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News Releases
iGrid to Push Edge of Networking
Frontier by Demonstrating World's Most Demanding Applications
San Diego, CA, May 3, 2005 -- The University
of California, San Diego, and the California Institute for Telecommunications
and Information Technology (Calit2) will host iGrid 2005 in September.
The goal of iGrid 2005 is to push research and development of optical
networking with data-intensive applications. This fourth biennial
international workshop will showcase the power of high-bandwidth
‘extreme’ networking to support the world’s most demanding applications
– from science to art – and international collaborations among partner
institutions from Europe, North America, South America, and the
Pacific Rim.
This workshop should appeal to those with a futuristic
mindset who are curious about how today’s state-of-the-art, globally
distributed, collaborative applications might become the mainstream
of tomorrow.
The event will take place Sept. 26-29 in the new Calit2
building at UCSD, one of the most ‘wired’ buildings on any U.S.
campus.
“Calit2 is supporting iGrid,” said Calit2 director
Larry Smarr, a professor of Computer Science and Engineering in
UCSD’s Jacobs School of Engineering, “because of our focus on experimentation
and prototyping of applications-driven infrastructure across scales
from local to global. iGrid will allow us to make a year’s worth
of progress in less than a week.”
“The unique capabilities of the Calit2 building at
UCSD, including networking, computing, and visualization, will be
put to their first important test by iGrid,” said Calit2 UCSD division
director Ramesh Rao, a professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering.
“It is certainly an unconventional and exciting way of bringing
the building online.”
The iGrid workshop will be followed by the Global
Lambda Integrated Facility meeting on Sept. 30. GLIF is an international
virtual organization that supports persistent data-intensive scientific
research and middleware development on ‘lambdagrids,’ natural extensions
of the grid to include user control of lambdas (wavelengths
of light on which gigabits of data are sent). The iGrid event earlier
in the week will showcase international scientific projects enabled
by the infrastructure that GLIF participants design and deploy year
round.
Last held in 2002, iGrid is a coordinated effort to
accelerate the use of many existing 10-gigabit-per-second international
and national networks to advance scientific research and educate
decision makers, academicians, and industry researchers on the benefits
of these advanced networks. The 2005 event provides an international
testbed for participants to collaborate on a global scale to advance
the state of the art in high-performance computing and communications.
“CENIC and the National LambdaRail are bringing an
additional 50 gigabits of bandwidth into UCSD in support of iGrid
and GLIF activities,” said Jim Dolgonas, president and chief operating
officer of the Corporation for Education Network Initiatives in
California.
The iGrid event consists of two tracks: real-time
demonstrations and presentations about today’s emerging global cyberinfrastructure.
The demos are driven by applications scientists, engineered
by a worldwide collaboration among leaders in advanced networking,
and enabled by grid middleware developers. Applications include
art, astro- and particle physics, chemistry, earth and ocean sciences,
neuroscience, and radio-astronomy, among others. To date, some 45
demonstration project proposals have been received from participants
in 20 countries.
Attendees will learn about the underlying technologies,
including high-performance optical networking, user control of lightpaths,
remote control of instrumentation and supercomputer simulations,
remote data gathering, interactive and high-definition TV to support
distributed virtual lecture halls, visualization on large-format
displays, virtual reality, global data sharing, ultra-high-performance
file transfer, and other technologies.
“What’s particularly exciting – and unusual – about
this workshop is that it enables people at the edge of the technology
curve to work with colleagues worldwide,” said Maxine Brown, associate
director of the Electronic Visualization Lab (EVL) at the University
of Illinois at Chicago and co-chair of iGrid 2005. “Academicians,
government researchers, and industry representatives work together
to incorporate new grid networking technologies and hardware into
their problem-solving environments, facilitating their research
and creating new markets of opportunity.”
“This international group of like-minded people work
together briefly but intensely, and the results can be dramatic,”
said Tom DeFanti, co-chair of iGrid, director of EVL, and research
scientist at Calit2. “We think of it as real-time guerrilla networking.”
Much of the infrastructure put in place for iGrid
will persist afterward and be available for long-term experimentation.
The results of the meeting will be published in a
special issue of the Elsevier journal The International Journal
of Grid Computing: Theory, Methods and Applications to be issued
within a few months of the event. This issue will be edited by Cees
de Laat, University of Amsterdam, Smarr, DeFanti, and Brown.
The iGrid event traditionally serves as a showcase
for leading vendors and their latest capabilities, including pre-commercial
technologies.
About iGrid
The iGrid workshop is a biennial event organized by the high-performance
computing research community to showcase international grid computing
using advanced networks. It's an opportunity for the best and brightest
technologists worldwide in applications, middleware, and networking
to work together to advance the state of the art. The event has
facilitated major change: prior to iGrid 2002 in Amsterdam, there
was 2.5 Gb of transatlantic bandwidth. By the time the event took
place, there was 22.5 Gb of bandwidth, and it has been growing ever
since. San Diego is the fourth iGrid host site. In 2002 the meeting
took place at the Science Park, Amsterdam, the Netherlands; two
years earlier at INET 2000 in Yokohama, Japan; and in 1998 the inaugural
iGrid meeting at Supercomputing98 in Orlando, Florida. For more
information, see www.igrid2005.org.
About GLIF
GLIF is a collaboration of institutions, organizations, consortia,
and country National Research and Education Networks (NRENs) that
voluntarily share optical networking resources and expertise to
advance scientific collaboration and discovery. GLIF’s mission is
to create and sustain a Global Facility that supports leading-edge
capabilities based on new and emerging technologies and paradigms
related to advanced optical networking. See www.glif.is.
About Calit2
Calit2’s mission is to extend the reach of the Internet throughout
the physical world. The institute teams UCSD and UC Irvine faculty,
students, and research professionals with leading California telecommunications,
computer, software, and applications companies to conduct research
on the scientific and technological components needed to bring this
new Internet into being. Institute applications researchers conduct
studies in “living laboratories” to investigate how this future
Internet will accelerate advances in environmental science, civil
infrastructure, intelligent transportation and telematics, genomic
medicine, new media arts, and educational practices. See www.calit2.net.
About CENIC
The Corporation for Education Network Initiatives in California
is charged with designing, provisioning, and operating robust, high-capacity,
next-generation Internet communications services through a cohesive
infrastructure for its associates and affiliates. CENIC represents
the common interests of its associates, who are drawn from California's
higher education academic and research communities, and is highly
accountable to the institutions it serves to fulfill the trust that
has been placed with it. CENIC also provides services to California
K-12 schools and, to facilitate the education and research mission
of its associates, to non-California higher education institutions
and industry research organizations with which CENIC associate researchers
and educators are engaged. See www.cenic.org.
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