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News Releases
iGrid to
Present Highest-End International Technology
and Application Demonstrations
San Diego, CA, August 23, 2005
-- The biennial iGrid workshop, becoming known
as the Woodstock of Networking,will provide
a few-day peek into the networked world of
the future less than five weeks from now. iGrids
primary focus is to demonstrate state-of-the-art
use of international optical networks showcasing
the highest-performance scientific and technology
capabilities. It will include keynote presentations,
panels, and master classes. And it will be
the first major event hosted at the new Calit2
building at UCSD.
Attendance grows significantly each
time this event is held. Some 400 people representing
20 countries from Europe, North America, South
America, and the Pacific Rim are expected to
participate during the five-day event, starting
September 26. (The workshop can still accommodate
more participants; to register, go to www.igrid2005.org.)
Watch this website for an iGrid
blog: Concurrent with iGrid, Calit2 intends
to launch a new blogosphere to share a variety
of perspectives on the event through video,
audio, and written media from Calit2 communications
professionals Doug Ramsey and Stephanie Sides;
Lev Manovich, one of todays most influential
thinkers in the fields of media arts/digital
culture and a professor in the UCSD Visual
Arts department; and hopefully some of the
iGrid demonstrators themselves.
iGrid keynote presentations will
be made by José Muñoz, NSF; Larry Smarr, Calit2
director; Carter Bullard, QoSient LLC; Bill
St. Arnaud, CANARIE; and Ian Foster, Argonne
National Lab and University of Chicago.
iGrid panels will address both technical
and more general-interest topics. Master classes
will be taught on optical control planes, service-oriented
infrastructure, and the User Controlled LightPath
software.
Nearly 50 demos will be presented
at iGrid, many of which will be reprised at
SC05 (Supercomputing), which takes place November
12-18 in Seattle, WA.
The demonstrations will represent
a range of disciplinary areas, including design/art,
gaming, cultural heritage, chemistry, physics
(broadly construed to include astronomy and
planetary science), environmental/earth science,
and biology/medical/neuroscience.
Most of the demonstrations can be categorized roughly
into these technology classifications (with many
fitting more than one):
- Remote control of capabilities (instrumentation,
computational simulations, etc.)
- High-definition applications
- Interactive applications
- Multicast applications
- Collaborative environments
- Visualization
- Manipulation and transfer of extreme amounts
of data
- New technical capabilities at the network
level
Subsequent articles in this space will briefly describe the demos in each category. These articles will be published weekly leading up to the event.
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