Online or onsite, instructor-led live GPU (Graphics Processing Unit) training courses demonstrate through interactive discussion and hands-on practice the fundamentals of GPU and how to program GPUs.
GPU training is available as "online live training" or "onsite live training". Online live training (aka "remote live training") is carried out by way of an interactive, remote desktop. Onsite live GPU trainings in Boston can be carried out locally on customer premises or in NobleProg corporate training centers.
NobleProg -- Your Local Training Provider
MA, Boston - Federal Street
101 Federal Street Suite 1900, Boston, united states, 02110
The office in Boston's Federal Street is a recently renovated office complex set in the heart of the financial district, just one block from Congress Street. Based on the 16th and 19th floors, the office offers spectacular views of the city. Finance and tourism are some of the prime businesses in the state capital, which is the largest city in New England. With its many colleges and universities, Boston is also regarded an international center of higher education, with students contributing more than $4billion to the economy annually. It has a strong reputation for medicine, biotechnology and research. It is ranked in the top 20 of global financial centers and number one for innovation. Boston also has an historic seaport which supports tourism, industry and fishing.
This instructor-led, live training in Boston (online or onsite) is aimed at beginner-level to intermediate-level developers who wish to use OpenACC to program heterogeneous devices and exploit their parallelism.
By the end of this training, participants will be able to:
Set up an OpenACC development environment.
Write and run a basic OpenACC program.
Annotate code with OpenACC directives and clauses.
This instructor-led, live training in Boston (online or onsite) is aimed at beginner-level to intermediate-level developers who wish to learn the basics of GPU programming and the main frameworks and tools for developing GPU applications.
By the end of this training, participants will be able to: Understand the difference between CPU and GPU computing and the benefits and challenges of GPU programming.
Choose the right framework and tool for their GPU application.
Create a basic GPU program that performs vector addition using one or more of the frameworks and tools.
Use the respective APIs, languages, and libraries to query device information, allocate and deallocate device memory, copy data between host and device, launch kernels, and synchronize threads.
Use the respective memory spaces, such as global, local, constant, and private, to optimize data transfers and memory accesses.
Use the respective execution models, such as work-items, work-groups, threads, blocks, and grids, to control the parallelism.
Debug and test GPU programs using tools such as CodeXL, CUDA-GDB, CUDA-MEMCHECK, and NVIDIA Nsight.
Optimize GPU programs using techniques such as coalescing, caching, prefetching, and profiling.
This instructor-led, live training in Boston (online or onsite) is aimed at beginner-level to intermediate-level developers who wish to use different frameworks for GPU programming and compare their features, performance, and compatibility.
By the end of this training, participants will be able to:
Set up a development environment that includes OpenCL SDK, CUDA Toolkit, ROCm Platform, a device that supports OpenCL, CUDA, or ROCm, and Visual Studio Code.
Create a basic GPU program that performs vector addition using OpenCL, CUDA, and ROCm, and compare the syntax, structure, and execution of each framework.
Use the respective APIs to query device information, allocate and deallocate device memory, copy data between host and device, launch kernels, and synchronize threads.
Use the respective languages to write kernels that execute on the device and manipulate data.
Use the respective built-in functions, variables, and libraries to perform common tasks and operations.
Use the respective memory spaces, such as global, local, constant, and private, to optimize data transfers and memory accesses.
Use the respective execution models to control the threads, blocks, and grids that define the parallelism.
Debug and test GPU programs using tools such as CodeXL, CUDA-GDB, CUDA-MEMCHECK, and NVIDIA Nsight.
Optimize GPU programs using techniques such as coalescing, caching, prefetching, and profiling.
This instructor-led, live training in Boston (online or onsite) is aimed at beginner-level to intermediate-level developers who wish to install and use ROCm on Windows to program AMD GPUs and exploit their parallelism.
By the end of this training, participants will be able to:
Set up a development environment that includes ROCm Platform, a AMD GPU, and Visual Studio Code on Windows.
Create a basic ROCm program that performs vector addition on the GPU and retrieves the results from the GPU memory.
Use ROCm API to query device information, allocate and deallocate device memory, copy data between host and device, launch kernels, and synchronize threads.
Use HIP language to write kernels that execute on the GPU and manipulate data.
Use HIP built-in functions, variables, and libraries to perform common tasks and operations.
Use ROCm and HIP memory spaces, such as global, shared, constant, and local, to optimize data transfers and memory accesses.
Use ROCm and HIP execution models to control the threads, blocks, and grids that define the parallelism.
Debug and test ROCm and HIP programs using tools such as ROCm Debugger and ROCm Profiler.
Optimize ROCm and HIP programs using techniques such as coalescing, caching, prefetching, and profiling.
This instructor-led, live training in Boston (online or onsite) is aimed at beginner-level to intermediate-level developers who wish to use ROCm and HIP to program AMD GPUs and exploit their parallelism.
By the end of this training, participants will be able to:
Set up a development environment that includes ROCm Platform, a AMD GPU, and Visual Studio Code.
Create a basic ROCm program that performs vector addition on the GPU and retrieves the results from the GPU memory.
Use ROCm API to query device information, allocate and deallocate device memory, copy data between host and device, launch kernels, and synchronize threads.
Use HIP language to write kernels that execute on the GPU and manipulate data.
Use HIP built-in functions, variables, and libraries to perform common tasks and operations.
Use ROCm and HIP memory spaces, such as global, shared, constant, and local, to optimize data transfers and memory accesses.
Use ROCm and HIP execution models to control the threads, blocks, and grids that define the parallelism.
Debug and test ROCm and HIP programs using tools such as ROCm Debugger and ROCm Profiler.
Optimize ROCm and HIP programs using techniques such as coalescing, caching, prefetching, and profiling.
This instructor-led, live training in Boston (online or onsite) is aimed at beginner-level to intermediate-level developers who wish to use CUDA to program NVIDIA GPUs and exploit their parallelism.
By the end of this training, participants will be able to:
Set up a development environment that includes CUDA Toolkit, a NVIDIA GPU, and Visual Studio Code.
Create a basic CUDA program that performs vector addition on the GPU and retrieves the results from the GPU memory.
Use CUDA API to query device information, allocate and deallocate device memory, copy data between host and device, launch kernels, and synchronize threads.
Use CUDA C/C++ language to write kernels that execute on the GPU and manipulate data.
Use CUDA built-in functions, variables, and libraries to perform common tasks and operations.
Use CUDA memory spaces, such as global, shared, constant, and local, to optimize data transfers and memory accesses.
Use CUDA execution model to control the threads, blocks, and grids that define the parallelism.
Debug and test CUDA programs using tools such as CUDA-GDB, CUDA-MEMCHECK, and NVIDIA Nsight.
Optimize CUDA programs using techniques such as coalescing, caching, prefetching, and profiling.
This instructor-led, live training in Boston (online or onsite) is aimed at beginner-level system administrators and IT professionals who wish to install, configure, manage, and troubleshoot CUDA environments.
By the end of this training, participants will be able to:
Understand the architecture, components, and capabilities of CUDA.
This instructor-led, live training in Boston (online or onsite) is aimed at beginner-level to intermediate-level developers who wish to use OpenCL to program heterogeneous devices and exploit their parallelism.
By the end of this training, participants will be able to:
Set up a development environment that includes OpenCL SDK, a device that supports OpenCL, and Visual Studio Code.
Create a basic OpenCL program that performs vector addition on the device and retrieves the results from the device memory.
Use OpenCL API to query device information, create contexts, command queues, buffers, kernels, and events.
Use OpenCL C language to write kernels that execute on the device and manipulate data.
Use OpenCL built-in functions, extensions, and libraries to perform common tasks and operations.
Use OpenCL host and device memory models to optimize data transfers and memory accesses.
Use OpenCL execution model to control the work-items, work-groups, and ND-ranges.
Debug and test OpenCL programs using tools such as CodeXL, Intel VTune, and NVIDIA Nsight.
Optimize OpenCL programs using techniques such as vectorization, loop unrolling, local memory, and profiling.
This instructor-led, live training in Boston (online or onsite) is aimed at intermediate-level developers who wish to use CUDA to build Python applications that run in parallel on NVIDIA GPUs.
By the end of this training, participants will be able to:
Use the Numba compiler to accelerate Python applications running on NVIDIA GPUs.
Create, compile and launch custom CUDA kernels.
Manage GPU memory.
Convert a CPU based application into a GPU-accelerated application.
This instructor-led, live training course in Boston covers how to program GPUs for parallel computing, how to use various platforms, how to work with the CUDA platform and its features, and how to perform various optimization techniques using CUDA. Some of the applications include deep learning, analytics, image processing and engineering applications.
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Testimonials (2)
Very interactive with various examples, with a good progression in complexity between the start and the end of the training.
Jenny - Andheo
Course - GPU Programming with CUDA and Python
Trainers energy and humor.
Tadeusz Kaluba - Nokia Solutions and Networks Sp. z o.o.
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