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How We Broke the World Record for Computing Digits of Pi

<!--HTML--><p>We have calculated 31.4 trillion digits of Pi in 2019 and broke the world record in the Pi computation. The process took about four months and 200 TiB of storage. Record-breaking Pi calculations have traditionally been done on supercomputers and special-made hardware, but w...

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Autor principal: Haruka Iwao, Emma
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/2677379
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author Haruka Iwao, Emma
author_facet Haruka Iwao, Emma
author_sort Haruka Iwao, Emma
collection CERN
description <!--HTML--><p>We have calculated 31.4 trillion digits of Pi in 2019 and broke the world record in the Pi computation. The process took about four months and 200 TiB of storage. Record-breaking Pi calculations have traditionally been done on supercomputers and special-made hardware, but we did it on Cloud for the first time. This talk will discuss the nature of the calculation, the architecture, challenges and techniques, and of course the brief history of Pi computation. Calculating Pi has been the speaker's childhood dream and this talk will also explain how the small dream grew to the new world record.</p> <p><strong>About the speaker</strong></p> <p>Emma is a developer advocate for Google Cloud Platform, focusing on application developers experience and high performance computing. She has been a C++ developer for more than 15 years and worked on embedded systems and the Chromium Project. Emma is passionate about learning and explaining the most fundamental technologies such as operating systems, distributed systems, and internet protocols. Besides software engineering, she likes games, traveling, and eating delicious food.</p>
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institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2019
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spelling cern-26773792022-11-02T22:27:46Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/2677379engHaruka Iwao, EmmaHow We Broke the World Record for Computing Digits of PiHow We Broke the World Record for Computing Digits of PiCERN Computing Seminar<!--HTML--><p>We have calculated 31.4 trillion digits of Pi in 2019 and broke the world record in the Pi computation. The process took about four months and 200 TiB of storage. Record-breaking Pi calculations have traditionally been done on supercomputers and special-made hardware, but we did it on Cloud for the first time. This talk will discuss the nature of the calculation, the architecture, challenges and techniques, and of course the brief history of Pi computation. Calculating Pi has been the speaker's childhood dream and this talk will also explain how the small dream grew to the new world record.</p> <p><strong>About the speaker</strong></p> <p>Emma is a developer advocate for Google Cloud Platform, focusing on application developers experience and high performance computing. She has been a C++ developer for more than 15 years and worked on embedded systems and the Chromium Project. Emma is passionate about learning and explaining the most fundamental technologies such as operating systems, distributed systems, and internet protocols. Besides software engineering, she likes games, traveling, and eating delicious food.</p>oai:cds.cern.ch:26773792019
spellingShingle CERN Computing Seminar
Haruka Iwao, Emma
How We Broke the World Record for Computing Digits of Pi
title How We Broke the World Record for Computing Digits of Pi
title_full How We Broke the World Record for Computing Digits of Pi
title_fullStr How We Broke the World Record for Computing Digits of Pi
title_full_unstemmed How We Broke the World Record for Computing Digits of Pi
title_short How We Broke the World Record for Computing Digits of Pi
title_sort how we broke the world record for computing digits of pi
topic CERN Computing Seminar
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/2677379
work_keys_str_mv AT harukaiwaoemma howwebroketheworldrecordforcomputingdigitsofpi