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Milwaukee Chapter Wisconsin Innovation Network Crowne Plaza Hotel May 10, 2012

Milwaukee Chapter Wisconsin Innovation Network Crowne Plaza Hotel May 10, 2012. John T. Byrnes Milwaukee Institute. You were promised …. Milwaukee Institute.

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Milwaukee Chapter Wisconsin Innovation Network Crowne Plaza Hotel May 10, 2012

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  1. Milwaukee ChapterWisconsin Innovation NetworkCrowne Plaza HotelMay 10, 2012 John T. Byrnes Milwaukee Institute

  2. You were promised … Milwaukee Institute • The Milwaukee Institute has proposed a dramatic expansion of the region’s capacity for high-performance computing, high speed data transport and mass data storage. • The Institute believes the region’s ability to handle the electronic data needed for the research and development activities of major academic institutions is essential for economic growth and job creation. • The Institute has developed the elements of a comprehensive network, including data centers, shared computational resources and more.

  3. Global economic expansion and job growth are being propelled by technological change that is unstoppable. • Real estate development initiatives now being emphasized by local leaders will not change the outcome in the fight for jobs. • Lack of technology development agenda is the core problem that needs to be addressed now, before its too late. Understanding the Situation

  4. Understanding the Problem Wisconsin % GDP

  5. Increasing Productivity Pace of change has accelerated since 2000!

  6. Skill Levels Rising Everywhere In 2012 we estimate that the US workforce has shifted further up!

  7. Re-Inventing Manufacturing • Unskilled labor has declining value in the modern world of advanced manufacturing. • Access to skilled knowledge workers is the key to success in manufacturing of the future. • Working knowledge of science, mathematics and information technology will be essential.

  8. No IT…No Advanced Mfg! Tightly Coupled --U.S Council On Competitiveness June, 2010

  9. (% Share of US Employment) IT, Health Care, Retail, Logistics, Transportation Private Services Manufacturing Agriculture YEAR Not Only Manufacturing IT workers

  10. Workforce Study Findings • IT workers are largest, single cohort of knowledge workers by type in the region. • The population of IT workers is the fastest growing cohort of workers and the rate of growth is accelerating. • IT workers have average salaries that are more than twice the average salaries in the region. • IT workers are statistically invisible because they are counted as employee across all industry and service sectors of the economy.

  11. Fastest Growing Occupations2006-2016 Occupation %Growth # of Jobs #1 Network systems data analysts + 53% +140,000 #4 Computer software engineers + 45% +226,000 #23 Computer systems analysts + 29% +146,000 #24 Database administrators + 28% + 34,000 #25 Software programmer + 28% + 99,000 Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics

  12. Technology Causes Change Age of Information & Space Civilization moves in big jumps based on widespread adoption of new technology! Electronics, computers, fiber optics, molecular genetics, internet, and space travel Age of Re-Industrialization Age of Industrialization Steelmaking, railroads, electricity, oil refining, chemicals, refrigeration, engines, cars, explosives, radio, telephone and television Age of Urbanization Plumbing, pulleys, levels, screws, gears, architecture and medicines Masonry, waterworks, metalworking, printing, woodworking, weaving Age of Domestication Wheels, boats, agriculture, ropes and rudimentary fabrics, art and mathematics. Bronze Age Mining, metals tools, vessels weapons, sleds Stone Age Natural tools, pottery weapons & clothing

  13. Embracing the Solution • At the Milwaukee Institute we believe that… • We must invest in high tech infrastructure. • We must promote the formation of industry clusters that focus on a shared technology research agenda. • We must inspire efforts to apply new science and technology to solving “grand challenge” problems. • We must focus on the “next gen” workforce to make it happen.

  14. High Tech Infrastructure Technical Computing! Largely Invisible! CyberSystem Elements

  15. MKEI: MGrid Core Regional Technical Computing Community MGrid Core

  16. MGrid Core MOU’s Now In Place Private Sector Sponsors

  17. MGrid Core: Phase One Operational Today 20 User Groups 64 CPU’s 256 cores 14 TB Data

  18. MGrid Core: Phase Two Operational 2013 875 CPU’s 3500 cores 100 TB Data Genomic Analysis & Systems Biology 64 CPU’s 256 cores 14 TB Data

  19. MGrid Core: Phase Three Operational 2014 3500 CPU’s 14,000 cores 2 PB Data 875 CPU’s 3500 cores 100 TB Data 100 gb/sec fiber optic connections BIG Data 64 CPU’s 256 cores 14 TB Data

  20. Milwaukee Institute Why do this now?

  21. Modern Technology 2. It is a collection of related research and development efforts... 1. It is about the Microcosm. InfoTech 3. …that attempt to mimic, interpret and predict the behavior of very small things. BioTech NanoTech 4. It is the foundational knowledge of allhigh techproductsand services.

  22. Information Technology InfoTech 2. It enables and accelerates the other technological innovation. 1. First among equals! 3. It is increasing high-performance—not just fast, but super fast! BioTech NanoTech Knowledge Gap! 4. Modern IT enable us to use of modeling and simulationto solve enormously complex problems that were previously unsolvable.

  23. Rise of Technical Computing • Increasing CPU speed and lower cost per cycle has made it possible to process increasingly complex and larger data sets than ever before. • The scientific method can now be applied in reverse by using computers to analyze enormous amounts of data in ways that produce new science. CPU Speed • The explosion of digital data requires massively parallel processing systems that in themselves create new ways of thinking about information. • Technical computing makes it possible to formulate large scale models to answer questions that in the past would have been inconceivable. Data Sets

  24. Why Technical Computing? Reality is not what it appears to be. • Real world is not a simple, linear system. • Real world inputs are often disproportionate to outputs. • Real world has systems we don’t fully understand, such as phase changes, e.g., solid, liquid, gas, and plasma. • Real world systems have limits and tipping points.

  25. Nano-Scale Molecular Imaging Requires HPC

  26. Requires HPC

  27. Requires HPC DOD Dynamic Supply Chain Management

  28. High Tech Infrastructure It’s Not So Easy! This is the hard part!

  29. Application Libraries • Packaged Software • OS Middleware • Collaboration Tools • Administrative Applets • Scientific Algorithms • Training Aids

  30. Managed Service Systems • Identity Management • Access Control • Scheduling • Data Security • Cost Recovery • User Training • Break/Fix

  31. Milwaukee Institute Fostering a High Tech Future Since November, 2007

  32. Institute Rules of Engagement • MKEI has no interest in intellectual property. • Everything MKEI invents will be available as open source. • Everything you give MKEI to run is protected and returned to you without retaining copies. • MKEI will encourage the fluidity of ideas among and between all segments of society. • Public to public • Public to private • Private to private • People to people • MKEI will assist with development of proprietary technology under agreements that provide we will retain nothing but cash fees for services rendered.

  33. Milwaukee Institute Board of Directors Technical Advisory Board MGrid Users Council J. Bayne, Phd. Executive Director N. Lindberg Sr. Consulting Eng. J. Gladieux Director Operations (Vacant) Director Cluster Dev. HPC Engineering MGrid MOU’s Healthcare Defense WEB Engineering HPC Services Manufacturing Transportation HPC Confg. Mgmt Network Services Financial Media & Design Data Storage Services Today: A Cyberphysical Organization

  34. Our Vision: Timeline of Events 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 Educational Outreach: IP Forum 1 IP Forum 2 IP Forum 3 Technology Summit I Tech Conference CI Day 1 CI Day 2 MiniConf Imagine Conference Imagine Conference Cyber Infrastructure: RCOE MGrid Data Center RCOE MGrid Data Centers Mkei.org HPC Mkei.org Website Organize 501C3 RCOE MGrid Data Center RCOE RCOE Public/Private Partnerships: Healthcare Grand Challenge Problems Transportation Mkei.org Industry Clusters Defense Financial Manufacturing Media BOD June, 2009

  35. Industry Clusters, V-2 Technical Grand Challenges Water • Examples: • Splitting water w/ sunlight • Molecular microfiltration • Lg. Scale hydrodynamic modeling Energy Materials To be developed by the regional community of professional engineers. Automation Genetics Space

  36. Grand Challenge Problems A problem that addresses important regional, national, and global priorities and… • …is technically difficult. • …requires inter-disciplinary collaboration. • …involves a public-private partnership. • …is funded in part by governmental agencies. • …has regional economic significance. • …will take 3-5 years to solve.

  37. National Academy Of Science • Make solar energy economical • Provide energy from fusion • Develop carbon sequestration methods • Manage the nitrogen cycle • Provide access to clean water • Restore and improve urban infrastructure • Advance health informatics • Better engineer medicines • Reverse engineer the brain • Prevent nuclear terror • Secure cyberspace • Enhance virtual reality • Advance personalized learning • Engineer tools of scientific discovery • www.engineeringchallenges.org

  38. Research Centers of Excellence Federal Funding $$$$$ Technology Transfer Research Agenda Business Cluster RCOE $$$ Academia New Business Formation Market pull, not technology push

  39. Embracing the Solution • At the Milwaukee Institute we believe that… • We must invest in high tech infrastructure. • We must promote the formation of industry clusters that focus on a shared technology research agenda. • We must inspire efforts to apply new science and technology to solving “grand challenge” problems. • We must focus on the “next gen” workforce to make it happen.

  40. Milwaukee Institute An Agent for Change Invent Don’t Copy

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