Two decades ago when I was building kernels, I thought
it would be wise to build a kernel using the same
libraries as would be used in the operating system.
Containers allow the same machine to support a range
of libraries and binaries, but I wonder about the kernel.
Is it rare for a container to
Greg, like a hat? Phi on a Pi?
It needs a six and an eight pin connector.
The Phi runs linux natively. To take the quick start a step further,
generate the mandelbrot visually, and call the coprocessor to add the
color fields.
HOST/USER
main()
{
#pragma offload target(mic)
}
COPROCESSOR
myColor
Beowulf,
In the quick start, in the colorfull pictures section Intel shows xeon phi
+ linux binaries + api's.
225 tw concerns me. How many pins is that?
I will soon know :)
Richard Edwards, thanks for the BAR comment. My 630 start up hackishly.
Hopeful for this leading to improvements.
Happy New Ye
I'd put one next to my Google Glass. A host within a host, symbiotically
reaching the world through a pci slot. It will be back :)
It was art + science + sociology in a package as misguided as it was ahead
of it's time.
On Thu, Dec 31, 2020 at 9:57 AM Carlos Bederián
wrote:
> KNC got dropped
KNC got dropped as a target in Parallel Studio XE 2018.
On Thu, Dec 31, 2020 at 5:17 AM John Hearns wrote:
> Stupid question from me - does OneAPI handle Xeon Phi?
>
> (a) I should read the manual
> (b) it is a discontinued product - why would they put any effort into it
>
>
>
> On Thu, 31 Dec 2
Stupid question from me - does OneAPI handle Xeon Phi?
(a) I should read the manual
(b) it is a discontinued product - why would they put any effort into it
On Thu, 31 Dec 2020 at 05:52, Jonathan Engwall <
engwalljonathanther...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Hello Beowulf,
> Both the Xeon Phi and Tesla