Software-Defined Memory finally breaks the Memory Wall hosted by Kove
How can you scale memory to achieve any size needed in real-time, dynamically, even over distance on standard hardware, and still achieve local performance?
How can you scale memory to achieve any size needed in real-time, dynamically, even over distance on standard hardware, and still achieve local performance?
Phil Burr is Head of Product at Lumai where he is focused on bringing the world’s fastest and most energy efficient datacentre AI accelerator to market. Phil has over 25 years of experience in global product management, go-to-market and leadership roles within leading semiconductor and technology companies, and a proven track record of building and scaling products and services. Phil’s previous experience includes leadership roles at Arm, indie Semiconductor, Mentor Graphics (now part of Siemens) and The Technology Partnership.
Parthasarathy (Partha) Ranganathan is currently a VP & Engineering Fellow, Google where he is the area technical lead for hardware and datacenters, designing systems at scale. Prior to this, he was a HP Fellow and Chief Technologist at Hewlett Packard Labs where he led their research on systems and data centers. Partha has worked on several interdisciplinary systems projects with broad impact on both academia and industry, including widely-used innovations in energy-aware user interfaces, heterogeneous multi-cores, power-efficient servers, accelerators, and disaggregated and data-centric data centers. He has published extensively (including being the co-author on the popular "Datacenter as a Computer" textbook), is a co-inventor on more than 100 patents, and has been recognized with numerous awards. He has been named a top-15 enterprise technology rock star by Business Insider, one of the top 35 young innovators in the world by MIT Tech Review, and is a recipient of the ACM SIGARCH Maurice Wilkes award, Rice University's Outstanding Young Engineering Alumni award, and the IIT Madras distinguished alumni award. He is one of few computer scientists to have his work recognized with an Emmy award. He is also a Fellow of the IEEE and ACM, and has also served on the board of directors for OpenCompute.