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Date: 27th Feb 2011
OpenCL University Kit from AMD for computer
science students
AMD has announced the introduction of the OpenCL University
Kit, a set of materials that can be leveraged by any university
to assist them in teaching a semester course in OpenCL programming.
OpenCL is the non-proprietary industry standard available
today for heterogeneous computing to help developers to
harness the full compute power of both the CPU and GPU to
create innovative applications for vivid computing experiences.
"As a former professor at Washington University in
St. Louis, I firmly believe that the university setting
is a vital environment to cultivate the best and brightest
minds and set them on a path to succeed," said Manju
Hegde, corporate vice president, AMD Fusion Experience Program.
"By ensuring that an industry standard like OpenCL
is a central element of the education process, we are helping
to put the PC application ecosystem in good hands to take
full advantage of a heterogeneous computing future."
"Teaching students to effectively leverage the OpenCL
standard involves all the intricacies of parallel programming
plus support for a new class of heterogeneous computing
devices built on a variety of hardware technologies,"
said David Kaeli, professor and associate dean of undergraduate
programs, Northeastern University College of Engineering.
"The OpenCL University Kit introduced by AMD is an
easy tool to enable educators to quickly introduce OpenCL
learning into their curriculum, helping them strike a balance
between teaching syntax and higher level architectural issues."
Included in the University Kit is a 13 lecture series,
equipped with instructor and speaker notes, as well as code
examples where necessary. An advanced understanding of OpenCL
is not needed to understand the course materials; students
only require a basic knowledge of C/C++ programming. A C/C++
compiler and an OpenCL implementation (such as the AMD APP
SDK) are needed to complete the exercises.
For students and developers who are interested in presenting
technical papers on heterogeneous computing, AMD will be
holding its first AMD Fusion Developer Summit from June
13-16 in Seattle, Washington. Proposals can be submitted
until February 25. Summit participants will engage in interactive
sessions and hands-on labs to deepen their knowledge of
advanced CPU and GPU programmability, and gain a better
understanding of how software applications can take full
advantage of the parallel processing power of APUs, bringing
supercomputer-like performance to everyday computing tasks.
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