06.03.14
Acceptance Speech for Maxine Brown and Tom DeFanti
Innovation Award for Experimental / Developmental Applications – iGrid2005
CENIC 2006
Title: Global LambdaGrid Applications Driving Innovation
Oakland, CA
1. “ Global LambdaGrid Applications Driving Innovation" Acceptance Speech for Maxine Brown and Tom DeFanti Innovation Award for Experimental / Developmental Applications – iGrid2005 CENIC 2006 Oakland, CA March 14, 2006 Dr. Larry Smarr Director, California Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology; Harry E. Gruber Professor, Dept. of Computer Science and Engineering Jacobs School of Engineering, UCSD
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5. Maxine Brown and Tom DeFanti, iGrid2005 Co-Chairs Larry Smarr and Ramesh Rao, Calit2 Hosts
8. … into a Leading-Edge Cyberworld Source: Maxine Brown-EVL, UIC
9. iGrid2005 Data Flows Multiplied Normal Flows by Five Fold! Data Flows Through the Seattle PacificWave International Switch
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12. iGrid Lambda Digital Cinema Streaming Services: Telepresence Meeting in Calit2 Digital Cinema Auditorium Lays Technical Basis for Global Digital Cinema Sony NTT SGI Keio University President Anzai UCSD Chancellor Fox
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16. iGrid Scientific Instrument Services: Enable Remote Interactive HD Imaging of Deep Sea Vent Source John Delaney & Deborah Kelley, UWash Canadian-U.S. Collaboration
19. iGrid Lambda e-Science: Enabling U.S. / Mexico Scientific Collaborations Source: iGrid 2005 Brochure--Maxine Brown
Notas del editor
The SC’98 International Grid (iGrid) research demonstrations showcase international collaborations using advanced high-speed networks, enabling researchers to work together, whether their colleagues live across the country or across the ocean, and to access geographically-distributed computing, storage, and display resources. The iGrid booth, jointly sponsored by the Electronic Visualization Laboratory at the University of Illinois at Chicago and Indiana University, provides global connectivity so collaborators from the United States, Australia, Canada, Germany, Japan, The Netherlands, Russia, Singapore, Switzerland, and Taiwan can demonstrate their use of advanced networks to solve complex computational problems. Enabling these international demonstrations is the National Science Foundation (NSF) sponsored initiative STAR TAP—the Science, Technology And Research Transit Access Point [www.startap.net]. Started in 1997, STAR TAP anchors the NSF vBNS (very high-speed Backbone Network Service) international program. Networks from Canada (CAnet-2), Singapore (SingaREN), Taiwan (TANet), Russia (MirNET), and the Asian-Pacific Advanced Network consortium (APAN) are connected; Indiana University is the lead institution of the APAN-USA joint venture, named TransPAC [www.transpac.org]. STAR TAP connections to the Nordic countries (NORDUnet), The Netherlands (SURFnet), France (RENATER), and Israel are imminent. Other USA federal agency advanced networks, notably the Department of Defense DREN, Department of Energy ESnet, and NASA NREN are also connected to STAR TAP. STAR TAP is managed by the Electronic Visualization Laboratory, Argonne National Laboratory, the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and Chicago’s Ameritech Advanced Data Services. The Electronic Visualization Laboratory and Indiana University, members of NCSA’s National Computational Science Alliance partnership, are working to advance the development of the International Technology Grid. The Grid is a prototype 21st century computational and information infrastructure integrating high-performance computers, visualization environments, remote instruments, and massive databases via high-speed networks to support advanced applications.
The SC’98 International Grid (iGrid) research demonstrations showcase international collaborations using advanced high-speed networks, enabling researchers to work together, whether their colleagues live across the country or across the ocean, and to access geographically-distributed computing, storage, and display resources. The iGrid booth, jointly sponsored by the Electronic Visualization Laboratory at the University of Illinois at Chicago and Indiana University, provides global connectivity so collaborators from the United States, Australia, Canada, Germany, Japan, The Netherlands, Russia, Singapore, Switzerland, and Taiwan can demonstrate their use of advanced networks to solve complex computational problems. Enabling these international demonstrations is the National Science Foundation (NSF) sponsored initiative STAR TAP—the Science, Technology And Research Transit Access Point [www.startap.net]. Started in 1997, STAR TAP anchors the NSF vBNS (very high-speed Backbone Network Service) international program. Networks from Canada (CAnet-2), Singapore (SingaREN), Taiwan (TANet), Russia (MirNET), and the Asian-Pacific Advanced Network consortium (APAN) are connected; Indiana University is the lead institution of the APAN-USA joint venture, named TransPAC [www.transpac.org]. STAR TAP connections to the Nordic countries (NORDUnet), The Netherlands (SURFnet), France (RENATER), and Israel are imminent. Other USA federal agency advanced networks, notably the Department of Defense DREN, Department of Energy ESnet, and NASA NREN are also connected to STAR TAP. STAR TAP is managed by the Electronic Visualization Laboratory, Argonne National Laboratory, the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and Chicago’s Ameritech Advanced Data Services. The Electronic Visualization Laboratory and Indiana University, members of NCSA’s National Computational Science Alliance partnership, are working to advance the development of the International Technology Grid. The Grid is a prototype 21st century computational and information infrastructure integrating high-performance computers, visualization environments, remote instruments, and massive databases via high-speed networks to support advanced applications.