00:03 | thank you for watching this video about was hearing and my research lab, |
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00:11 | advanced computing research lab, which the is on energy efficient computing, that |
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00:18 | highly important in their wide range of . And I will try to convince |
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00:24 | that that is the case. So you are later on looking for jobs |
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00:29 | the silicon industry, like Intel AMG IBM or in NVIDIA or others or |
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00:36 | the user industry and particularly the big companies or the oil and gas |
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00:42 | Energy is one of the prime concerns . Again, whether you do use |
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00:49 | or platforms or your design and build . So in order to address this |
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00:58 | looks at all aspects of the so to speak, algorithm software and |
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01:04 | and students in the group worked on aspect or the other depending upon their |
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01:11 | . So first time I tried to you that why power and energy is |
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01:18 | important and here's the first argument why important. So the heat density of |
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01:30 | At about 2005 got to the point there was no cooling technology available or |
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01:37 | the horizon that would allow the continued increase that has been going on until |
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01:47 | 2005. As you can see on little right hand diagram, the heat |
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01:52 | is close to the same as in nuclear reactor and about 10 times more |
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01:57 | on your stove plate where, you , boil your eggs or make tea |
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02:02 | coffee or something similar. So the density ended up being unacceptable to continue |
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02:12 | the other part why it's important is Economics. So since about the same |
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02:19 | as well it turns out that for lifetime of the system the cost of |
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02:26 | and cooling exceeds the cost of the hardware itself. For the last bigger |
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02:32 | was involved in purchasing myself. It's 1300 old cluster. It ended up |
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02:39 | about 1/3 of the total cost was actual computing system itself. And the |
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02:45 | reason why it's an important aspect is electricity consumption for what's known as the |
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02:53 | . C. T. They basically and computing technologies uh By the end |
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03:01 | this decade is expected to be more for about 20% of the total electricity |
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03:08 | . And as you can see it's exponentially growing. So that in itself |
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03:13 | a concern but not necessarily negative one computing tend to replace in many aspects |
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03:21 | more energy consuming activities. But the is that only about a quarter of |
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03:28 | generation comes from clean and renewable energy and about 2/3 comes from combustion. |
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03:37 | it has a big environmental impact. this slightly basically gives a little bit |
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03:43 | the scales at this because as data consume about the equivalent of 100 million |
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03:48 | . S. Homes in terms of electricity. So now what can be |
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03:53 | about it? Well software depending upon you um use it can have a |
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04:03 | range of efficiencies as this points points for a very trivial case, basically |
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04:08 | multiplication and you know, popular programming like python and java tends to be |
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04:16 | inefficient in terms of resource utilization. at this slide shows it's about more |
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04:23 | four orders of magnitude in terms of , depending upon the efficiency of your |
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04:29 | . For the very trivial type algorithm matrix multiplication of course this is performance |
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04:35 | not energy but unfortunately energy is not to the performance. It's Has a |
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04:45 | but it's not very large. So would claim that may not be 60,000 |
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04:50 | between the best and worst case but probably most likely at least 10,000 times |
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04:57 | . It's also that depending upon how architecture you can get a widely different |
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05:04 | efficiencies and what this line shows that to standard microprocessors, kind of general |
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05:12 | like your typical x 86 whether it from in calorie MB or some other |
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05:19 | and um be about up to five of magnitude less energy efficient than a |
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05:28 | type architecture. So that's why, was pointed out by the touring award |
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05:35 | a couple of years ago, john and the Paterson that many of you |
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05:41 | know by name from their very popular book. But it's basically says the |
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05:49 | purpose type architecture that implied convergence over couple of decades is kind of over |
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05:56 | to the need for more energy efficient And another one is this example from |
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06:04 | saw some of the big users of , they took their medicine their own |
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06:10 | and um, Google designed what they the tensor processing unit. And according |
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06:17 | their own claims, if they hadn't it and continued with standard General Gpus |
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06:22 | Cpus, they would have actually required to double their data centers. So |
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06:28 | we're doing in the group now is to be driven by application by vertical |
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06:35 | co design if you like that, a popular word or domain specific |
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06:40 | but one of my students is focused machine learning for in this case for |
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06:48 | applications and machine learning is incredibly our high energy consumption. So the |
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06:58 | graph towards the end of the left side shows you that some of these |
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07:03 | networks and their training uh requires as energy as a lifetime energy or I |
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07:11 | say energy but the emissions associated given a mix of sources for electricity, |
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07:21 | about five times as um damaging in of carbon dioxide as five cars over |
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07:31 | lifetime of the cars. Another student working on encoding up point clouds and |
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07:38 | to you use it in fact for in his case to do computational |
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07:45 | And so what we've come up with representation of point class that is Up |
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07:51 | 200, we have served up to times as compact if you like compared |
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07:57 | a standard of representation. And a student has been working on understanding and |
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08:04 | a novel architecture. I was originally for vision processing, but then it's |
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08:10 | used for machine learning and we have gun up obtain a demonstrated quite a |
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08:18 | improvement in energy efficiency with proper algorithmic choices. And here is finally a |
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08:27 | where the students have ended up in past summer, ended up in being |
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08:33 | , professors at some good universities, ends up in the computer industry and |
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08:40 | and uses of the industry and others more entrepreneurial and ends up in startups |
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