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- Newsgroups: comp.parallel
- Path: sparky!uunet!destroyer!gatech!hubcap!fpst
- From: rms@well.sf.ca.us (richard marlon stein)
- Subject: observations of Supercomputing '92
- Message-ID: <1992Nov23.200859.15786@hubcap.clemson.edu>
- Apparently-To: comp-parallel@uunet.uu.net
- Sender: news@well.sf.ca.us
- Organization: Whole Earth 'Lectronic Link
- Distribution: usa
- Date: Mon, 23 Nov 1992 17:27:21 GMT
- Approved: parallel@hubcap.clemson.edu
- Lines: 115
-
- [This is a somewhat charged statement. I'm letting it by since it is
- an area of concern for eveyone. Steve ]
-
-
- (C) Copyright 1992 Richard Marlon Stein
- The Silicon Ceiling
- Richard Marlon Stein
- The Minneapolis Convention Center hosted Supercomputing '92 during
- Nov. 16-20, a showplace for the prosperous paradoxical veneer of
- masculinity that underlies the industry. Where else could one find
- the world's fastest computers, the phallic symbols of computation,
- poised for display like steroid-popping body builders? But these
- macho edifices conceal a catastrophic harbinger portending the
- breed's irreversible demise.
- Supercomputer manufacturers have enjoyed lavish nourishment in
- the form of government subsidies. This protection permits the
- technology to evolve and procreate asexually, much to its
- disadvantage. Where economic competition is most needed,
- protectionist policies shield this industry by subsidizing a few
- chosen companies to almost exclusively supply the federal
- bureaucracy, despite the availability of more suitable solutions
- from MasPar, Convex, IBM, Fujitsu, Meiko, and others.
- The firms who do not receive federal funding aggressively
- compete for the remaining market share, estimated to become US $2B
- by 1995. Yet the entire domestic industry is vulnerable from an
- overdependence on foreign semiconductor suppliers not to mention
- the government's failure to promote education among the aerospace,
- biotechnology, and automotive industries who depend on
- supercomputer-based simulations for competitive advantage. The
- government has failed to train software engineers and to transfer
- the programming expertise located in national laboratories into the
- public sector.
- This egregious oversight raises the cost of supercomputer
- software, the codes which run vital solutions for environmental and
- industrial use. The government did not stimulate demand for
- supercomputers by launching an equally aggressive policy to train
- users and programmers. Furthermore, the entire High Performance
- Computing and Communications Initiative does not specifically
- sponsor the involvement of women and minorities who should be given
- the opportunity to contribute.
- This human capital vacuum obstructs innovation, a pivotal
- skill that all people possess. The preponderance of white males in
- key management areas is analogous to the glass ceiling encountered
- by women and minorities. But the ceiling that restricts the
- mobility of women and minorities in the supercomputer industry
- possesses an opaque surface. It is a silicon ceiling. One cannot
- see through this monolithic barrier.
- The ceiling's composition resists conditioned feminine
- attempts or equal opportunity approaches to entry. The silicon
- ceiling cannot be smashed with hammer blows, but must wait to be
- etched away by a visionary rinsing of political, social, and
- educational mores.
- For years, our government has failed to successfully motivate
- a proportionate number of women and minorities to participate in
- engineering and physical science education. This cultural and
- political failure accrues to our disadvantage in critical areas of
- technology where diverse backgrounds and alternative opinions
- fortuitously combine into innovative products. Only a reformation
- in the education system and social mores of society can reverse
- this trend.
- The silicon ceiling conceals more than a gender barrier. But
- the macho images of Supercomputing '92 reflect the ceiling's
- impermeability. No matter where you looked in the Minneapolis
- Convention Center, nearly indistinguishable supercomputers faced
- each other like rutting elephants trumpeting their egos, not the
- plethora of software solutions they so vitally require to survive.
- Women did attend the conference, though they were represented
- as market and public relations personnel, ostensibly there to
- defend the mediocre products built by all-male engineering
- organizations. Out of some 40 vendors, IBM and HP were two
- noticeable exceptions. Each presented females who served in
- engineering management.
- But the `old white boys' dominate the technology hierarchy.
- This anachronistic clan precludes the introduction of social
- change, and facilitates an industrial complacency once found in the
- consumer electronics and automobile industries.
- Although the supercomputer industry is pivotal to our economic
- future, it resembles a sand pile build from hollow bravado and
- poorly articulated government policy. The technological pile grows
- uniformly, expanding outward and upward, as material ego, special
- interests, and stop-gap political solutions are added in lieu of
- cogent industrial and economic policies. But if one more ill-
- conceived policy is dropped on top, a catastrophic cascade will
- start reducing the technology citadel to a retrenched and
- aesthetically weakened hill owned by foreign interests.
- The economic camel's straw of vulnerability can be forestalled
- if an egalitarian glue is applied to the technological sandpile.
- The formula for this glue is not sugar and spice. It is an
- adhesive agglomeration that coagulates political leadership into an
- accountable body free from political action committees and attunes
- them to the strategic issues that govern our collective economic
- and technological welfare. Our leadership must articulate a policy
- which promotes domestic industry and competition, but also provides
- incentives to liberate industries from this dependence. No policy
- can be harder to create.
- All organisms need sustenance to survive after birth. To wean
- technology-driven industries, we must apply our skill, knowledge,
- and judgement to economic policy shaped with a liberal sprinkling
- of egalitarian glue. Our industries will become self-sustaining
- organizations if government policies implement this dichotomy.
- Egalitarian glue engineers solutions to problems where none
- existed previously. It can act as a rinse that etches the silicon
- ceiling into a polished looking glass where all people can see
- equally well. We need a remedy that permits strong minds to
- discuss ideas, prevent average minds from discussing events, and
- weak minds from ever gaining power.
- Biography
- Richard Marlon Stein is a freelance writer and software consultant
- who resides in Santa Clara, CA. He can be reached via Internet as
- rms@well.sf.ca.us.
- (C) Copyright 1992 Richard Marlon Stein
- --
- Richard Marlon Stein, Internet: rms@well.sf.ca.us
- To those who know what is not known; The Chronicles of Microwave Jim!
-
-