BEGIN:VCALENDAR PRODID:-//Microsoft Corporation//Outlook MIMEDIR//EN VERSION:1.0 BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART:20131119T223000Z DTEND:20131119T230000Z LOCATION:401/402/403 DESCRIPTION;ENCODING=QUOTED-PRINTABLE:ABSTRACT: In the late 1990s, powerful economic forces led to the adoption of commodity desktop processors in high-performance computing. This transformation has been so effective that the June 2013 TOP500 list is still dominated by x86.=0A=0AIn 2013, the largest commodity market in computing is not PCs or servers, but mobile computing, comprising smartphones and tablets, most of which are built with ARM-based SoCs. This leads to the suggestion that once mobile SoCs deliver sufficient performance, mobile SoCs can help reduce the cost of HPC.=0A=0AThis paper addresses this question in detail. We analyze the trend in mobile SoC performance, comparing it with the similar trend in the 1990s. We also present our experience evaluating performance and efficiency of mobile SoCs, deploying a cluster and evaluating the network and scalability of production=0Aapplications. In summary, we give a first answer as to whether mobile SoCs are ready for HPC. SUMMARY:Supercomputing with Commodity CPUs: Are Mobile SoCs Ready for HPC? PRIORITY:3 END:VEVENT END:VCALENDAR