Patrick J. Miller
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Patrick J. Miller
Patrick J. Miller is a computer scientist and High-performance computing, high performance Parallel computing, parallel applications developer with a Ph.D. in Computer Science from University of California, Davis, in run time (program lifecycle phase), run-time error detection and correction. Until recently he was with Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. He is most noted for building and assembling the largest temporary supercomputer in the world, flash mob computing, FlashMob I, in an attempt to break into the Top 500 list of supercomputers with students from his "Do-it-yourself Supercomputing" class at the University of San Francisco in April 2004. This effort was featured on the front page of the New York Times on February 23, 2004. In September 2005, he and others at Bryn Mawr College, Bryn Mawr recreated a FlashMob Supercomputer to calculate the value of pi to 15,000 digits and performed 15,800 steps to simulate the unfolding of a protein interacting with an anthrax t ...
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Computer Scientist
A computer scientist is a person who is trained in the academic study of computer science. Computer scientists typically work on the theoretical side of computation, as opposed to the hardware side on which computer engineers mainly focus (although there is overlap). Although computer scientists can also focus their work and research on specific areas (such as algorithm and data structure development and design, software engineering, information theory, database theory, computational complexity theory, numerical analysis, programming language theory, computer graphics, and computer vision), their foundation is the theoretical study of computing from which these other fields derive. A primary goal of computer scientists is to develop or validate models, often mathematical, to describe the properties of computational systems (processors, programs, computers interacting with people, computers interacting with other computers, etc.) with an overall objective of discovering des ...
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