Dan Stanzione

Director, High Performance Computing Initiative
GWC 182
480-727-8738

Welcome - this page will be under perpetual construction


Like most folks nowadays, I'm smeared across a number of web pages... the most current info will likely be found at the center page, http://hpc.asu.edu/


Dan Discovers Donuts Bigger than his Head in Rome, Leaves US Permanently
ummmm, doooooooonnuuuuuuttt
OK, if you want an "official" photo (who knows why, but some ask), see my page in the school of Computing and Informatics here.

Personal Info


Hi, you've reached Dan Stanzione's Home Page.
I am the Director of the High Performance Computing Initiative in the Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering at Arizona State University. In this role, I handle the research computing needs of the ASU campus community, including supercomputers, large scale storage, and the varied needs of campus cyberinfrastructure to drive research. I also maintain an affiliate faculty position in ASU's School of Computing and Informatics. See the Center web page, hpc.asu.edu , to see what's going on there. I'm particularly proud of a couple of our larger projects that are having a big impact right now. We're part of a team building the world's largest supercomputer for open science, Ranger, along with the good folks at the Texas Advanced Computing Center, and support from the NSF. Another NSF project is the iPlant Collaborative. Led by our friends down the road in Tucson, our team will build the Cyberinfrastructure to solve the grand challenges of the national Plant Science community. Here's a press clipping or two about it: http://www.fulton.asu.edu/fulton/news/page.php?sid=417.


Contact Information
Very Short Bio

Past Lives (Previous Affiliations):
Parallel Architecture Research Lab. and the Center for Advanced Engineering of Films and Fibers
In addition to teaching and research, I was responsible for Clemson's Computational Mini-Grid Supercomputing Facility , for which I oversaw the design and installation.

National Science Foundation and the American Association for the Advancement of Science
In 2003-2004, I served as a AAAS/NSF Science and Technology Policy Fellow in the Division of Graduate Education at the National Science Foundation, where I co-chaired a national workshop on Graduate Student Support , and developed and managed a new NSF-Navy collaborative program. I was also involved with the IGERT program, NSF's premiere, $60M program in interdisciplinary traineeships, the GK-12 program, and the NSF Graduate Research Fellowship program. I handled a number of graduate education policy issues, and serve as a division representative on the Cyber Learning Working Group, and the Postdoc Working Group.