quality of research software. Since its founding, JOSS has published over 2500 software papers—and counting!—with over 80 active editors spread across seven topic-area tracks. To handle this level of submissions and publishing, relying on a fully volunteer team, JOSS relies on GitHub and a system of open tools for reviewing and publishing submissions, driven by chatbot commands. Authors submit short Markdown papers along with links to their software's repository, which are compiled to PDF via Pandoc. JOSS’s editorial bot performs automated health checks on submissions, and reviews take place in GitHub issues, with authors, editors, and reviewers issuing bot commands via comments. This talk will describe the publication experience of JOSS and its machinery, and how it can be adapted by other communities.
</p>

Bio:
<p>
Kyle E. Niemeyer is an Associate Professor at Oregon State University in the School of Mechanical, Industrial, and Manufacturing Engineering. He also serves as the Associate School Head for Undergraduate Programs. He leads the Niemeyer Research Group, which uses computational modeling to study various phenomena involving fluid flows, including combustion and chemical kinetics, and related topics like numerical methods and parallel computing. He is also a strong advocate of open access, open source software, and open science in general, and has contributed in the area of standardizing research software citation. Kyle has received multiple prestigious fellowships throughout his career, including the AAAS Science & Technology Policy Fellowship in 2022, the Better Scientific Software (BSSw) Fellowship in 2019, the NSF Graduate Research Fellowship in 2010, and the National Defense Science and Engineering Graduate Fellowship in 2009. Kyle received his Ph.D. in Mechanical Engineering from Case Western Reserve University in 2013. He received BS and MS degrees in Aerospace Engineering from Case Western Reserve University in 2009 and 2010, respectively.
</p>
Material:
<ul>
<li> <a href="https://zenodo.org/records/13799976">Slides</a></li>
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