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User:Chris Szalwinski

78 bytes removed, 22:12, 16 May 2014
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'''Chris Szalwinski''' is a Professor at the [https://scs.senecac.on.ca/ School of Information and Communications Technology] (ICT) of Seneca College and a an independent scientific researcher in his own right.He teaches C, C++ and Parallel Programming. He has also taught Game Programming (DirectX) and Human Computer Interaction and has published comprehensive web sites that contain his course materials. He currently leads the programming faculty in and is updating its course material for the C and C++, diploma and degree subjects. He works does research on soft matter mechanics in his spare time.
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In fall 2012, Chris introduced an ICT course in parallel programming on heterogeneous computers using Nvidia's CUDA technology; that is, a course on how to use your desktop as your very own supercomputer. He teaches ICT students to harness the processing power available on today's desktop graphics cards for computing tasks that benefit from high performance hardware. Students who finish this course should find themselves well-positioned to assist employers and clients in solving embarrassingly data-parallel programming problems.
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<p>This winter (2014), Chris is teaching taught an intermediate successor course for those students who wish to specialize in the modern field of parallel computing. This new course covers covered a variety of parallel algorithms and platforms.
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<p>Chris is interested in supervising applied research initiatives in task-parallel and data-parallel programming that provide students who have completed his courses with opportunities to apply and refine their skill set by working as research assistants on heterogeneous applications. He is interested in joint collaboration with academia, business, and industry on research projects that will advance the state of this technology and better prepare his students for the challenges and opportunities that are arising in the field of accelerated computing.
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Chris maintains a personal interest, outside his Seneca College duties, in developing and modelling constitutive relations for soft granular matter. He believes that finds this is a fascinating, emerging field, which he believes presents numerous opportunities for innovative programming.
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