Check out this youtube video. Nice introduction on having a super-computer competing in series of example Jeopardy game shows.
This is just one of numerous fun and still seriously challenging projects being worked these days. The IBM Research teams are amazing. They have found some very interesting performance challenges. The project drives advanced technologies, product improvements, system improvements, performance tool improvements, but most of the work is in the realm of demonstrating complex natural language processing in a time-constrained answer and question world.
Various thoughts on the process of improving performance on a Linux system - in a mode of discovering just how much there is to learn. Customers use their systems uniquely - some care passionately about performance, some just want and expect the best "out-of-the-box" experience with no tweaking. I have observed that people in search of performance answers generally want the simple answer, but the practiced answer to any real performance question is: "Well, it depends..." - Bill Buros
Tuesday, June 15, 2010
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Bill Buros
Bill leads an IBM Linux performance team in Austin Tx (the only place really to live in Texas). The team is focused on IBM's Power offerings (old, new, and future) working with IBM's Linux Technology Center (the LTC). While the focus is primarily on Power systems, the team also analyzes and improves overall Linux performance for IBM's xSeries products (both Intel and AMD) , driving performance improvements which are both common for Linux and occasionally unique to the hardware offerings.
Performance analysis techniques, tools, and approaches are nicely common across Linux. Having worked for years in performance, there are still daily reminders of how much there is to learn in this space, so in many ways this blog is simply another vehicle in the continuing journey to becoming a more experienced "performance professional". One of several journeys in life.
Performance analysis techniques, tools, and approaches are nicely common across Linux. Having worked for years in performance, there are still daily reminders of how much there is to learn in this space, so in many ways this blog is simply another vehicle in the continuing journey to becoming a more experienced "performance professional". One of several journeys in life.
The Usual Notice
The postings on this site are my own and don't necessarily represent IBM's positions, strategies, or opinions, try as I might to influence them.