The Ohio Supercomputer Center (OSC) launched OSC OnDemand in January and gave presentations about it at various meetings and conferences, including the XSEDE conference in July. Through OnDemand, users can run high-performance computing (HPC) and visualization on Glenn and Oakley, our production clusters. To some of our users, I suspect OnDemand looks like a web site and nothing more. I think it is substantially more. I think it is Sputnik.
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The Daily Digest for this Tuesday focuses on various topics such as the relationship between 3D printing and agriculture manufacturing, wireless devices straining campus networks, the increase in STEM graduates, and funding to Louisiana State University for new supercomputing efforts. There are also articles on higher education lobbying efforts focusing more on state and local governments and the student loan default rate in Ohio.
The first daily digest of the week features more articles on the effects of the government shutdown as it pertains to scientific research. We also have articles on manufacturing and productivity, changes in state energy laws, a shift in how libraries focus on targeting their audience and providing their services, along with an article on the increase of tablet computer use.
The Daily Digest for today features articles on NSF awards to San Diego Supercomputer Center in California and a Penn State University project focusing on natural gas drilling. Also included are articles featuring a new patnership with India and Bangladesh pertaining to cross-border power transmission, student loan default rates, and course management company Design2Learn's new efforts in massive open online courses.
Today's Daily Digest covers stories concerning the effect of the Affordable Care Act and job growth in Ohio, historically black public colleges and increase in enrollment, attendance encouragement at local public schools, and libraries evolving into technology centers. Two more articles are featured in the DD for today, focusing on how some districts are functioning without technology officers and the NSA working on productivity during the shutdown.
Experimental testing is fundamental to most engineering R&D. Over the past decade, large companies have leveraged simulation techniques to help expedite their design and development phase, with the use of Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) being the key tool in fluid based systems. By marrying CFD with traditional physical testing, it is possible to quickly identify and correct weaknesses in a given design and often improve performance above what would have been achievable through rig testing alone.
Today’s Daily Digest features articles concerning legal risks involved with moving to cloud computing, the benefits of massive open online courses in 2-year institutions, the effect of the shutdown on small business investments and national security, and a new OSU software venture to improve patient education.
The Daily Digest for this Friday consists of articles revolving around education investment being the next big "bursting bubble" in the global economy, OSU's new partnership with Microlin Bio to diagnose new types of cancer, supercomputing and cleaner environmental practices, the shutdown's effect on libraries, and a software developer firm moving to Dublin, Ohio.
The Daily Digest for today is compiled of articles featuring more information on the government shutdown and how exactly each agency will be affected, information on the upcoming Manufacturing day on October 4th, student loan default rates, school districts using data for teaching assistance, and how the White House is working on efforts to incorporate more women into STEM subjects.
Today's Daily Digest features articles revolving around the manufacturing sector and auto production, improvement of career centers in colleges and universities, and Ohio college and university presidents meeting to discuss capital projects. We also have articles featuring metadata stored by NSA and a unique opportunity for NASA to launch a 3D printer into space!
The Ohio Supercomputer Center is pleased to be celebrating Ohio Manufacturing Month and National Manufacturing Day in a very special way. Earlier this summer, the Ohio Third Frontier Commission awarded a $3 million Innovation Platform Program grant to OSC and our partners for a project to design and deploy easy-to-use advanced manufacturing simulation apps.
Our Digest to mark off the beginning of fall and a new month features a variety of articles, some giving insight on the effects of the government shutdown. While the two articles on the shutdown are from before prior to the official midnight shutdown, they provide a summary on how specific aspects of the federal government will be affected.
The remaining articles we have feature 3D printing and its contribution to manufacturing, new standards for college cybersecurity programs, and the effects of comprehensive clean energy for manufacturing in Ohio.
I am a passionate advocate for empowering high-quality teachers. I believe that’s partly because I had a high-quality teacher who made a huge impact on my life. Helen Heller, my high school Latin teacher in Farmer, Ohio, believed in me and gave me a directive—backed by a cash gift—to go to college. I had lost my father that school year, and Mrs. Heller was just the kind of teacher I needed.
Articles featured for the final daily digest of the week include information on funding for a new innovation funding pool research project at Edison Welding Institute, Ohio's rural businesses, Ohio State and Brazil collaboration funding for researchers to build on existing partnerships, renewable energy in Ohio, robots developed for research, and the threat to science in the STEM field
Today's daily digest features a number of articles from a wide variety of sources. We have articles featuring new efforts by Oracle to strengthen research into big data along with research looking into productivity of manufacturing. There are also articles featuring NASA's new FY 2013 operating plan, Miami University's push for online learning, Florida State Colleges dropping remedial class requirements to open more doors to students, and information from the federal Consumer Financial Protection Bureau on how to guide private student loan borrowers.
Today's Daily Digest, compiled and distributed by the OH-TECH Policy and Communications Team, includes news summaries on topics related to areas of consortium interest. Today's posts focus on growth of a Central Ohio community college, Columbus State, which also received funding for a career training program in conjunction with Cincinnati State. We also have articles featuring NASA's supercomputer focusing on climate conditions, information on faculty at Wright State University receiving tenure, a new Mitsubishi Training Center, technology revamping in area libraries, and the Ohio Third Frontier!
The first daily digest of this week features articles about the relationship between employers and community-college graduates, GM working to consolidate in order to save on energy consumption, suspension of specific federal tests in the 2013-14 school year for students taking mathematicsa nd English/language arts, an NIST award for manufacturing research, Ohio STEM job increase, and the University of Toledo's online education portfolio
The final Daily Digest of this week includes articles from a variety of sources about overcoming educational technology challenges in rural areas, the Massive Open Online Course industry, NASA research efforts with 3D printing, Ohio colleges and job training, reauthorization of the Higher Education Act, and rural southern Ohio school districts catering toward international students. We also have articles about further STEM efforts in universities and middle schools catered toward females along with an article about a new manufacturing center at Wright State University in Dayton, Ohio.
The daily digest for today is an assortment of articles on the subjects of supercomputing, education, and shale energy. The articles feature the development of a faster and low-energy supercomputer, the shale industry booming Ohio's economy, the need for more well-rounded college graduates, California's college system seeking creative commons licenses, and the University of Wisconsin working to protect its researchers' published work.
The daily digest for this Wednesday features articles featuring issues regarding lack of braodband in school districts, manufacturing jobs and the skills gap in Northeast Ohio, female engineers, Ohio report card grades being linked to poverty, resourcing of school libraries to improve literacy rates, the debate over whether state funds should go toward online classes or not. We also have an article featuring graduates in Ohio, during the 2008 recession, and how they were able to find work despite the looming economy.
Today's Daily Digest includes articles about emerging markets in the EU causing apps related jobs to move overseas, Ohio school funding and academic advancement, technical colleges in Texas revolving around state funding, a new manufacturing technology education collaborative, and online filters blocking educational sites
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