iSGTW - International Science Grid This Week
iSGTW - International Science Grid This Week
Null

Home > iSGTW 3 March 2010 > Blog post of the week - Out of the mouths of babes

Blog post of the week - Out of the mouths of babes


A recent high school field trip to Argonne National Laboratory and Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory was recorded the 21st century way – with tweets.

In a recent Symmetry Breaking blog post, Symmetry intern Andrea Mustain wrote:

    “I was looking for a way for them to journal, but in a more realistic way. I think that’s what texting is and definitely what Twitter is—a way to journal,” says Dale Basler, instigator of all that cell-phone gazing and a physics teacher at Appleton East High School.

    Basler gave the students several assignments for the field trip; he’d set up a Twitter feed, and one option was to post tweets throughout the day.

    But he laid out some ground rules. The students had to do at least 16 tweets, on a variety of topics–physics topics–and, Basler says, he enforced strict cell phone etiquette: ringers off, and utmost discretion while tweeting.

    He did allow for some lighthearted posting. “I figured it’s the same as talking around the lab table while you’re setting up an experiment,” Basler says. “But I told them they’d only get credit for ones with appropriate subjects.”

At Argonne, several students tweeted with awe – and not a few with covetous undertones – as they were introduced to Intrepid, a Blue Gene configuration with a peak performance of 557 teraflops. Intrepid is not, however, the fastest computer in the world, as they seemed to surmise. That honor goes to Oak Ridge National Laboratory’s Jaguar, which boasts a peak performance of 2331 teraflops. Intrepid is currently the eighth fastest computer in the world.

The trip certainly taught the students a bit about how rapidly computer performance is improving. xJamarcusx wrote, “A xray of a certain protein that our guide did took him two years, now the computer can do it in seven minutes! Talk about efficiency.”

A few more choice tweets about computing:

    antigravity826 The EPIC computer system controls the very sophisticated operation of concentrating x-rays to collect data

    xJamarcusx Fermilab produces a million collisions a second and they have to save 370 of them they do that by the TRIGGER computer system

    crazo708 Due to the expansion of space, the game asteroids should get easier as time goes on.

    SLAppletonEast World wide web possible because of physics

To learn more about the class trip, check out our blog post of the week. Or, to read their tweets, visit the trip Twitter stream.

Tags:



Null
 iSGTW 1 September 2010

Feature - The forecast before the storm

Q&A - Joe Hellerstein on cloud programming

Q&A - People behind EGI: Steve Brewer steps in as the voice of the user

Poll of the week - Rock stars of scientific computing

Videos of the week - NoHardware.com destroys server huggers' equipment

 Announcements

Symposium on Authentication Technologies for Research and Education abstracts due

Grace Hopper early bird registration due

Gordon Conference 2010 abstracts due

Jobs in distributed computing

 Subscribe

Enter your email address to subscribe to iSGTW.

Unsubscribe

 iSGTW Blog Watch

Keep up with the grid’s blogosphere

 Mark your calendar

September 2010

August 29-Sept 3, CERN School of Computing

2-3, Citizen Cyberscience Summit

6-8, IASTED in Botswana

6-9, PRACE Training Week

6-10, GridKa School 2010

13-15, CaBIG

13-16, UK All Hands Meeting

14-17, EGI Technical Forum

20-24, Cluster 2010

27-29, ICT 2010

21-23, Cybera Summit 2010

More calendar items . . .

FooterINFSOMEuropean CommissionDepartment of EnergyNational Science Foundation RSSHeadlines | Site Map