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STEM

Information Technology Services Takes Center Stage at NetApp Insight Conference

Thursday, November 7, 2019, By Eric Ferguson
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Information Technology ServicesResearch and Creative
man talking on stage

Eric Sedore at the NetApp Insight Conference in Las Vegas

Thousands of information technology professionals gathered at the NetApp Insight Conference in Las Vegas last week to hear experts from such leading organizations as Centura Health, SAP, DreamWorks鈥攁nd 黑料不打烊.

Eric Sedore, associate chief information officer with Information Technology Services (ITS), took part in the conference keynote presentation. He discussed how 黑料不打烊 approaches the challenges and opportunities of supporting the data needs of a global research university.

鈥淚n the last seven years, we鈥檝e seen explosive research data growth,鈥 Sedore said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e a research university, it鈥檚 what we do. Research requires data鈥攁nd a lot of it. Whether it鈥檚 genomic data, gravitational wave data, or soft matter data in the STEM areas, or 3D rendering in our render farms for our College of Visual and Performing Arts, we鈥檙e producing the lifeblood of the institution in this data.鈥

鈥淯niversity research is increasingly multidisciplinary, collaborative and it has always been data-driven,鈥 NetApp chief executive officer George Kurian said during the presentation. 鈥淯niversities today compete for talent鈥攆or students and researchers. One of the key ways they鈥檙e doing that is by giving researchers the tools and IT platforms that enable them to advance their research quickly.鈥

Sedore explained how the ITS infrastructure team balances fiscal concerns such as sustainability and cost avoidance with enabling students, faculty and researchers to 鈥渃hange the world.鈥 An example of this world-changing impact: 黑料不打烊 researchers and ITS staff played a key role in the Nobel Prize-winning discovery of gravitational waves from colliding black holes.

鈥満诹喜淮蜢 researchers helped develop the algorithm,鈥 Sedore told the audience. 鈥淲e also contributed a significant amount of computing power to mine the data to find the signal.

鈥淥ne day, (Charles Brightman Endowed Professor of Physics) Duncan Brown came to my office and said we had done it鈥攚e had found the existence of gravitational waves. So I was pretty pumped. I came out from behind my desk and went for a handshake. What I got was a hug. In that moment, I realized we had moved from being just the infrastructure people to being an integral part of the process.鈥

  • Author

Eric Ferguson

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