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==Why Fedora?==
==Why Fedora?==
I'm a big fan of the Fedora project, I got my start in the Unix/Linux world using FreeBSD in the late 90's working for an automotive supplier in Detroit and then progressed on to Fedora Core when I began developing software and hardware for remote environmental data collection systems in Texas and never looked back.  Today I work in the world of large clusters which typically run some form of RHEL (typically centOS).
I'm a big fan of the Fedora project, I got my start in the Unix/Linux world using FreeBSD in the late 90's working for an automotive supplier in Detroit and then progressed on to Fedora Core when I began developing software and hardware for remote environmental data collection systems in Texas and never looked back.  Today I work in the world of large clusters which run some form of RHEL (typically centOS).

Revision as of 16:00, 31 May 2010

John Lockman III
John Lockman III
Fedora Information
FAS name: j0hn
Fedora email: j0hn@fedoraproject.org
IRC nick: j0hn
IRC channels:
Fedorapeople page: https://j0hn.fedorapeople.org
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About me

My name is John Lockman. I live in Austin Texas, U.S.A. and work as a High Performance Computing Specialist with the Texas Advanced Computing Center where I collaborate with the Performance Evaluation and Optimization group. We spend a lot of time optimizing large parallel codes written with MPI or OpenMP.

Other fun things I do at work:

  • Teach courses in scientific computing and utilizing HPC resources
  • Support users on our clusters
  • Build packages (rpm)
  • Benchmark and test new hardware

I also do some research and publish papers in the areas of:

  • Scheduling large collectives using Artificial Immune System algorithms
  • Real-time Stereo Vision techniques

Why Fedora?

I'm a big fan of the Fedora project, I got my start in the Unix/Linux world using FreeBSD in the late 90's working for an automotive supplier in Detroit and then progressed on to Fedora Core when I began developing software and hardware for remote environmental data collection systems in Texas and never looked back. Today I work in the world of large clusters which run some form of RHEL (typically centOS).