San Diego Supercomputer Center
James Bordner received his Ph.D. in Computer Science at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 1999, with a focus on multigrid linear solvers. As a post-doc at NCSA (National Center for Supercomputing Applications) and later CASS (Center for Astrophysics & Space Sciences) he worked with the ENZO parallel adaptive mesh refinement astrophysics and cosmology application, where he developed a multigrid solver for its radiative transfer method, measured and optimized ENZO's performance, and developed an automated software testing infrastructure for use in ENZO. In 2010 he began developing Cello, a highly-scalable adaptive mesh refinement software framework, and Enzo-E, a port of ENZO's physics to use the Cello framework. Today he enjoys leading the continued development of Enzo-E / Cello, in collaboration with the ENZO and Enzo-E international open-development community.
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San Diego Supercomputer Center
The San Diego Supercomputer Center's (SDSC) mission is to transform research, education, and practice through Cyberinfrastructure. SDSC's experts, datacenter, computational resources, and software tools and environments are used by the academic, private, and public sector to facilitate applications, advances and promote new discovery. SDSC hosts one of the largest academic data centers in the world and is recognized as an international leader in data use, management, storage, and preservation.