Recent News
Partnering for success: Computer Science students represent UNM in NASA and Supercomputing Competitions
December 11, 2024
New associate dean interested in helping students realize their potential
August 6, 2024
Hand and Machine Lab researchers showcase work at Hawaii conference
June 13, 2024
Two from School of Engineering to receive local 40 Under 40 awards
April 18, 2024
News Archives
[Colloquium] An Overview of (Some of the) Systems Research @ UNMCS
February 10, 2011
Watch Colloquium:
M4V file (999 MB)
- Date: Thursday, February 10, 2011
- Time: 11:00 am — 11:50 am
- Place: Mechanical Engineering 218
Dorian Arnold
Assistant Professor
UNM Department of Computer Science
In this presentation, I will provide digests of some of the research we have going on in the Scalable Systems Lab (co-directed w/ Prof. Patrick Bridges). Major research areas include large scale software infrastructures, fault-tolerance and resilience, virtualization for HPC systems and HPC tools.
Bio: Dorian Arnold is an assistant professor in Computer Science at the University of New Mexico and a visiting scientist at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. He received an associate’s degree from St. John’s College in Belize, a bachelor’s degree from Regis University in Denver, Colorado, a master’s degree from The University of Tennessee, and a Ph.D from The University of Wisconsin-Madison.
His research interests fall under the broad areas of high performance computing and large scale distributed systems. In particular, he is interested in abstractions and mechanisms that allow system non-experts to harness the power of high-performance systems in scalable, efficient, reliable ways.