Speakers
Andy Bechtolsheim
Product Architect, Systems Group
Sun Microsystems Inc.
Andy Bechtolsheim, co-founder of Sun Microsystems, Inc. and employee number one, is a product architect with the Systems Group. Andy works with the Systems Group to help drive next generation X64 and storage servers product architecture as well as HPC opportunities.
Bechtolsheim has more than 25 years of Network Computing knowledge and expertise. He was a co-founder of Sun Microsystems where he held a variety of roles including Vice President of Technology and Chief Architect of Sun's highly successful workstation product line. He invented the "Stanford University Network workstation" that eventually became the Sun-1 Workstation and was instrumental in launching other successful Sun products, including the SparcStation 1.
Bechtolsheim left Sun in 1995 to found Granite Systems, a Gigabit Ethernet start-up company, that was acquired by Cisco Systems in 1996. Andy became Vice President of Engineering and later Vice President General Manager of Cisco's Gigabit Systems business which developed the Catalyst 4000 family, the industry's highest volume modular Ethernet switching platform.
Bechtolsheim returned to Sun in 2004 via the Kealia, Inc. acquisition, a company which he co-founded to develop advanced server technology.
Bechtolsheim received a MS in computer engineering from Carnegie Mellon University in 1976 and he was a PhD student in Computer Science and Electrical Engineering at Stanford University from 1977 to 1982. He has been honored with a Fulbright scholarship, a German National Merit Foundation scholarship, the Stanford Entrepreneur Company of the year award, the Smithsonian Leadership Award for Innovation and is a member of the National Academy of Engineering.
Marc Hamilton
Vice President, HPC & Cloud Computing Sales
Sun Microsystems Inc.
Marc Hamilton is Vice President of HPC and Cloud Computing sales for Sun's Global Sales and Services organization. His group is responsible for architecting some of the largest supercomputers in the world including the Ranger supercomputer at the Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC) and the TSUBAME supercomputer at the Tokyo Institute of Technology (TiTech). Hamilton is also responsible for Sun's commercial HPC customers in varied industries including financial services, life sciences, energy, media/entertainment, and manufacturing. His group is also working with customers and service providers implementing their own cloud infrastructure based on the Sun Cloud technology.
Hamilton has over 15 years experience at Sun and previously held roles as VP of Systems Sales in North American, VP of Systems sales for the Americas, and VP of Solaris marketing. As VP of Solaris marketing, Hamilton was responsible for Sun's Solaris OEM agreements with Dell and IBM, and also launched "Project Indiana" which became the current OpenSolaris program. Hamilton helped start Sun's Global Education and Healthcare Sales group in 1999 where he was a Senior Director. Prior to that, Hamilton held a number of sales and systems engineering management roles in Sun's sales organization.
Prior to Sun, Hamilton worked at TRW developing HPC applications for the US aerospace and defense industry. He has published a number of technical articles and is the author of the book, "Software Development, Building Reliable Systems". Mr. Hamilton holds a BS degree in Math and Computer Science from UCLA, an MS degree in Electrical Engineering from USC, and is a graduate of the UCLA Executive Management program.
For more information, please visit his blog at http://blogs.sun.com/marchamilton.
David Padgham
Policy Director for the HPC Initiative
Council on Competitiveness
David Padgham is policy director for the High Performance Computing (HPC) Initiative at the Council on Competitiveness. In this role, he works to foster government-university-industry partnerships focused on promoting greater use of HPC in support of innovation in the United States. Previously, he was an associate program officer at the Computer Science and Telecommunications Board (CSTB) of the National Research Council. His work there comprised a robust mix of writing, research and project management, and he contributed to the development and publication of numerous CSTB studies. Prior to CSTB, Padgham was a policy analyst with the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM), working closely with ACM's public policy committee, USACM, to develop and support the organization's policy principles and promote its policy interests. He holds a master's degree in library and information science (2001) from Catholic University of America in Washington, and a Bachelor of Arts in English (1996) from Warren Wilson College in Asheville, N.C.
Dr. Nash Palaniswamy
Senior Manager, Throughput Computing
Intel Corporation
Dr. Nash has been at Intel since October 2005, and currently manages the Throughput Computing efforts in the Server Product Group. His responsibilities include the strategy and marketing efforts around Intel® QuickAssist Technology enabled Accelerators, and other technologies related to throughput computing. His prior responsibilities at Intel included being the World Wide Web Consortium Advisory Committee representative from Intel. Prior to joining Intel as part of the acquisition of Conformative Systems, an XML Accelerator Company, he has served in several senior executive positions in the industry including being the Director of System Architecture at Conformative Systems, CTO/VP of Engineering at MSU Devices, and Director of Java Program Office and Wireless Software Strategy in the Digital Experience Group of Motorola, Inc. Dr. Palaniswamy holds a B.S. in Electronics and Communications Engineering from Anna University (Chennai, India) and an M.S. and Ph.D. from the University of Cincinnati in Electrical and Computer Engineering.
Gary Tyreman
Vice President and General Manager, Infrastructure Division
Univa UD
Gary Tyreman's career in product commercialization, taking a technology concept through the entire product lifecycle in a timely manner, spans more than 16 years. He has directed in excess of 200 product launches and driven more than US$600 Million in software revenue generation in a range of technology companies from start-ups to hundred million dollar product lines. At Univa UD, Gary is Vice President and General Manager of the High-Performance Computing Division. In this role he oversees all aspects of the company's HPC business, including strategic planning, engineering, marketing, sales and business development. He also directs the growth of the company's online open source community.
Prior to joining Univa UD in 2008, Gary was Vice President and Business Manager for Platform Computing HPC division. During nearly five years there, he led the company's business planning, innovation and product management efforts while marshaling a team that developed some of the industry's most popular software. Tyreman was among the first in the industry to recognize the emerging entry-level user in the HPC space and was responsible for developing a vision for how to simplify running applications off the shelf, a key to unlocking value among organizations new to HPC. He worked with Intel Corp. to develop his innovations, which were taken into account when Intel announced the Intel Cluster Ready program last year, making it easier to design, build, sell, program, acquire and deploy clusters built with Intel components. Prior to his tenure at Platform Computing, Tyreman held a variety of executive positions in product management and marketing in technology growth companies, including Hummingbird, Delano and Itemus.
Gary is actively involved in the standards community and has held key positions in the X Consortium (X.org) and Open Grid Forum.