WEBVTT 1 00:00:09.880 --> 00:00:12.940 Alejandro Suarez: We will get started in just a moment. 2 00:00:13.720 --> 00:00:15.260 Alejandro Suarez: See that our 3 00:00:15.590 --> 00:00:17.820 Alejandro Suarez: attendees are leveling off here. 4 00:00:40.130 --> 00:00:53.969 Alejandro Suarez: Alright, I think we are ready to go here. So thank you. Everyone for joining us at the National AI Research Resource pilot classroom partner showcase so my name is Alejandro Suarez. 5 00:00:53.970 --> 00:01:15.660 Alejandro Suarez: I'm here with my colleague Jenny Lee from the office of Advanced cyber infrastructure, and our colleague, Ellen Zagura, Division Director of the Division of Computer Network Systems, also within National Science Foundation. And we're going to talk to you a little bit about the near pilot the active opportunities that are available for researchers. And 6 00:01:16.078 --> 00:01:36.180 Alejandro Suarez: of course, as the title leads you to the classroom and education opportunities that are available at Nsf and connected to the nair pilot from which you will hear to lightning talks from some education partners specific to the neare pilot. 7 00:01:36.180 --> 00:01:49.960 Alejandro Suarez: So as a reminder, this webinar will be recorded, and a recording of this webinar will be available via the link to which you signed up to the webinar. 8 00:01:51.010 --> 00:02:13.520 Alejandro Suarez: So, as I noted our agenda, we'll start with an overview of the near pilot. We'll talk a little bit about what what it actually consists of the active opportunities that you can apply to today and the resources that are available in the research setting and then in the education setting which will lead to my colleague Ellen, talking about the education opportunities that are available in Nsf. 9 00:02:13.917 --> 00:02:42.739 Alejandro Suarez: Before we will hand it over to our colleagues at the prototype National Research Platform and vocarium, who will talk a little bit about their partner contributed resources that are available via the near pilot for applications. We'll finish off with our QA. Via zoom. So at any time you are welcome to submit a question using the QA feature in zoom. We'll try to get to as many of them as we can as time permits. At the end of our presentations. 10 00:02:43.720 --> 00:02:47.739 Alejandro Suarez: So what is the national AI research resource? 11 00:02:47.760 --> 00:03:13.860 Alejandro Suarez: Well, the vision for the ner? Nair r, is to have a widely accessible national research infrastructure that can advance AI R&D and innovation by empowering a diverse set of users. And this is done by providing access to high performance computing resources, access to high quality data sets catalogs of test beds, education, materials and training opportunities. 12 00:03:13.860 --> 00:03:21.439 Alejandro Suarez: and those are all to further the goals of spurring innovation and increasing the diversity of talent within the AI space 13 00:03:21.440 --> 00:03:34.909 Alejandro Suarez: to ensure that the capacity for AI R&D remains competitive on the world stage, and to advance the trustworthiness and robustness of AI models. You can all often call this re the responsible AI models as well. 14 00:03:35.060 --> 00:03:39.669 Alejandro Suarez: So this is what the full mayor would be looking to accomplish. 15 00:03:39.990 --> 00:04:05.199 Alejandro Suarez: and the vision for the the full ner was discussed in a White House, mandated Taskforce. Report that you can see in purple on the left here this task force report was released in January of last year, and it had a bold vision for a large scale. Multi 1 billion dollar AI research resource activity for the for the nation. 16 00:04:05.622 --> 00:04:28.189 Alejandro Suarez: Right now what we are working on is a pilot of that narr infrastructure. So in the White House executive order that was released at the end of October, Nsf. With partner agencies that I'll go into in a little bit. We're mandated to launch a pilot of the Nair which have specific goals to demonstrate the value and impact of this narr concept 17 00:04:28.190 --> 00:04:39.356 Alejandro Suarez: to support the transformative AI research that we can among broad communities within existing resources and to gain experience that can help advance, and 18 00:04:40.841 --> 00:05:02.870 Alejandro Suarez: guide of and refine the full narrow design. So we should note that the availability of resources that we have right now are those that are contributed in kind from our partners or existing resources that we have available. We do not yet have a fully appropriated ner at this time. So we're seeing what we can do with the pilot. 19 00:05:03.970 --> 00:05:26.563 Alejandro Suarez: So even though we're at a pilot, stage, researchers and educators can access opportunities today to be able to attain resources, to advance their education and research goals. So near pilot.org is the primary portal to interface with the near pilot and see what opportunities are available. You can see a 20 00:05:27.060 --> 00:05:41.470 Alejandro Suarez: list of opportunities for researchers as well as classroom and educators. And then there's some other resources that discuss data sets and some external training opportunities and other activities that will be added as the pilot progresses 21 00:05:41.930 --> 00:05:49.210 Alejandro Suarez: so in terms of who is eligible for the ner pilot AI researchers. 22 00:05:49.220 --> 00:05:59.659 Alejandro Suarez: domain scientists that are applying AI within their research researchers at the research, and students and educators are all eligible to apply for and use the near pilot. 23 00:06:00.016 --> 00:06:23.210 Alejandro Suarez: There is a quite a broad eligibility criteria in terms of affiliation with institutions in terms of who can use pilot resources. The main restriction is that you must be from a Us. Based institution but you can be from an academic institution, a nonprofit Federal agency, or federally funded our R. And D center a State local or tribal agency 24 00:06:23.210 --> 00:06:30.190 Alejandro Suarez: or startup, or a small business that has some sort of federal funding, such as an sbir funding. 25 00:06:30.250 --> 00:06:37.989 Alejandro Suarez: So all of these resources are available to a wide variety of of researchers. 26 00:06:39.740 --> 00:06:56.960 Alejandro Suarez: And this is something that we. We launched the 1st availability of resources in January of this year, and we have already announced some of the types of projects that have been supported by near pilot resources, as of May 6, th 27 00:06:57.407 --> 00:07:11.719 Alejandro Suarez: this follows everything from fundamental computer science projects to molecular biology and other disciplinary work in agriculture, ecology, hydrology. So there's a very wide range of activities that are possible 28 00:07:11.720 --> 00:07:14.649 Alejandro Suarez: via access to the near pilot resources. 29 00:07:16.170 --> 00:07:42.899 Alejandro Suarez: So I noted that there is a large amount of partners associated with the the near pilot. We have a dozen agency partners and over 25 non-governmental partner organizations that are making available different types of resources that researchers and educators can apply to get their research activities or education activities accomplished. 30 00:07:43.040 --> 00:08:01.630 Alejandro Suarez: So I'm gonna go through some examples of the research resources that are available. And then I'm going to hand it over to Ellen, who's gonna talk a little bit about the education focused opportunities at Nsf. Before we go into the education focused resources that the near pilot provides. 31 00:08:03.390 --> 00:08:11.750 Alejandro Suarez: So in terms of the access to resources that researchers may find useful within the near pilot. There's a variety of 32 00:08:11.750 --> 00:08:36.719 Alejandro Suarez: super computing or high performance computing resources that you can apply for access to as part of the the near pilot, and this can advance research or education focused activities so this smattering of different systems has a variety of different types of architectures and service models. Everything from a more traditional batch processing. Based high performance computing environment towards a more cloud 33 00:08:36.720 --> 00:08:52.919 Alejandro Suarez: cloud based environment towards more AI specific chips and architectures and usage modalities, or high memory type systems. All of these types of resources you can apply for and have a justification for why you need that type of resource 34 00:08:53.810 --> 00:09:10.639 Alejandro Suarez: terms of private sector contributions for the researcher space. There's a wide variety of different types of non-government partners that are providing in kind resource contributions, and we had a webinar on the research related resources on May 21.st 35 00:09:10.970 --> 00:09:26.180 Alejandro Suarez: You are welcome to look up the recording of that webinar on the link provided here on the QR code that's available on screen. But this wide variety of resources are still available today through an application mechanism that you can find on their pilot org. 36 00:09:26.650 --> 00:09:32.080 Alejandro Suarez: and when it comes to the resource requests 37 00:09:32.540 --> 00:10:00.240 Alejandro Suarez: some of you may be familiar with the Nsf. Proposal process for Nsf funding these resources are not requested through the Nsf proposal process. It's actually a request for for for allocation of these types of resources. So it's a much simpler type of proposal. There is an FAQ available on their pilot.org, and some instructions on how to go through the request process. 38 00:10:00.240 --> 00:10:30.170 Alejandro Suarez: These resources are available. 1st come first.st Serve as in once requests have been reviewed and allocated that could limit availability of resources for future requests but we are are looking to make these awards and review awards quite quickly compared to more traditional government funding activities in that within about 6 weeks of submission. You may be expected to see a response in terms of the status of your your request. 39 00:10:30.170 --> 00:10:39.169 Alejandro Suarez: So it's a simple way to get in. But we recognize that there's a variety of different types of activities that you may want to accomplish. 40 00:10:39.542 --> 00:11:06.000 Alejandro Suarez: Related to AI research and education. They may not be. They. They may be a bit more substantive than just requesting allocations. And so I'm gonna talk a little bit about a recent year. Colleague letter that we've come out with. And my colleague Ellen, will talk about some of the AI education opportunities that Nsf and our computer science director, Directory, Directoritt has made available. 41 00:11:07.270 --> 00:11:10.070 Alejandro Suarez: So when it comes to 42 00:11:10.200 --> 00:11:33.599 Alejandro Suarez: more larger scale or demonstration project scale activities that you may wish to take on using near pilot resources. We have a dear colleague letter that was recently released, which asks for early types of research activities or supplemental funding requests to existing Nsf projects 43 00:11:33.600 --> 00:11:55.589 Alejandro Suarez: that are separate from our allocation request process. This is looking for teams of AI researchers or domain scientists, cyber infrastructure specialists that are looking to do something quite unique and innovative with the near pilot resources that is above and beyond what could be possible with just an allocation request 44 00:11:55.881 --> 00:12:14.549 Alejandro Suarez: so this activity you can read more about by scanning the QR code on the right or going to the link below these require sending a concept paper a concept outline to us via the Nsf email address that you see at the bottom. But we welcome consideration of such requests. If you're looking at something at that scale 45 00:12:15.140 --> 00:12:28.009 Alejandro Suarez: when it comes to the education activities, though I'm sure this is what you're all here and interested to learn about. I'm going to turn it over to my colleague, Alan Zagora, who will talk about some of the AI educator opportunities that Nsf. Has. 46 00:12:28.660 --> 00:12:29.819 Alejandro Suarez: Take it away. Ellen. 47 00:12:30.580 --> 00:12:46.729 Ellen Zegura: Thanks. Al, appreciate it, Ellen Zagora. I'm a a division director of computer and network systems and size, the same part of Nsf that that Al and and Jenny reside in I wanna put the nair 48 00:12:47.217 --> 00:13:10.600 Ellen Zegura: pilot classroom opportunities into a little bit of a bigger context about Nsf's commitments to education. And Nsf's recent efforts in the area of AI education. So Nsf has longstanding commitments to stem education at all levels. Nsf is a research funding agency. But 49 00:13:10.600 --> 00:13:33.660 Ellen Zegura: the education pipeline is an incredibly important part of the research ecosystem. And so a Nsf is long. Recognize that supporting stem education is an important part of the work that we do. In the area of AI. We have, stood up an educate AI initiative. This came into into 50 00:13:33.660 --> 00:14:02.680 Ellen Zegura: reality at the end of last year, and it has a a tall order for its goal the the broad goal is to enable educators to make state of the art inclusive. AI educational experiences available nationwide. That's a that is a tall order, especially when you consider that the learners who who will need to or are interested in learning about AI are really spread across the entire spectrum from K 12 51 00:14:02.680 --> 00:14:23.060 Ellen Zegura: to undergraduate community college and undergraduate experiences into graduate school as well as upscaling and reskilling of workers. So it's a it's a big, it's a big ask it's a big lift to have state of the art educational experiences in AI made available broadly. 52 00:14:23.650 --> 00:14:43.140 Ellen Zegura: the Nair pilot classroom effort is a key component of educate AI and as as Al has been describing, and you'll hear more about from the 2 partner presentations. The Nair pilot classroom is intended to make it possible for more educators to be able to incorporate 53 00:14:43.512 --> 00:15:02.527 Ellen Zegura: incorporate assignments into their courses that would need AI resources. Those may not be available in your own institution. It may be cost prohibitive for you to access them through other means. And so that's a key part of what the near pilot classroom effort is trying to make possible 54 00:15:03.070 --> 00:15:27.616 Ellen Zegura: in the long term. Thinking about education. We know that. It's a lot more than just access to resources. It's also building communities and communities of practice of educators who are in similar situations in terms of the students they're trying to reach in terms of the types of courses that they're that they're working to develop and that 55 00:15:28.090 --> 00:15:48.139 Ellen Zegura: if we can foster communities of practice that will allow everyone to help kind of bootstrap one another. Up into effective classroom practices where we can take the best of what of what's being learned? Across the country at different levels next slide out. 56 00:15:49.610 --> 00:16:01.670 Ellen Zegura: So I wanted to mention a couple of the programs funding programs that Nsf has already in place where proposals that relate to AI education would be welcome. 57 00:16:01.690 --> 00:16:18.080 Ellen Zegura: So one of these is a program that goes by the Iuse Q. Acronym. This is on improving undergraduate stem education, and there's a particular portion of it which has to do with computing and undergraduate education. 58 00:16:18.479 --> 00:16:38.870 Ellen Zegura: You can read the description. I just wanna highlight that this call for proposals asks for re- envisioning how to teach, computing effectively to a broad group of students in a scalable manner and with an emphasis on broadening participation. And in particular, there's a mobilizing track within that solicitation 59 00:16:38.870 --> 00:17:00.929 Ellen Zegura: to to encourage the development of shared national visions around innovation and inclusion which could very well include AI innovation in undergraduate computing education. So that's 1 of the programs we have. If you are an educator at the undergraduate level this program would Po provide support for rethinking curriculum 60 00:17:01.010 --> 00:17:02.289 Ellen Zegura: next slide. Now. 61 00:17:03.130 --> 00:17:13.090 Ellen Zegura: I'll mention a second program. And these are really, these are samples of what Nsf has available that could help support AI education. 62 00:17:13.160 --> 00:17:16.879 Ellen Zegura: And Nsf has a category of of 63 00:17:17.380 --> 00:17:36.700 Ellen Zegura: funded entity called a research coordination network. And at 1st glance you might think that this doesn't have much to do with an education effort. But, in fact, despite the r the R. In the name. The goal of the Rcn. Program is to advance a field or create new directions in research or education. 64 00:17:36.700 --> 00:18:00.420 Ellen Zegura: So the E. Isn't. The E is implicit here. A research coordination network can focus on education, and the intent is support to support investigators who are looking at a new field or creating new directions so that they can communicate and coordinate their work, including their work on educational activities, and that they can do so across boundaries. So that's 65 00:18:00.420 --> 00:18:07.250 Ellen Zegura: sounds a lot like the community of practice concept that I that I mentioned on the previous slide. So 66 00:18:08.600 --> 00:18:31.820 Ellen Zegura: each of these 2 funding programs can complement the Nar pilot classroom resources to try to help educators both access resources, but also have the time and space to think about the implications for curriculum, and then through Rcns to reach out across other 67 00:18:32.313 --> 00:18:36.120 Ellen Zegura: institutions and be able to to share best practices. 68 00:18:36.270 --> 00:18:37.050 Ellen Zegura: Now. 69 00:18:38.120 --> 00:18:39.750 Alejandro Suarez: Thank you so much, Ellen. 70 00:18:39.820 --> 00:19:03.920 Alejandro Suarez: So you've seen a little bit now about some of the the actual Nsf funding opportunities that that are available. We talked about the near pilot research resources that are available. And for our main event we'd like to talk a little bit about the education and educator for educator resources that are available, and these will be done from 2 of our partners 71 00:19:04.244 --> 00:19:33.749 Alejandro Suarez: from the San Diego super computing center, the prototype National Research platform and from our in kind voca vocarium contributor. So right before I go into them, I just need to go through one statement, since we have private partners involved. So this is to allow researchers and educators to learn more about the resources that are available via non near pilot.org and just as a note Nsf does not endorse any specific information in in organizations, the views they may express 72 00:19:33.750 --> 00:19:45.609 Alejandro Suarez: or the project services they offer. But with that I'd like to turn it over to my colleagues at the San Diego Supercomputing center to talk about the prototype national research, platform. 73 00:19:45.850 --> 00:19:46.679 Alejandro Suarez: so frank. 74 00:19:46.680 --> 00:19:47.150 Frank Wurtheim: Slain. 75 00:19:47.150 --> 00:19:48.539 Alejandro Suarez: Rita, take it away! 76 00:19:49.010 --> 00:19:50.899 Frank Wurtheim: Let's go straight to the next slide. 77 00:19:52.090 --> 00:19:56.120 Frank Wurtheim: So we're going to talk a little bit about philosophy 78 00:19:56.190 --> 00:20:00.319 Frank Wurtheim: and then mostly about what is actually on offer next slide. 79 00:20:02.110 --> 00:20:03.060 Frank Wurtheim: The 80 00:20:03.320 --> 00:20:09.989 Frank Wurtheim: ultimately, what we're trying to do here is that the Nrp is designed to democratize access. 81 00:20:10.130 --> 00:20:19.890 Frank Wurtheim: and we want to connect every community, college, every minority of institution and every college and university, including all urban, rural, and tribal institution. 82 00:20:20.010 --> 00:20:33.209 Frank Wurtheim: to world-class and secure research and education, infrastructure with particular attention institutions that have been currently undeserved, and of course stole this from the minds we need, as you can see here as a reference. But this is really what 83 00:20:33.230 --> 00:20:37.370 Frank Wurtheim: but is underlying of what we do next slide. 84 00:20:40.320 --> 00:20:55.820 Frank Wurtheim: This is the current deployment. It is an infrastructure that is literally deployed all over the country. It has 68 institutions at this point and included, and the Nrp. Is a prototype 85 00:20:55.830 --> 00:21:01.579 Frank Wurtheim: to do exactly what this minds we need was aspiring to 86 00:21:02.310 --> 00:21:03.370 Frank Wurtheim: next slide. 87 00:21:04.090 --> 00:21:17.329 Frank Wurtheim: and if you are interested in becoming joining this sent me an email that is separate from the one I think we're offering. This is funded via an an Nsf. Grant, I'll skip this next slide. 88 00:21:18.670 --> 00:21:24.530 Frank Wurtheim: Now let's get into what is actually on offer within the context of the near classroom. 89 00:21:24.630 --> 00:21:37.600 Frank Wurtheim: and what I'm going to talk about is one slide on what's an offer? The resources? And then we'll talk about. How are other people already using this and let me move this this away so that I can actually see my slide. 90 00:21:38.396 --> 00:21:40.939 Frank Wurtheim: The starting point is. 91 00:21:40.970 --> 00:21:44.569 Frank Wurtheim: this is what we're offering is a Jupyter resource for classes. 92 00:21:44.890 --> 00:21:53.009 Frank Wurtheim: And the. In addition to a Jupiter resource for classes as written on the 1st bullet, let me move to the 4th bullet. 93 00:21:53.070 --> 00:22:06.030 Frank Wurtheim: We have a support community interaction through matrix channels. Matrix is is an open source version of slack. I mean, I assume everybody knows what a slack channel is, and matrix channels are basically the same as slack channels. 94 00:22:06.040 --> 00:22:18.140 Frank Wurtheim: And the so, in a way, if you listen to, or the previous speaker, we are trying to create a community that teaches 95 00:22:18.340 --> 00:22:30.730 Frank Wurtheim: via Jupiter resources on our platform, and that community can talk to each other, meaning the educators can talk to each other, learn from each other, develop best practices share best practices da da da. 96 00:22:31.600 --> 00:22:40.679 Frank Wurtheim: deal with, teach each others about how to get around bugs, etc. Etc. Etc. And all of that is supported via the the matrix channel. In addition 97 00:22:40.750 --> 00:22:42.774 Frank Wurtheim: to the A 98 00:22:44.080 --> 00:22:46.819 Frank Wurtheim: to the matrix channels 99 00:22:47.070 --> 00:22:54.239 Frank Wurtheim: where educators talk to each other. We're also offering one, for where the educators talk to the students. 100 00:22:54.917 --> 00:23:04.460 Frank Wurtheim: In in. And the that's the ticketing system and everything else on this page, I think, is probably self-explanatory. So let's go to the next slide. 101 00:23:06.920 --> 00:23:11.690 Frank Wurtheim: Now, what is required from you. If you want to teach 102 00:23:11.710 --> 00:23:13.710 Frank Wurtheim: a class on our platform. 103 00:23:13.810 --> 00:23:17.320 Frank Wurtheim: you need to submit a syllabus of the plan class. 104 00:23:17.590 --> 00:23:23.110 Frank Wurtheim: We can provide you examples from previous classes that have already been taught. And I'll give you some names in the next slide. 105 00:23:23.130 --> 00:23:34.459 Frank Wurtheim: We want to get some information about you from you. What exactly do you need for the course? Do you need data? Where's the location? What's the structure? Basically, we want to understand 106 00:23:34.560 --> 00:23:35.580 Frank Wurtheim: how much 107 00:23:36.150 --> 00:23:39.519 Frank Wurtheim: technical support you need from us. In order to pull this off. 108 00:23:39.930 --> 00:23:44.779 Frank Wurtheim: We wanted to get an understanding of the number of students, the dates, the classes happen. 109 00:23:44.860 --> 00:23:58.709 Frank Wurtheim: The latter is only important if you use is especially important. If you intend to use our platform inside the classroom, if you use our platform only for for assignments. 110 00:23:58.790 --> 00:24:00.460 Frank Wurtheim: then we don't need 111 00:24:00.720 --> 00:24:07.870 Frank Wurtheim: the dates of the classes as as importantly. And so we also want from you to know 112 00:24:07.940 --> 00:24:12.520 Frank Wurtheim: what exactly is your plan? Are you planning to use us during classroom? 113 00:24:12.860 --> 00:24:30.020 Frank Wurtheim: Is it only for assignments? Is it for homework? Is it for quizzes? Are they quizzes at a certain time. Basically, if you bring a few 100 students to our platform, we want to understand when in time, you actually need interactive support. Because 114 00:24:30.430 --> 00:24:39.400 Frank Wurtheim: when I have 300 students active and want to do something, and that's we want you to tell us as part of your or proposal. 115 00:24:40.113 --> 00:24:45.220 Frank Wurtheim: Finally, we want to get a little bit of a sense of what kind of resources you need 116 00:24:45.550 --> 00:24:50.109 Frank Wurtheim: in particular, if you're working, if you intend to do something with ll, M. 117 00:24:50.210 --> 00:24:58.479 Frank Wurtheim: What's the Lm, what kind of memory those kinds of things? If you don't use lms, then the requirements are probably less stringent. 118 00:24:58.560 --> 00:25:04.219 Frank Wurtheim: and we need to know a little bit of what to prepare for, so that we can appropriately support you. 119 00:25:05.550 --> 00:25:06.730 Frank Wurtheim: next slide. 120 00:25:08.100 --> 00:25:22.480 Frank Wurtheim: Now I want to go into. There's at present there's about, I want to say, maybe half a dozen institutions that teach anywhere between a couple to a couple dozen classes on the platform right now. 121 00:25:22.520 --> 00:25:30.909 Frank Wurtheim: and I want to give you 2 examples. In fact, I'm probably going to just give you one example in dangerous of time. California versus San Bernardino, next slide. 122 00:25:33.830 --> 00:25:41.049 Frank Wurtheim: Tsu San Bernardino is an interesting institution, in that it has a fair number of students, 19,000, 123 00:25:41.320 --> 00:25:45.460 Frank Wurtheim: but 57% of them are peltland recipients. 124 00:25:45.480 --> 00:25:49.089 Frank Wurtheim: and the institution is Hispanic Soviet Institution. So it's 125 00:25:49.230 --> 00:26:01.989 Frank Wurtheim: it's not your typical Harvard or Mit, or Uses D. For that matter, it is an institution much more representative of the bulk of the 3,900 institution of higher learning in the Us. 126 00:26:02.370 --> 00:26:11.349 Frank Wurtheim: Currently, they're offering the courses that I've listed here that they've done in the past, and they offer routinely. 127 00:26:11.490 --> 00:26:16.089 Frank Wurtheim: There's some machine learning, some big data analytics, all the usual stuff that you'd expect 128 00:26:16.970 --> 00:26:18.050 Frank Wurtheim: next slide. 129 00:26:18.740 --> 00:26:24.260 Frank Wurtheim: And we have filibi of some of these is available for you. 130 00:26:24.270 --> 00:26:33.140 Frank Wurtheim: The history of Csu San Bernardino on the platform is they very much started, just like you would be starting they 131 00:26:33.250 --> 00:26:39.240 Frank Wurtheim: started with a single class in our Jupiter Hub. By our Jupiter resources! 132 00:26:39.850 --> 00:26:45.689 Frank Wurtheim: At that point we loved it. They then created a copy of our hub 133 00:26:45.930 --> 00:26:48.899 Frank Wurtheim: which they now run for their own university. 134 00:26:49.300 --> 00:27:01.999 Frank Wurtheim: And so the reason why I'm stressing this is because ultimately, while we're all all for you teaching a single class. We're really wanting to teach you how to fish rather than provide you food. 135 00:27:02.522 --> 00:27:08.189 Frank Wurtheim: Ultimately, we're looking long term as you to engage with the platform. 136 00:27:09.850 --> 00:27:16.919 Frank Wurtheim: Decide where this is the kind of thing that makes you happy to teach a class, and then your institution 137 00:27:16.940 --> 00:27:26.100 Frank Wurtheim: to become a partner, and therefore scale this out by your institution and your own hub, teaching your own dozens of classes, etc, etc, etc. 138 00:27:26.130 --> 00:27:30.420 Frank Wurtheim: So there's a long-term exit strategy as well as an incoming strategy. 139 00:27:30.490 --> 00:27:31.580 Frank Wurtheim: Next slide. 140 00:27:34.783 --> 00:27:37.870 Frank Wurtheim: Next state. How much time do you have left. 141 00:27:39.420 --> 00:27:41.430 Alejandro Suarez: I think you have about 5 min left. 142 00:27:41.620 --> 00:27:53.649 Frank Wurtheim: Okay, I have plenty of time. Then let's go through this. A. Another example is the University of Missouri, which is leveraging the Youtube list for stem and aiml, expansual learning and education. 143 00:27:54.139 --> 00:28:08.060 Frank Wurtheim: They have, like many of the institutions that work. With that currently they also started small. They started with trying this out. Then they invested in buying their own hardware. We operated for them. 144 00:28:08.060 --> 00:28:36.089 Frank Wurtheim: And I, if you want to learn more about how that works, send me an email. And when we do this separately from this webinar, and at this point they have they. They wrote a proposal for CC. Star award that gave them hardware to add on to, and at this point they use this infrastructure as it is prescribed here, in order to both do experiential learning opportunities as well as teach classroom next slide. 145 00:28:38.530 --> 00:28:45.269 Frank Wurtheim: And the kind of classes include computer science classes, Hpc. Classes, undergrad air science. 146 00:28:45.662 --> 00:29:12.349 Frank Wurtheim: Hbc emphasis for the graduate data science. And we also from Missouri, also gave us a a example syllabus that we can share with you. And they're also teaching and courses from the Department of Higher Education workforce Development. So that sort of they both use the platform for regular classroom teaching, but also for what I would more call training and workforce development courses that are not 147 00:29:12.650 --> 00:29:18.920 Frank Wurtheim: a regular quarter or semi or semester schedule, but on other schedules. 148 00:29:19.210 --> 00:29:20.449 Frank Wurtheim: Next slide 149 00:29:21.800 --> 00:29:23.000 Frank Wurtheim: summary. 150 00:29:23.130 --> 00:29:49.809 Frank Wurtheim: the our offering for their classroom offices, Jupiter resources that can back. And and to use Gpu nodes or nautilus and any other integrated nodes. Basically, if we don't have the gpus that you want, we'll figure something out, we'll find, and the Gpus elsewhere. And because the infrastructure is sufficiently flexible that we can go out in the cloud and integrate Gpus from the cloud into our platform. 151 00:29:50.350 --> 00:29:57.770 Frank Wurtheim: The classes that we're looking for you to teach is aiml or using Eml in domain, science 152 00:29:58.180 --> 00:30:02.990 Frank Wurtheim: proposal should include syllabus, etc. All the information I said 153 00:30:03.130 --> 00:30:04.670 Frank Wurtheim: an ideal 154 00:30:04.940 --> 00:30:10.720 Frank Wurtheim: engagement from our side would be. If you want to teach something in the fall. 155 00:30:10.810 --> 00:30:16.859 Frank Wurtheim: you should actually submit your request now, so that we can give you access over the summer 156 00:30:16.920 --> 00:30:33.479 Frank Wurtheim: over the summer. You figure out how to actually do this, and we teach you how to do this. We learn you get your tas. The moment that you get your tears is assigned to you you can get them onto the platform. Figure out how it works, so that you are up and running, and don't have to 157 00:30:33.510 --> 00:30:44.459 Frank Wurtheim: have any stress at the beginning of the semester or the quarter in the fall, but we're really angling towards regular classroom teaching fall a quarter or fall semester. 158 00:30:44.560 --> 00:30:58.329 Frank Wurtheim: and there's a vibrant, vibrant community that you can tap into right away the moment that you get access, and you can ask others. So how have you done this? What work, what doesn't work, etc. We monitor that chat room. 159 00:30:58.330 --> 00:31:15.019 Frank Wurtheim: But we don't necessarily provide always the answers, because the idea is to create a community that self supports each other and ultimately can grow and is not limited by our pockets, and and the amount of effort that is available that we can put on this 160 00:31:15.646 --> 00:31:17.830 Frank Wurtheim: and I think that's it. 161 00:31:18.150 --> 00:31:20.060 Frank Wurtheim: Ask any questions you want. 162 00:31:21.940 --> 00:31:23.820 Alejandro Suarez: Thank you so much, Frank. 163 00:31:23.870 --> 00:31:27.900 Alejandro Suarez: Now we will turn it over to Vocarium. 164 00:31:29.500 --> 00:31:30.640 Alejandro Suarez: And please. 165 00:31:30.980 --> 00:31:32.100 Alejandro Suarez: hey, David. 166 00:31:32.960 --> 00:31:45.410 David Lin (Vocareum): Yeah. Hi, as Alan Ellen mentioned earlier, there are significant challenges when teaching AI at scale, including supporting a curriculum that incorporates the latest in AI advancements 167 00:31:45.480 --> 00:31:50.210 David Lin (Vocareum): ensuring access to appropriate cloud and AI resources supporting diverse skill levels 168 00:31:50.260 --> 00:31:54.270 David Lin (Vocareum): among the different learners and providing enough hands on experience. 169 00:31:54.390 --> 00:32:03.710 David Lin (Vocareum): So today we're pleased to share that to the vulcarium is advancing AI education in partnership with this near pilot classroom initiative. 170 00:32:04.507 --> 00:32:17.330 David Lin (Vocareum): As you may know, vulcarium is a leading hands-on platform in the tech space. We've reached over 4 million learners and are in use at more than 7,000 colleges and universities worldwide. 171 00:32:17.620 --> 00:32:19.209 David Lin (Vocareum): Some of you 172 00:32:19.230 --> 00:32:31.899 David Lin (Vocareum): may already be using vocarium through Aws Academy Udasti scholarship programs, Dan Bridge University alliances, or one of our many other programs and partnerships around the world. 173 00:32:31.970 --> 00:32:33.240 David Lin (Vocareum): So our suite 174 00:32:33.777 --> 00:32:42.400 David Lin (Vocareum): products support hands-on learning for generative AI cloud computing machine learning data, science and more next slide 175 00:32:45.000 --> 00:32:55.489 David Lin (Vocareum): in terms of our contribution today and for the next 2 years Vocarim is donating 20,000 seats of our AI notebook in support of Nair. 176 00:32:55.600 --> 00:33:03.750 David Lin (Vocareum): This donation reflects our commitment to ensuring that AI education is inclusive and accessible, leaving no one behind. 177 00:33:04.070 --> 00:33:11.389 David Lin (Vocareum): What really excites us about ner is the potential to train the next generation. AI leaders at a massive scale 178 00:33:12.070 --> 00:33:13.100 David Lin (Vocareum): next slide. 179 00:33:16.100 --> 00:33:25.780 David Lin (Vocareum): So what is the Vulcan AI notebook? Well, it's a cloud-based, enhanced Jupiter notebook, designed specifically for teaching and learning. AI 180 00:33:26.060 --> 00:33:32.389 David Lin (Vocareum): so incorporates numerous features tailored towards education, including integration into Lms. 181 00:33:33.083 --> 00:33:40.340 David Lin (Vocareum): Here you'll see that vocarium is, I framed right into a canvas instance here. 182 00:33:40.620 --> 00:33:47.540 David Lin (Vocareum): Okay, students can do the work and submit their their work 183 00:33:47.640 --> 00:33:52.090 David Lin (Vocareum): for automated assessments through. Mb, greater. 184 00:33:52.768 --> 00:33:57.921 David Lin (Vocareum): We can set up team projects for learners to work together, 185 00:33:58.430 --> 00:34:03.569 David Lin (Vocareum): on on different projects, and everything is delivered through the browser. 186 00:34:04.493 --> 00:34:08.730 David Lin (Vocareum): In addition, you can easily add secure and budgeted resources 187 00:34:08.800 --> 00:34:15.610 David Lin (Vocareum): like Gpus for deep learning. Gen. AI to help teach prompt engineering 188 00:34:15.679 --> 00:34:19.470 David Lin (Vocareum): and also using genai Api keys to build applications. 189 00:34:19.940 --> 00:34:21.364 David Lin (Vocareum): Okay? And so 190 00:34:21.909 --> 00:34:27.150 David Lin (Vocareum): you know, for model training. We can seamlessly send jobs directly to Gpus for processing. 191 00:34:27.505 --> 00:34:32.059 David Lin (Vocareum): You control the type of instances. The scaling policies as well as the budgets 192 00:34:32.130 --> 00:34:34.490 David Lin (Vocareum): for the users and the organizations 193 00:34:36.000 --> 00:34:40.809 David Lin (Vocareum): for prompt engineering. We also have introduced a prompt cell type. 194 00:34:41.010 --> 00:34:44.580 David Lin (Vocareum): Okay, so that learners can quickly interact with different models. 195 00:34:44.850 --> 00:34:51.730 David Lin (Vocareum): Okay? As well as using embeddings and rag to enhance the quality and the relevance of the generated outputs. 196 00:34:51.830 --> 00:34:57.270 David Lin (Vocareum): So it makes it really easy to tie in and in once one place 197 00:34:57.822 --> 00:35:00.989 David Lin (Vocareum): integrate all the AI sort of capabilities 198 00:35:02.235 --> 00:35:06.149 David Lin (Vocareum): these features really ensured that both educators and learners 199 00:35:06.240 --> 00:35:12.369 David Lin (Vocareum): have a robust, scalable efficient platform for learning and experimenting with AI. 200 00:35:13.000 --> 00:35:23.020 David Lin (Vocareum): And I think to be clear, volcan does not provide any instructional content or assignments. We're in the platform that helps you deliver those most effectively 201 00:35:24.171 --> 00:35:28.849 David Lin (Vocareum): in the 1st batch of their classroom allocations. We'll be supporting Iowa State University 202 00:35:28.960 --> 00:35:32.070 David Lin (Vocareum): with their translational AI. But boot camps 203 00:35:33.210 --> 00:35:34.429 David Lin (Vocareum): next slide. 204 00:35:38.570 --> 00:35:42.509 David Lin (Vocareum): So we do provide optional, secure budgeted 205 00:35:42.560 --> 00:35:51.230 David Lin (Vocareum): and policy controlled access to resources which can be provisioned at the institution learner or lab levels. 206 00:35:51.350 --> 00:35:56.299 David Lin (Vocareum): Okay, so this includes cloud infrastructure like aws, azure. Tcp. 207 00:35:56.500 --> 00:36:00.080 David Lin (Vocareum): it also includes a model. And Api access 208 00:36:01.825 --> 00:36:05.439 David Lin (Vocareum): to open AI, Claude and others. 209 00:36:06.094 --> 00:36:08.880 David Lin (Vocareum): Book terms. AI notebook is actually 210 00:36:08.950 --> 00:36:12.820 David Lin (Vocareum): the 1st of its kind that fully integrates managed access 211 00:36:12.850 --> 00:36:18.280 David Lin (Vocareum): to these type of resources, and these can all be configured by an organization administrator 212 00:36:18.310 --> 00:36:20.060 David Lin (Vocareum): as well as instructors. 213 00:36:20.940 --> 00:36:21.880 David Lin (Vocareum): Next slide. 214 00:36:24.720 --> 00:36:32.660 David Lin (Vocareum): I think what further distinguishes the AI notebooks from other platforms like Google, Colab or Jupiter Hub, are the classroom features 215 00:36:32.690 --> 00:36:39.389 David Lin (Vocareum): which really include various assessment approaches, including manual and automated grading. 216 00:36:41.550 --> 00:36:44.790 David Lin (Vocareum): ta, or instructor inline feedback. 217 00:36:45.557 --> 00:36:47.140 David Lin (Vocareum): In student code 218 00:36:47.618 --> 00:36:52.101 David Lin (Vocareum): peer reviews so that students can gain access to 219 00:36:52.580 --> 00:36:56.319 David Lin (Vocareum): to other student environments. 220 00:36:56.840 --> 00:37:05.480 David Lin (Vocareum): run the run the environments as well as provide feedback and also provide a avenue for multiple choice assessments. 221 00:37:06.354 --> 00:37:14.229 David Lin (Vocareum): Another neat option is a leaderboard which allows instructors to run competitions and score submissions based on various criteria. 222 00:37:15.029 --> 00:37:32.480 David Lin (Vocareum): In terms of how the Vulcan AI notebook can be used. It can be used in a live classroom could be used online. It could. You know it could be used in an exam scenario, so it could be a high stakes exam, for example. 223 00:37:33.100 --> 00:37:34.250 David Lin (Vocareum): next slide 224 00:37:37.848 --> 00:37:48.459 David Lin (Vocareum): in terms of recommended usage. It is ideal for any university course. Our Lti integration means that there's no need to lock into vocarium directly. 225 00:37:48.570 --> 00:37:56.749 David Lin (Vocareum): Learners are sent straight to their Bookram AI notebook from the Lms, so it's fully embedded into the experience. 226 00:37:57.288 --> 00:38:00.969 David Lin (Vocareum): Student work is retained for the duration of the course. 227 00:38:01.180 --> 00:38:04.699 David Lin (Vocareum): Okay? And then, after students have submitted. Then the 228 00:38:05.338 --> 00:38:14.509 David Lin (Vocareum): the grades are automatically generated by the auto. Grader and student scores are sent automatically to the Lms grade books. 229 00:38:14.720 --> 00:38:27.980 David Lin (Vocareum): Okay? So it's you know, kind of a very clean experience for instructors. And of course instructors can again access to provide their own, you know, kind of teach a class give Demos, and then also. 230 00:38:28.596 --> 00:38:33.050 David Lin (Vocareum): instructors have access to the various learner 231 00:38:33.827 --> 00:38:36.750 David Lin (Vocareum): activities as well. So not just the 232 00:38:36.850 --> 00:38:40.449 David Lin (Vocareum): the peers can share access to 233 00:38:41.070 --> 00:38:45.914 David Lin (Vocareum): to learn our work, but the instructors have, of course, have access such that they can 234 00:38:46.300 --> 00:38:49.160 David Lin (Vocareum): do the manual grading as well as provide feedback. 235 00:38:50.123 --> 00:38:50.870 David Lin (Vocareum): Next slide. 236 00:38:52.600 --> 00:38:59.720 David Lin (Vocareum): Another recommended use would be to run workshops, boot camps for hackathons, using our vocarium AI notebook 237 00:39:00.147 --> 00:39:11.379 David Lin (Vocareum): this allows learners to or users to self register on the Vulcan platform, and we will, we can grant short lived access to the notebooks and associated resources. 238 00:39:11.660 --> 00:39:25.679 David Lin (Vocareum): Last month at the Nvidia's developer conference aws hosted a workshop on the on vulcarium, and which taught folks how to train robots into cloud with Nvidia and Gpus 239 00:39:27.690 --> 00:39:28.820 David Lin (Vocareum): next slide. 240 00:39:31.760 --> 00:39:46.200 David Lin (Vocareum): so to recap. Vulcan is offering 20,000 seats of the Vulcan AI notebook to the New York community. This includes a star kit with onboarding, support, grading assistance and customization of the environment. 241 00:39:47.226 --> 00:39:48.420 David Lin (Vocareum): Next slide. 242 00:39:50.320 --> 00:39:54.070 David Lin (Vocareum): And we look forward to your proposals, questions. 243 00:39:54.450 --> 00:39:57.501 David Lin (Vocareum): and any engagement happy to 244 00:39:58.560 --> 00:40:03.970 David Lin (Vocareum): to to answer any questions, and then at some point, if you'd like, we can set up a demo 245 00:40:04.090 --> 00:40:06.419 David Lin (Vocareum): and walk through it. Live. 246 00:40:07.330 --> 00:40:08.090 David Lin (Vocareum): Thank you. 247 00:40:10.750 --> 00:40:12.570 Alejandro Suarez: Thank you very much, David. 248 00:40:12.910 --> 00:40:38.449 Alejandro Suarez: So those are our contributed partner presentations, and we are now going to open it up for QA. We just want to highlight once again that a recording of this webinar will be available in the next week or so at the event page from which you signed up to this event. So that is available at the link above or at the QR code to your right. 249 00:40:38.753 --> 00:41:05.800 Alejandro Suarez: So just keep an eye out for the recording that will be posted there. If you wanna learn more about announcements about the near pilot. Say new resources that are coming online, the webinar that we just held, or other types of announcements and activities. You can subscribe to our mailing list right on the homepage of their pilotor. You could scroll down a little bit to the subscribe for updates button that will pre-populate an email that can sign you up for our mailing list. 250 00:41:06.060 --> 00:41:35.179 Alejandro Suarez: and as a reminder, you can use the QA. Feature on zoom to submit questions. I know we have a team of colleagues at Nsf. And from our our partner con contributors that have already been answering several of your questions. So thank you very much to them. What I'm going to do now is just start going through some of the pending questions that we may be able to answer live as we finish off our presentation today. 251 00:41:36.740 --> 00:41:38.620 Alejandro Suarez: So let me just 252 00:41:39.670 --> 00:41:56.369 Alejandro Suarez: go through. Here's us a simple one, maybe, for our vocarium colleagues is, can you elaborate on the term 20,000 seats as this number students at a particular time? Or how are you defining 20,000. 253 00:41:57.110 --> 00:42:00.760 David Lin (Vocareum): Yeah, so basically, it's 20,000 current seats. 254 00:42:01.698 --> 00:42:04.839 David Lin (Vocareum): On a monthly basis. So 255 00:42:05.548 --> 00:42:07.740 David Lin (Vocareum): so if you are teaching 256 00:42:07.980 --> 00:42:11.121 David Lin (Vocareum): a course for a thousand. 257 00:42:11.840 --> 00:42:17.679 David Lin (Vocareum): you know users in a workshop that will last, you know, 2 weeks. That. Would. 258 00:42:17.760 --> 00:42:21.410 David Lin (Vocareum): you know? Just just be those number seats 259 00:42:21.590 --> 00:42:24.850 David Lin (Vocareum): right? And the next month you can do it again. 260 00:42:25.160 --> 00:42:26.486 David Lin (Vocareum): Right? So 261 00:42:28.270 --> 00:42:32.489 David Lin (Vocareum): yeah, hopefully, that's that's clear. So if you're teaching a class that will span. 262 00:42:32.510 --> 00:42:38.904 David Lin (Vocareum): you know, a full semester 3 months, and you need, you know, a thousand seats that would, 263 00:42:39.380 --> 00:42:43.309 David Lin (Vocareum): you know, eat into into that allocation for those those months. 264 00:42:45.700 --> 00:42:46.669 Alejandro Suarez: Thank you, David. 265 00:42:48.330 --> 00:42:49.190 Alejandro Suarez: Let's 266 00:42:49.620 --> 00:42:52.370 Alejandro Suarez: see some of the other 267 00:42:52.600 --> 00:42:53.930 Alejandro Suarez: questions. 268 00:42:55.217 --> 00:43:07.400 Alejandro Suarez: here's 1 for the the Pnrp, are there any training resources or tutorials available at at Ucsd, or I guess more generally. 269 00:43:07.400 --> 00:43:09.370 Frank Wurtheim: Mina, do you want to comment on that. 270 00:43:09.370 --> 00:43:20.780 Mahidhar Tatineni: Yeah, so we have tutorials on on the pnp documentation page that have, like a lot of the basic things that you need for interacting with that 271 00:43:21.192 --> 00:43:27.709 Mahidhar Tatineni: with with the cluster. We also do. Lots of workshops. There's 1 coming up at Perk 272 00:43:28.000 --> 00:43:30.910 Mahidhar Tatineni: that we're gonna do on using the machine? 273 00:43:31.460 --> 00:43:41.389 Mahidhar Tatineni: So yeah, we do have resources for classes per se. There might be some more specific things needed. Like, for example, if you want to spin up your own. 274 00:43:42.823 --> 00:44:01.273 Mahidhar Tatineni: if you want to spin up your own instance of Jupyter we would help you through the metrics channel. So the metrics channel Frank mentioned for Jupiter Hub Admins is essentially a mechanism to get people started like certain for new new faculty member or 275 00:44:02.088 --> 00:44:14.260 Mahidhar Tatineni: user wants to get started. With that, they can just go in the channel and see what's already being done. We actually have a get lab instance with all the setup for a default option. 276 00:44:14.420 --> 00:44:23.190 Mahidhar Tatineni: But I think there was a question about, you know, changing images and having different kinds of environments, all of those that is possible, and we can help you through the channel. 277 00:44:26.490 --> 00:44:27.870 Alejandro Suarez: Thank you very much. 278 00:44:28.180 --> 00:44:38.399 Alejandro Suarez: Oh, I see we we're also joined by our office director of the office, advanced cyber infrastructure. Katie and tas Katie, you have some comments for us. Welcome. 279 00:44:38.400 --> 00:44:53.709 Katie antypas: Yeah, I just noticed there are many questions about the demonstration projects, and I see Marlon kind of repeating the same. The same response in there. I think it's worth noting just again that when you request, send in a 3 page application for 280 00:44:54.175 --> 00:45:00.100 Katie antypas: near pilot resources you you requesting those resources. There isn't an exchange of 281 00:45:00.110 --> 00:45:01.510 Katie antypas: of funding. 282 00:45:02.440 --> 00:45:03.990 Katie antypas: We do 283 00:45:04.060 --> 00:45:15.999 Katie antypas: have this demonstration project opportunity as well. Okay, and that is a request for funding for demonstration projects of the near or the near. Now, if you you're 284 00:45:16.587 --> 00:45:21.242 Katie antypas: if your thought is that you, you only need 285 00:45:22.420 --> 00:45:44.659 Katie antypas: the resources, computing or data resources, then that is not a good match for demonstration project. A demonstration project is Al said, is a combination of infrastructure with a domain science, and you should send a concept outline to us, you know, as Al said, at near underscore pilot at Nsf. Gov. And so there's 286 00:45:44.660 --> 00:45:54.380 Katie antypas: anyway, there's 2 2 opportunities going on here, and the primary one is to provide their research and education, community access to resources. 287 00:45:56.280 --> 00:46:21.059 Alejandro Suarez: Thank you, Katie, for that clarification. Yes, we we talked about sort of as an aside some other Nsf specific Nsf funding activities that are available, and the Dcl. Is one that is a bridge between the Nsf. Funded activities and near pilot connections. But, as as Katie said, that is separate from these education requests and separate from allocation requests. It's much more substantive. 288 00:46:24.660 --> 00:46:27.180 Alejandro Suarez: So let's see if we have 289 00:46:27.460 --> 00:46:29.950 Alejandro Suarez: the other questions. 290 00:46:38.290 --> 00:46:38.770 Alejandro Suarez: The 291 00:46:41.050 --> 00:46:44.360 Alejandro Suarez: yes. What are the questions that are still pending? 292 00:46:49.310 --> 00:47:15.449 Alejandro Suarez: Oh, so I see a a question or asks are there abilities to adjust extensions, kernels, or language servers that are that are provided in these Jupiter instances, and I would maybe more generally say that to either of the notebook instances of the the 2 different providers that we discussed. So I don't know if our Ucsd colleagues and then our vocarium colleagues could talk to that one. 293 00:47:17.860 --> 00:47:27.379 Mahidhar Tatineni: So everything on on the Nautilus side is essentially containerized in terms of what image you use for the Jupiter notebook. 294 00:47:27.390 --> 00:47:33.529 Mahidhar Tatineni: So on the back end you could pretty much choose whatever you want. That has the tools that you need. 295 00:47:34.080 --> 00:47:42.489 Mahidhar Tatineni: And add Jupiter to that. And deploy it, and that's the sort of thing we would help you with if if you're trying to deploy something different 296 00:47:42.997 --> 00:47:46.072 Mahidhar Tatineni: just about the only constraint I can think of is 297 00:47:46.768 --> 00:47:55.900 Mahidhar Tatineni: the drivers on the node on the Gp node, just making sure whatever you install is compatible with the underlying hardware drivers and everything that's about it. 298 00:47:57.740 --> 00:48:01.329 David Lin (Vocareum): Yeah, with volcano. It's it's similar. You know. 299 00:48:01.520 --> 00:48:04.670 David Lin (Vocareum): you can customize containers for 300 00:48:04.820 --> 00:48:06.129 David Lin (Vocareum): whatever needs you have. 301 00:48:08.030 --> 00:48:08.860 Alejandro Suarez: Thank you, David. 302 00:48:11.480 --> 00:48:18.725 Alejandro Suarez: Oh, I see we have, Katie's typing this one, but I think it may be important to highlight as well in the 303 00:48:19.260 --> 00:48:21.022 Alejandro Suarez: the main session. 304 00:48:21.780 --> 00:48:37.550 Alejandro Suarez: There was a questioner that asked that on the near pilot web pages there are some resources from Nsf. Cloud Bank and jet stream 2 and other nationally available resources like our super competing resources. What would be the difference between applying 305 00:48:38.003 --> 00:49:05.200 Alejandro Suarez: to narr versus those programs? So just as as a note Nsf does and has historically supported allocation programs for time on super computers. The current version of that one of the main current versions of that is the access program, and that is for researchers in any kind of computationally position, science 306 00:49:05.200 --> 00:49:14.819 Alejandro Suarez: to request some time on a super computer that may be most relevant to the type of science they are doing. So those are still available and still serving researchers. 307 00:49:14.820 --> 00:49:39.590 Alejandro Suarez: The near pilot is providing over and above resources. So additional allocations on those existing systems and availability of new systems that are specific to AI research and domain specific research that applies AI needs as well as training activities that can inform and foster the next generation of AI researchers that we are discussing 308 00:49:39.590 --> 00:49:46.520 Alejandro Suarez: today. So I hope that differentiates that. Yes, there are some activities or some resources that are available through both 309 00:49:46.872 --> 00:50:09.800 Alejandro Suarez: and you are free to request resources through the the other means by which they're available as well. If that's more relevant to you. But the ner is yet another opportunity that allows more institutions to be able to request such resources and a different type of resource, different types of resources to be available. In addition to some of these more traditional 310 00:50:09.810 --> 00:50:11.740 Alejandro Suarez: computing resources that we have. 311 00:50:17.960 --> 00:50:23.440 Frank Wurtheim: Can. Can I ask it? Alhandrew? Can I maybe add something clarifying. 312 00:50:23.790 --> 00:50:24.540 Alejandro Suarez: Please. Go ahead, Frank. 313 00:50:24.540 --> 00:50:31.440 Frank Wurtheim: My about the access versus my understanding is that some of the contributions to the near pilot 314 00:50:31.910 --> 00:50:33.969 Frank Wurtheim: can only be received. 315 00:50:34.480 --> 00:50:38.240 Frank Wurtheim: but via the near Pilot, for example. 316 00:50:38.840 --> 00:50:43.969 Frank Wurtheim: the Aws and the Microsoft azure contributions to the near pilot 317 00:50:44.050 --> 00:50:51.880 Frank Wurtheim: while they are administered by Cloud Bank. They cannot be gotten directly from Cloud Bank is that by the Cloud Bank program? Is that true? 318 00:50:52.710 --> 00:51:18.169 Alejandro Suarez: Yes, thank you. Thank you, Frank, for that for that clarification. So some of the nationally available resources, like the Nsf Cloud Bank program, they have specific restrictions on who is eligible to apply. So the eligibility criteria to apply for, say, cloud computing resources through Cloud bank are different, and hence someone who may not be eligible via the Cloud Bank route to apply for 319 00:51:18.170 --> 00:51:35.000 Alejandro Suarez: you. You brought up aws resources. They would be eligible possibly to apply for those resources through the near pilots and through the criteria that we have through the near pilot. So that's another differentiator between these types of availability of resources that we have. 320 00:51:35.010 --> 00:51:36.160 Alejandro Suarez: So, thank you, Frank. 321 00:51:40.044 --> 00:51:46.230 Juan Jenny Li (NSF/OAC): There's some questions about how to apply for the resources. Can you send out a link? I type in the chat. 322 00:51:47.936 --> 00:52:04.429 Alejandro Suarez: Yes. So there is. If you look in the on the near pilot web page and a link was just provided within our our chat. You can go into the there's a little dropdown menu at the top 323 00:52:04.998 --> 00:52:13.580 Alejandro Suarez: or you can scroll down and see the current opportunities so the classroom and educator resources. If you click, apply. 324 00:52:14.000 --> 00:52:27.970 Alejandro Suarez: That is where you find information about the 2 resources that were described today, and some application instructions, as well as a pointer to the submission system, to be able to put in your application for these resources. 325 00:52:49.040 --> 00:52:51.590 Alejandro Suarez: So let's see other questions 326 00:52:52.150 --> 00:52:53.250 Alejandro Suarez: that 327 00:52:54.450 --> 00:52:55.970 Alejandro Suarez: been available. 328 00:53:05.880 --> 00:53:15.709 Alejandro Suarez: Oh, here's an interesting question in terms of the types, of coursework that could use some of these resources, and maybe our our colleagues 329 00:53:16.070 --> 00:53:41.920 Alejandro Suarez: at Pnrp and vocarium can respond to this would certificate programs and professional training courses offered by universities be eligible for such resources. So I will just point out in terms of the eligibility criteria. If you're a Us. Based researcher at a Us based institution. So if if you're you're from a us based. Institution. That's the main criteria. So if it's for a course offered by your institution 330 00:53:42.280 --> 00:54:01.289 Alejandro Suarez: that, that would not negate your eligibility for applying to the the near pilots and applying to these education resources. But I'll let my colleagues from our partners talk about what that fit might look like if you're running a certificate program or professional training course. 331 00:54:03.710 --> 00:54:06.950 Frank Wurtheim: I see if the Nsf. Is happy. We're happy. 332 00:54:10.310 --> 00:54:35.969 Alejandro Suarez: And just one last clarification when it comes to what it says. Professional training courses. We discussed the eligibility of us based institutions. And those can be research institutions, institutions of higher education. When it comes to any for profit businesses. We talk about how small businesses may be eligible provided they have some sort of federal funding. For example, an sbir award. 333 00:54:37.610 --> 00:54:45.698 David Lin (Vocareum): Yeah. And for Vulcan, I think, any educational institutions? Who may want to run these these programs that should be okay. 334 00:54:46.520 --> 00:54:52.360 David Lin (Vocareum): But yeah, for profit. We just that's not really the intended purpose here. 335 00:54:53.410 --> 00:54:54.299 Alejandro Suarez: Thank you. David 336 00:55:12.950 --> 00:55:13.910 Alejandro Suarez: Haiti. Yes. 337 00:55:13.910 --> 00:55:29.720 Katie antypas: Yeah, I'll maybe I should just add, I know you covered it at the beginning. Is that this really is just the start we intend to bring on a line more education resources as we move forward. So please please stay tuned and 338 00:55:30.386 --> 00:55:33.399 Katie antypas: over the next months and into the fall. 339 00:55:36.230 --> 00:55:41.197 Alejandro Suarez: Yes, thank you, Katie. So so we should note that these these resources 340 00:55:41.690 --> 00:55:46.860 Alejandro Suarez: the resources that you heard about today only started coming online 341 00:55:47.060 --> 00:56:13.759 Alejandro Suarez: about a month ago, and there are, you know, more resources that will come online. We'll see more of the outcomes of the initial allocations on these resources you'll be able to learn about. You know, some examples of what can be done with these resources in addition to what was already discussed at the presentations today. So there's there's a lot more functionality. We'll be building up along the near pilot, and we welcome your participation in letting us know sort of 342 00:56:13.760 --> 00:56:27.350 Alejandro Suarez: what you think about the availability of these resources. How easy they are to find how easy they are to use this will all help inform the evolution of the near pilot as we move forward over the coming months. 343 00:56:38.994 --> 00:56:44.349 Juan Jenny Li (NSF/OAC): We have several question about the feature of now. Maybe in case they can answer that. 344 00:56:50.110 --> 00:56:51.830 Katie antypas: Yeah, sure, if you read it out, there's. 345 00:56:51.830 --> 00:56:55.419 Juan Jenny Li (NSF/OAC): Oh, okay, okay, it does. Pilot has an end date. 346 00:56:55.640 --> 00:56:58.669 Juan Jenny Li (NSF/OAC): And what's the vision of the pilot versus the 347 00:56:59.030 --> 00:57:00.619 Juan Jenny Li (NSF/OAC): vision of the 348 00:57:00.930 --> 00:57:02.790 Juan Jenny Li (NSF/OAC): changing stuff. 349 00:57:03.640 --> 00:57:14.047 Katie antypas: Yeah. So the the near pilot as as Al mentioned, Nsf was directed to launch the near pilot with our many 350 00:57:15.050 --> 00:57:29.880 Katie antypas: agency partners as a response to the AI executive order. And so what we were direct to do was really launch the pilot with our existing resources to demonstrate the potential, the impact, the value of the larger near concept. 351 00:57:30.000 --> 00:57:45.359 Katie antypas: the full narr full naira itself is as described in the near Taskforce report is a 2.6 billion dollar initiative envisioned over a period of 6 years that would require additional funding to achieve. 352 00:57:45.360 --> 00:58:03.499 Katie antypas: And so what we are, you know, trying to do now is show this the value of this concept to the community? Really include the community and every step of the way to get. You know your your feedback on what is most useful, as we, you know. Hopefully, we'll be able to go forward and build out a larger error. 353 00:58:08.190 --> 00:58:09.020 Alejandro Suarez: Thank you. Katie. 354 00:58:09.020 --> 00:58:09.850 Juan Jenny Li (NSF/OAC): Thank you. 355 00:58:12.550 --> 00:58:13.295 Alejandro Suarez: So 356 00:58:14.210 --> 00:58:16.800 Alejandro Suarez: I'm seeing an earlier question. 357 00:58:19.080 --> 00:58:19.770 Juan Jenny Li (NSF/OAC): Should we go back. 358 00:58:19.770 --> 00:58:22.079 Alejandro Suarez: So about, has there been discussion about 359 00:58:22.150 --> 00:58:27.129 Alejandro Suarez: how sharing educational items and elements so that they're openly accessible. 360 00:58:27.400 --> 00:58:30.880 Alejandro Suarez: those inside and outside, those prospective communities of practice. 361 00:58:31.344 --> 00:58:54.429 Alejandro Suarez: Through infrastructure, like osf or other repositories. So that's a great question. And we should note that when it comes to accessing the research resources available via the near pilot. Any research that is done on use of those resour with use of those resources should be published openly. So in terms of internal research. 362 00:58:54.788 --> 00:59:17.751 Alejandro Suarez: We don't allow anything that isn't sort of published in some sort of community venue or journal and is is available. The outcomes are available. So this feedback is, is very useful when it comes to the sharing of educational items, and how this evolves the other activities that we funded Nsf. And with other agencies on the curriculum development itself. 363 00:59:18.567 --> 00:59:40.080 Alejandro Suarez: We should note that the availability of the resources that you heard about today is specifically the infrastructure to support the curriculum or education and training opportunities that you may have existing or that you are developing independently through your through your institutions. 364 00:59:40.080 --> 00:59:50.710 Alejandro Suarez: But we we're definitely hearing this interest in more openly available training opportunities, coursework and other related work there. Jen, did you have some additional. 365 00:59:50.710 --> 00:59:58.850 Juan Jenny Li (NSF/OAC): Right if they had. Yes, if you have any request for any kind of educational items, elements, you can send it to us 366 00:59:58.870 --> 01:00:00.889 Juan Jenny Li (NSF/OAC): bye, and we can work from there. 367 01:00:00.990 --> 01:00:03.580 Juan Jenny Li (NSF/OAC): Any request gets sent to us. 368 01:00:06.150 --> 01:00:08.609 Juan Jenny Li (NSF/OAC): Okay? So that's the 1st question. 369 01:00:09.720 --> 01:00:10.580 Alejandro Suarez: Thank you. Jen. 370 01:00:10.580 --> 01:00:14.100 Juan Jenny Li (NSF/OAC): Okay, the otherwise smaller IP, right? I think you answered that right. 371 01:00:14.450 --> 01:00:29.979 Alejandro Suarez: Yes, I think the when it was there was a similar question on the the IP. And how do you make some of this more, more available. And we we do understand having more training materials available to more student communities is is definitely something that we're hearing. 372 01:00:36.332 --> 01:00:42.459 Juan Jenny Li (NSF/OAC): Another question is probably for Dan. Does any access to this chat? The question and answers. 373 01:00:42.740 --> 01:00:46.980 Juan Jenny Li (NSF/OAC): can I get to the question and answers, besides, the video. 374 01:00:48.500 --> 01:01:11.540 Alejandro Suarez: Oh, yes, I I see that question as well. Yes, thank you for that feedback. We'll look into how we can make the the the chat transcript available. If we can make that available, it will be available in the same way that we make the recording available, which will be via that event link that you see in the QR code on screen. 375 01:01:11.580 --> 01:01:13.200 Alejandro Suarez: So thanks for that feedback. 376 01:01:15.120 --> 01:01:15.810 Juan Jenny Li (NSF/OAC): Yeah, he. 377 01:01:16.040 --> 01:01:18.279 Juan Jenny Li (NSF/OAC): thank you. Next one. 378 01:01:21.570 --> 01:01:24.710 Juan Jenny Li (NSF/OAC): So it's a Nvidia stitching kit. 379 01:01:24.990 --> 01:01:25.850 Juan Jenny Li (NSF/OAC): Oy. 380 01:01:26.420 --> 01:01:32.700 Alejandro Suarez: Yes, I'm not sure. There was a questioner that asked about whether the 381 01:01:32.810 --> 01:01:34.669 Alejandro Suarez: and video do I teaching. 382 01:01:34.670 --> 01:01:36.500 Juan Jenny Li (NSF/OAC): Right? Yeah, that's the question. 383 01:01:36.500 --> 01:01:37.325 Alejandro Suarez: Useful. 384 01:01:38.940 --> 01:02:01.600 Alejandro Suarez: I I think that. Well, that may be. I don't know if our our colleagues at Vocarium or Pnrp. Are familiar with doi teaching the the Nvidia Dli teaching kits but that may be sort of a question related to what what types of backends are compatible with either vocaria more pnrp, but if others have comments on that 385 01:02:01.915 --> 01:02:04.949 Alejandro Suarez: you may, you may know more than me on that subject. 386 01:02:06.050 --> 01:02:08.770 David Lin (Vocareum): Unfortunately, I don't have any information about that. 387 01:02:11.420 --> 01:02:13.510 Mahidhar Tatineni: Yeah, I'll have to check on what's 388 01:02:13.690 --> 01:02:15.249 Mahidhar Tatineni: what's in it before. 389 01:02:16.540 --> 01:02:22.859 Juan Jenny Li (NSF/OAC): Yes, and then the media does provide the resources, and we do as one of the resource providers. 390 01:02:22.860 --> 01:02:23.613 Mahidhar Tatineni: Oh, okay. 391 01:02:23.990 --> 01:02:28.649 Juan Jenny Li (NSF/OAC): And this teaching one is it. It's free. Yes, Daniel. 392 01:02:29.680 --> 01:02:44.340 Daniel Bullock: Oh, I just have a separate question we can address if we're moving on question. So around 3 0 1, it looks like we have a question regarding just the general review process for submissions. Al, if you would wanted to cover just sort of the 393 01:02:44.430 --> 01:02:47.350 Daniel Bullock: general application, process and review process. 394 01:02:48.542 --> 01:03:15.677 Alejandro Suarez: Yes. So you'll see some documentation on the near pilot website the near classroom. Requests follow a very similar process to what is done for the research application. So essentially, you'll fill out an application. It will be reviewed in terms of an alignment with the near pilot goals and sort of what education activities you're doing, the justification of the resources you're looking for. 395 01:03:16.491 --> 01:03:20.370 Alejandro Suarez: And you got some some further feedback about what 396 01:03:20.370 --> 01:03:32.860 Alejandro Suarez: the different types of resources that are available are looking for in when providing those resources. After that alignment review by outside experts. It will be. 397 01:03:33.705 --> 01:03:44.239 Alejandro Suarez: Those! Those proposals will be shared with the providers, and there will be a matching step in which, if you, if you requested a specific resource. 398 01:03:44.240 --> 01:04:08.799 Alejandro Suarez: that resource will be able to say, alright. We have room to be able to accommodate this, or maybe we have some questions we need to ask of the proposer, or there may be some other outcomes that that may need to be considered and this is all hopefully done within the course of of just a few weeks. So within the the 15th of each month we will see what has been submitted to that point, and we will start reviewing them for. 399 01:04:08.800 --> 01:04:22.866 Alejandro Suarez: or that alignment and the matching to the appropriate resource. This is done sort of in parallel with the education as well as the research resources. And so right now we. So we just had the one set of 400 01:04:23.360 --> 01:04:32.230 Alejandro Suarez: requests that came in May 15, th we're going through and finishing up the review process for those, and we will start the process 401 01:04:32.310 --> 01:04:37.609 Alejandro Suarez: right at the same time with proposals that are submitted by June 15.th 402 01:04:38.060 --> 01:05:00.840 Alejandro Suarez: So we're all hoping to do that relatively quickly. And if you have questions, you can see what the FAQ at the nearpilot org website has that's just available in the dropdown from the about page, and you can, if you have any questions. There's also a little help button and some ticketing systems within our application process that can can help you get the help you need. 403 01:05:04.647 --> 01:05:09.240 Juan Jenny Li (NSF/OAC): There's another question on the volume at 2, 4, 5, 404 01:05:11.140 --> 01:05:14.158 Juan Jenny Li (NSF/OAC): does it? Which type of systems 405 01:05:17.180 --> 01:05:25.040 Alejandro Suarez: Oh, this was asking, how translatable is the vocarium tools to in field systems and which types of systems 406 01:05:26.780 --> 01:05:29.869 Alejandro Suarez: I don't know if we need more information from our questioner on that one. 407 01:05:29.870 --> 01:05:32.132 David Lin (Vocareum): Yeah, I wasn't sure what 408 01:05:32.570 --> 01:05:33.810 David Lin (Vocareum): what they were getting at 409 01:05:34.330 --> 01:05:36.530 David Lin (Vocareum): ideally. We can get a little more information on that. 410 01:05:36.908 --> 01:05:44.060 Alejandro Suarez: To that question. Feel free to. If you wanna define what in field systems are a little bit more we can try to get you an answer on that. 411 01:05:47.802 --> 01:06:06.660 Alejandro Suarez: We had a question that asked. You know, could you talk about educator resources that might be apple applicable for K, 12 educators. That's a great question. As you may have seen from the presentations today, a lot of the resources that we have available are geared primarily towards 412 01:06:06.992 --> 01:06:21.309 Alejandro Suarez: undergraduate or maybe even graduate student settings. However, there are other opportunities that are available especially for broadening participation and computing Nsf programs that are on that line. Jen, you may have more that you can say on that. 413 01:06:22.250 --> 01:06:30.039 Juan Jenny Li (NSF/OAC): Yes, for educate AI, they have the Cs for all. And thus it's connected to K to 12 414 01:06:32.080 --> 01:06:36.419 Juan Jenny Li (NSF/OAC): like, and I think Frank also mentioned that they have some k to 12. 415 01:06:36.840 --> 01:06:43.340 Frank Wurtheim: Yeah, the the we're we're working with scenic. The regional networking organization in California 416 01:06:43.450 --> 01:06:49.680 Frank Wurtheim: and Scenic has his target audience, K, 12. Public libraries. 417 01:06:49.860 --> 01:06:51.489 Frank Wurtheim: the whole range. 418 01:06:51.540 --> 01:07:07.190 Frank Wurtheim: and so they want to use our platform also for K. 12 education and offer it in. And but we haven't done it yet, so I can't give you an example that I could actually say, Here's a here's a teacher who's used this in grade 11 to teach Blah. 419 01:07:07.330 --> 01:07:08.930 Frank Wurtheim: But fundamentally. 420 01:07:09.140 --> 01:07:15.150 Frank Wurtheim: we're not excluding it. So if somebody were to put in a near classroom request 421 01:07:15.210 --> 01:07:16.960 Frank Wurtheim: for teaching 422 01:07:17.660 --> 01:07:23.020 Frank Wurtheim: something that requires that that makes useful use of the Pnrp 423 01:07:24.080 --> 01:07:29.440 Frank Wurtheim: in A. K 12 context, we will certainly review it and consider it, and there's no reason why not. 424 01:07:34.010 --> 01:07:35.120 Alejandro Suarez: Thank you, Frank. 425 01:07:37.750 --> 01:07:38.796 Alejandro Suarez: I see. 426 01:07:39.440 --> 01:07:47.989 Alejandro Suarez: Dan, can you bring up or sorry, Marlon, can you? Highlight? Which question you were asking about the Us based researcher requirement. 427 01:07:48.120 --> 01:07:50.210 Alejandro Suarez: Just make sure we answer the right one. 428 01:07:54.280 --> 01:07:56.980 Juan Jenny Li (NSF/OAC): Yeah. Tell us the time. I don't see 429 01:07:58.560 --> 01:07:59.630 Juan Jenny Li (NSF/OAC): what time. 430 01:08:00.800 --> 01:08:06.509 Daniel Bullock: It's making reference to some documentation on one of the narrow pages that indicates that 431 01:08:07.132 --> 01:08:11.229 Daniel Bullock: the courses themselves have to be strictly accessible 432 01:08:11.270 --> 01:08:15.320 Daniel Bullock: for individuals affiliated with Us. Institutions. 433 01:08:16.466 --> 01:08:21.209 Alejandro Suarez: Yes. So in terms of this, this comes back to the usage of the 434 01:08:21.692 --> 01:08:27.829 Alejandro Suarez: the research and education resources. So in either of those settings, the users. 435 01:08:27.939 --> 01:08:55.299 Alejandro Suarez: And so this would be the the the students that may be using the resource for a given class need to be part of a Us. Based institution, so that has nothing to do with citizenship of the students or background of the students or their immigration status of the students. All it has to do is, what is the institutional affiliation of the student? 436 01:08:55.299 --> 01:09:14.399 Alejandro Suarez: So a student that is, affiliated with the Us. Based University, for example, that is where they're taking the course. That is an appropriate usage case. For the the near pilot, a student that is affiliated with an international university based outside of the Us. And using the resource 437 01:09:14.399 --> 01:09:26.149 Alejandro Suarez: or course outside of the Us. Would not be eligible for near pilot resources. To that end. I hope that clarifies the the Us. Based user requirements of the near pilot. 438 01:09:32.989 --> 01:09:45.199 Juan Jenny Li (NSF/OAC): We have several questions about education material. I think. I we answer that is that if we don't have anything right now that you're looking for. Please let us know. Can send us email contact us. 439 01:09:45.529 --> 01:09:46.229 Juan Jenny Li (NSF/OAC): Hi. 440 01:09:46.399 --> 01:09:47.379 Juan Jenny Li (NSF/OAC): thank you. 441 01:09:49.710 --> 01:10:02.558 Alejandro Suarez: Yes, and we will put some of our emails in the chat as well. If you have questions about the A, any of the things that were discussed here. 442 01:10:03.890 --> 01:10:05.770 Alejandro Suarez: you may have seen. 443 01:10:05.830 --> 01:10:07.980 Alejandro Suarez: Let me just type in my email here. 444 01:10:09.650 --> 01:10:10.490 Alejandro Suarez: So 445 01:10:10.560 --> 01:10:37.149 Alejandro Suarez: you can reach me via my email as far as@nsf.gov, you may have received that email when you registered for the presentations today. And I'd be happy to forward that along to whoever can answer your question best. Otherwise you can reach out to folks at vocarium or Ucsd or other colleagues at Nsf. Directly. 446 01:10:39.630 --> 01:10:54.159 Alejandro Suarez: and if you have more general questions about the near pilot or other ways you wish to get involved, my colleague Katie, just put in near_pilot@nsf.gov is our general email address for all inquiries related to the pilot. 447 01:10:59.260 --> 01:11:00.610 Alejandro Suarez: Another question, Dad. 448 01:11:01.359 --> 01:11:12.750 Daniel Bullock: Yes, at 2 57. There's a question that appears to be asking about funding for the Nara pilot which I am interpreting. As for rather than from 449 01:11:13.264 --> 01:11:17.975 Daniel Bullock: so it may be asking about the broader sort of funding landscape for the near 450 01:11:18.660 --> 01:11:19.470 Daniel Bullock: pilot. 451 01:11:21.870 --> 01:11:24.169 Alejandro Suarez: Yes, Kenya, yes, yes, 2, 5, 6. 452 01:11:24.170 --> 01:11:24.613 Katie antypas: Yeah, 453 01:11:25.720 --> 01:11:26.940 Katie antypas: so 454 01:11:27.130 --> 01:11:47.898 Katie antypas: I I for the near pilot itself, I think. You have to stay tuned to hear more about what may be available in an Fy 24 budget Nsf's a fy, 25 presence request budget is is 30 million dollars for the pilot. You know. That obviously, is is public information. 455 01:11:48.350 --> 01:11:53.769 Katie antypas: And then for the full ner I mean, there's draft legislation in a create AI act. 456 01:11:54.460 --> 01:12:01.210 Katie antypas: But that, you know, probably has a ways, a ways to go. So though that's, I think, what we can say at this point. 457 01:12:03.860 --> 01:12:04.880 Alejandro Suarez: Thank you, Katie. 458 01:12:08.377 --> 01:12:21.399 Alejandro Suarez: There was a question. I'll just note some of these. You can also see in the frequently asked questions. Page of an air pilot.org site but this may be worth bring up here is someone had asked. 459 01:12:22.100 --> 01:12:45.999 Alejandro Suarez: That. Do the near requests cover both the Nsf funded infrastructure and industry resources. And if so, what is the maximum allowable request? Size? So anything that is listed on theirpilot.org is eligible to be requested through that opportunity directly through the application process there. So that includes a mixture of activities funded by Nsf. As well as other agencies. 460 01:12:46.353 --> 01:12:55.886 Alejandro Suarez: And the non-government contributors. When it comes to any. Sorry, I think I lost the question here. When it comes to any other 461 01:12:57.814 --> 01:13:02.800 Alejandro Suarez: maximums in terms of how much you can request. 462 01:13:03.172 --> 01:13:31.407 Alejandro Suarez: There's no specific limitation right now on how large of a request you can make especially some of our non government providers like vocarium have noted what is the total amount of resources that they've been able to make available. So I think that's something to keep in mind when you're requesting a resource is you're not likely to be able to get a request for the entirety of the resource that's available. It would have to be some fraction of that. 463 01:13:31.740 --> 01:13:49.700 Alejandro Suarez: I can let my colleagues at Pnrp. Or vocarium talk about some of the scale that you've worked in in the past, or what may make sense when you're looking at proposals or or requests within the near pilot structure. 464 01:13:51.980 --> 01:13:55.550 David Lin (Vocareum): Yeah, for for vulgarium. We 465 01:13:55.900 --> 01:14:04.839 David Lin (Vocareum): are very scalable. So we are able to accommodate most requests. You know, we we do run 466 01:14:05.590 --> 01:14:15.720 David Lin (Vocareum): synchronous you know, large scale events. Actually, this week we're at the data bricks and AI summit, and they've been running workshops all week 467 01:14:15.860 --> 01:14:17.779 David Lin (Vocareum): on on our platform 468 01:14:17.820 --> 01:14:19.979 David Lin (Vocareum): with dozens of of learners. 469 01:14:20.641 --> 01:14:28.960 David Lin (Vocareum): So we can, we can, you know, bring in lots of synchronous learners. It could be, you know, small classrooms as well. 470 01:14:29.590 --> 01:14:33.550 David Lin (Vocareum): And and of course asynchronous is pretty 471 01:14:33.570 --> 01:14:34.880 David Lin (Vocareum): pretty straightforward. 472 01:14:41.650 --> 01:14:45.050 Alejandro Suarez: Anything from our Pnrp colleagues in terms of 473 01:14:45.220 --> 01:14:54.750 Alejandro Suarez: maximum size requests that, or what what you see is the scalability of how much of the resource you can make available for a given request. 474 01:14:55.290 --> 01:14:57.490 Frank Wurtheim: I think. Let me give you. 475 01:14:58.230 --> 01:15:03.560 Frank Wurtheim: It is clearly not as scalable as our commercial friends here. 476 01:15:04.400 --> 01:15:07.209 Frank Wurtheim: I think the a reasonable 477 01:15:07.620 --> 01:15:16.130 Frank Wurtheim: assumption that we are making right now is that we will run out of human effort before we run out of computer computing infrastructure. 478 01:15:16.980 --> 01:15:19.050 Frank Wurtheim: The what we're 479 01:15:19.190 --> 01:15:20.540 Frank Wurtheim: assuming 480 01:15:20.600 --> 01:15:22.140 Frank Wurtheim: we can set aside 481 01:15:22.250 --> 01:15:28.200 Frank Wurtheim: is an infrastructure equivalent to what uses D. Uses to do its own teaching. 482 01:15:28.960 --> 01:15:32.360 Frank Wurtheim: and uses. D. Teaches 50 courses simultaneously 483 01:15:32.840 --> 01:15:35.020 Frank Wurtheim: across 5,000 students. 484 01:15:35.970 --> 01:15:42.149 Frank Wurtheim: I think if you came to us and said, you want a thousand student courses that you're teaching. 485 01:15:42.390 --> 01:15:44.090 Frank Wurtheim: we probably would reject it. 486 01:15:44.390 --> 01:15:47.450 Frank Wurtheim: because we probably that doesn't make doesn't make sense. 487 01:15:47.700 --> 01:15:51.050 Frank Wurtheim: If it is a few 100, a few 100, it's probably doable. 488 01:15:51.230 --> 01:15:54.289 Frank Wurtheim: And where exactly the line is is unclear. 489 01:15:55.230 --> 01:15:56.240 Frank Wurtheim: does that help. 490 01:15:59.810 --> 01:16:00.819 Alejandro Suarez: Thank you, Frank. 491 01:16:01.490 --> 01:16:01.990 Alejandro Suarez: I think. 492 01:16:01.990 --> 01:16:13.389 Mahidhar Tatineni: Yeah, I I also want to jump in and say, that's actually one of the reasons we were asking about the sizes of the resources and all for for the particular class, because it could 493 01:16:13.900 --> 01:16:20.119 Mahidhar Tatineni: also depend on what your particular class needs. Right? You could have a case where 494 01:16:20.300 --> 01:16:22.989 Mahidhar Tatineni: you scale up a lot and need a lot of resources. 495 01:16:23.150 --> 01:16:24.850 Mahidhar Tatineni: Yeah, obviously. 496 01:16:25.220 --> 01:16:31.690 Frank Wurtheim: Obviously, you're not going to be able to use P. And Rp. To teach a class on how to change at Ubt. 497 01:16:31.830 --> 01:16:32.990 Frank Wurtheim: That's obvious. 498 01:16:33.050 --> 01:16:35.930 Frank Wurtheim: Neither. None of us can offer that. 499 01:16:36.050 --> 01:16:38.880 Frank Wurtheim: obviously. And so there are obviously limits. 500 01:16:39.220 --> 01:16:42.769 Frank Wurtheim: And and where exactly those are we'll have to 501 01:16:43.120 --> 01:16:45.879 Frank Wurtheim: sort out. This is why it's called a pilot. 502 01:16:47.340 --> 01:16:55.380 Juan Jenny Li (NSF/OAC): Okay? So why we here, what it? What about minimum? Any minimum for the students in the class? That's just one question just came up. 503 01:16:55.580 --> 01:16:57.820 Frank Wurtheim: I see no reason why there should be any minimum. 504 01:16:59.520 --> 01:17:00.860 David Lin (Vocareum): And no minimum here, either. 505 01:17:01.090 --> 01:17:02.390 Juan Jenny Li (NSF/OAC): Okay, thank you. 506 01:17:04.260 --> 01:17:07.540 Juan Jenny Li (NSF/OAC): And another question also, for 507 01:17:08.222 --> 01:17:14.990 Juan Jenny Li (NSF/OAC): I think you mentioned 25 regional chapters, how come the valley is not included. 508 01:17:15.060 --> 01:17:16.899 Juan Jenny Li (NSF/OAC): Think that's for Frank, probably. 509 01:17:18.481 --> 01:17:21.219 Juan Jenny Li (NSF/OAC): The last one. Yes, 3, 1, 8. 510 01:17:22.600 --> 01:17:23.250 Frank Wurtheim: Unless 511 01:17:24.320 --> 01:17:26.600 Juan Jenny Li (NSF/OAC): Or 3, 1, 8, 3, 1, 8. 512 01:17:28.640 --> 01:17:30.360 Frank Wurtheim: I don't understand the question. 513 01:17:33.620 --> 01:17:37.929 Alejandro Suarez: So someone had asked Snare open to collaborating with nonprofits. Universities 514 01:17:38.120 --> 01:17:40.310 Alejandro Suarez: have their own funding programs 515 01:17:40.770 --> 01:17:46.779 Alejandro Suarez: that they want to leverage to support narrow development in particular help with development, distribution of materials. 516 01:17:47.120 --> 01:18:10.910 Alejandro Suarez: For that questioner feel free to reach out at narrow underscore pilot and nsf.gov, especially if there are activities, you know, if there's contributions you wish to make, or if an allocation on some of our resources can can help some of your development activities. If there's some unique way that you'd you'd be interested in partnering with the Narr. We're happy to happy to hear it. 517 01:18:13.010 --> 01:18:14.280 Alejandro Suarez: Think we're 518 01:18:15.080 --> 01:18:17.280 Alejandro Suarez: running out of time. 519 01:18:21.390 --> 01:18:24.659 Alejandro Suarez: I think at this point 520 01:18:28.350 --> 01:18:34.760 Alejandro Suarez: let me just go through our slides one more time, because there were a few questions 521 01:18:39.450 --> 01:18:40.575 Alejandro Suarez: regarding 522 01:18:43.130 --> 01:18:50.954 Alejandro Suarez: I think it's the so there, some some questions about contacting Pnrp, I think that can that can be done through 523 01:18:51.370 --> 01:18:56.857 Alejandro Suarez: reaching out to me or through the near pilot inbox. There's 524 01:18:57.720 --> 01:19:02.919 Alejandro Suarez: If if you have any further questions on that, we'll we'll be sure to route you to the right to the right person. 525 01:19:05.770 --> 01:19:10.870 Alejandro Suarez: But I think that maybe about about time for us. 526 01:19:16.220 --> 01:19:29.820 Alejandro Suarez: So I think what I'm want to do is 1st off, I, I wanna give a great thank you to our partners at Pnrp and vocarium to be able to tell us a little bit more about our activities. 527 01:19:29.820 --> 01:19:46.739 Alejandro Suarez: I'd also like to thank my colleagues, Ellen Zagura and Jenny Lee, who talked about the education opportunities that Nsf. Has available, as well as Katie Antipas, our office director, who has helped out with our QA. We have some other colleagues within Nsf. 528 01:19:47.127 --> 01:20:16.570 Alejandro Suarez: Marlon Pierce and our science technology policy fellow, Daniel Bullock, who has also been tirelessly answering a lot of the questions in the background that you've been asking. So thank you all so much for coming we hope to have more of these webinars on different near pilot resources opportunities new activities that relate to the pilot in in the coming weeks and months. So please look forward to 529 01:20:16.570 --> 01:20:24.589 Alejandro Suarez: future announcements via our mailing list, and we look forward to hearing from you all on the the great types of applications you may put in 530 01:20:24.881 --> 01:20:30.120 Alejandro Suarez: and how you'd be able to use these these resources. So thank you so much for coming. 531 01:20:31.880 --> 01:20:32.339 David Lin (Vocareum): Thank you.