HeSANDA & Health Data Australia FAQ
This document provides answers to common questions about the Health Studies Australian National Data Asset (HeSANDA), and the Health Data Australia (HDA), including the usage of the health data platform, sharing, contributing and accessing clinital trails data, governance, and potential risks.
Keywords: HeSANDA, Frequently asked Questions, Health Data Australia, training material
HeSANDA & Health Data Australia FAQ
https://zenodo.org/records/11075589
https://dresa.org.au/materials/hesanda-health-data-australia-faq
This document provides answers to common questions about the Health Studies Australian National Data Asset (HeSANDA), and the Health Data Australia (HDA), including the usage of the health data platform, sharing, contributing and accessing clinital trails data, governance, and potential risks.
contact@ardc.edu.au
Australian Research Data Commons
Australian Research Data Commons (type: Editor)
Australian Clinical Trials Alliance (type: Editor)
Melbourne Academic Centre for Health (type: Editor)
Mental Health Node (type: Editor)
The Queensland Node (type: Editor)
Sydney Health Partners Node (type: Editor)
Western Australia Node (type: Editor)
Monash University and Monash Partners Node (type: Editor)
Health Translation South Australia (type: Editor)
National Cancer Cooperative Trials Groups (type: Editor)
Northern Australia Node (type: Editor)
HeSANDA, Frequently asked Questions, Health Data Australia, training material
OpenCL
Supercomputers make use of accelerators from a variety of different hardware vendors, using devices such as multi-core CPU’s, GPU’s and even FPGA’s. OpenCL is a way for your HPC application to make effective use of heterogeneous computing devices, and to avoid code refactoring for new HPC...
Keywords: supercomputing, Pawsey Supercomputing Centre, CPUs, GPUs, OpenCL, FPGAs
Resource type: activity
OpenCL
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLmu61dgAX-aa_lk5fby5PjuS49snHpyYL
https://dresa.org.au/materials/opencl
Supercomputers make use of accelerators from a variety of different hardware vendors, using devices such as multi-core CPU’s, GPU’s and even FPGA’s. OpenCL is a way for your HPC application to make effective use of heterogeneous computing devices, and to avoid code refactoring for new HPC infrastructure.
training@pawsey.org.au
Toby Potter
Pawsey Supercomputing Research Centre
Pelagos
Toby Potter
supercomputing, Pawsey Supercomputing Centre, CPUs, GPUs, OpenCL, FPGAs
masters
ecr
researcher
support