Dr. Gary Conboy selected as the 2021 recipient of the Atlantic Award of Excellence in Veterinary Medicine and Animal Care

The Atlantic Veterinary College (AVC) is pleased to announce that Dr. Gary Conboy, professor emeritus, has been selected as the 2021 recipient of the Atlantic Award of Excellence in Veterinary Medicine and Animal Care. The award was presented by Dr. John VanLeeuwen, interim dean, AVC, University of Prince Edward Island (UPEI), on Sunday, April 24, during the Atlantic Provinces Veterinary Conference in Halifax, Nova Scotia.

UPEI Cross Country welcomes running prospect Benji Dueck to squad

UPEI cross country head coach Mike Peterson believes he has found a diamond in the rough in running prospect Benji Dueck.

A native of Morden, Manitoba, the 18-year-old Dueck is the first runner to join the UPEI team this off season. Peterson envisions him being a key piece to a young nucleus that already includes Jack Roberts and Riley Fitzpatrick but will be without graduating senior and top runner Dan Maguire.

“Benji will have an immediate impact on our team and will add depth to our steadily improving men's side,” Peterson said.

Meet Wayne Peters, interim dean of UPEI's Faculty of Sustainable Design Engineering

What's your job title here at UPEI, and what do you spend most days doing?

I'm the interim dean of the Faculty of Sustainable Design Engineering at UPEI and also an associate professor. As the interim dean, I'm the academic head of the Faculty which means I'm responsible for the overall operation, delivery and quality of both our undergraduate and graduate degree programs. I spend almost all my time as an administrator working with faculty, staff, and students to ensure we're delivering the best experience possible for our students. 

ACENET: Parallel Computing School 2022

ACENET's Parallel Computing School seeks to educate participants in common tools and techniques used in high-performance computing and scientific computation. The format is two 2-hour sessions per week over six weeks (omitting the week of May 24). In the course of 12 sessions, we will cover general parallel computing, Dask, Machine Learning, OpenMP programming, GPU accelerator programming, and Message Passing Interface (MPI) programming.

ACENET Basics: Job Scheduling with Slurm

This session teaches participants how to use the Digital Research Alliance of Canada’s queuing environment on the national systems, using the job scheduler Slurm. Learn how the scheduler works, how it allocates jobs, what are reasonable requests to minimize wait time, how to make the best use of the resources to be more efficient, how to get more throughput, how to get more jobs running at the same time, and how to troubleshoot and deal with crashes.

ACENET Basics: Introduction to Shell Scripting

Participants will learn how to use shell scripting to exercise the power of the command line. Shell scripting helps you save time, automate file management tasks, and better use Linux. This session teaches you how to name, locate, and set permissions for executable files, taking input and producing output. Learn about job scripts, shell variables, and looping commands. This workshop is designed for either new HPC users who are familiar with working in a Linux environment but have not had experience with shell scripting, or for experienced users seeking to get more out of shell scripting.

ACENET Basics: Introduction to Linux

Linux is the terminal interface used to enable you to use the ACENET and the Digital Research Alliance of Canada (the Alliance) HPC clusters from your desktop. It's the tool you need to get your data on the clusters, run your programs, and get your data back. In this session, learn how to get started with Linux, how to create and navigate directories for your data, load files, manage your storage, run programs on the computing clusters, and set file permissions. This workshop is designed for those with no prior experience in working with a terminal interface.

ACENET Basics: Introduction to HPC

What is high performance computing (HPC) and what can it do for me? How can ACENET help? Used by researchers across many disciplines to tackle analyses too large or complex for a desktop, or to achieve improved efficiency over a desktop, this session takes participants through the preliminary stages of learning about high performance computing (HPC) and computing clusters, and how to get started with this type of computing. It then reviews software packages available for applications, data analysis, software development, and compiling code.

ACENET: Introductory Programming: Unix Shell, Git, and Python

This is a beginner level series that is hands-on, covering the fundamentals of Python including data types, conditional statements, loops and functions, as well as program design, version control, data management, and task automation. Participants will be encouraged to help one another and to apply what they have learned to their own research problems. The goal is to teach the practical knowledge needed to start programming, debugging, and using Python in everyday tasks. 

You do not need to have any previous knowledge of the tools that will be presented at the workshop.