On May 16, 2025, Peter Childs, Daniel Howard and Julita Inca ran a
storage workshop at QMUL. The purpose was to educate QMUL researchers
in storing and securing access to their data which is a critical part
of their daily research. We outlined the methods available to achieve this.
On May 7, 2025, from 2pm to 5pm in the Sofa Room at Dept,
researchers from the Blizard Institute advanced their understanding of Apocrita,
the High Performance Computing cluster at Queen Mary University of London.
The hybrid session included six participants in person and four joining online via Microsoft Teams.
A group photo was taken during a coffee break, showcasing their enthusiasm and new souvenirs.
If you go to run every morning, or drive to work on weekdays, you should know that every journey is unique.
For me, every High Performance Computing (HPC) workshop I deliver has its own personality.
The audience, the material tailored to each audience, the interactions and questions, and of course,
the energy of the community.
Last Thursday September 26, an HPC workshop for the Wolfson Institute of Population Health was held from 2:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m.
at Dept. W Room 1.20, 1.21 and 1.22. The seminar includes, as usual, presentations, coffee break, quiz and treats,
and the photographs to make it memorable.
On May 3, 2024 Queen Mary University of London conducted a workshop to
introduce our students to Linux at the Department W building in Whitechapel.
Students from a variety of programmes at Queen Mary attended the workshop.
Many students who participated are working towards Masters and PhD degrees.
We held a 2-hour HPC workshop last Friday, December 15th at Dept W room 3.05.
We arranged an agenda in coordination with the research student at QMUL,
Peter Alexander Lock. It covered the generalities of Linux,
accessing Apocrita, submitting jobs, and linux commands for Apocrita.