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DAILY NEWS AND INFORMATION
FOR THE GLOBAL GRID COMMUNITY / JUNE 9, 2003: VOL. 2 NO. 23
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Breaking News -
General:
Gridbus 2003 International Grid
Workshop
Gridbus 2003: International Workshop on Service-Oriented Grid and Utility
Computing
June 7, 2003, Melbourne, Australia
Organised by: GRIDS Lab @ The University of Melbourne, Australia
Call for Participation
Grid Computing is emerging as a next-generation parallel and distributed
computing platform driven by the Internet, Web services technologies, and
service-oriented computing architectures. Grids enable the sharing, selection,
and aggregation of geographically distributed resources, such as computers
(PCs, workstations, clusters, supercomputers), data sources, and scientific
instruments, for solving large-scale problems in science, engineering, and
commerce. To realise the full potential of computing Grids, a number of
projects, both within Australia and around the world, have been making steady
progress in the design, development, and deployment of Grid technologies and
applications.
The notion of utility computing, which enables the leasing of information
technology (IT) services on demand, is gaining wide attention due to its cost
effective computing nature. Hence, the need for technologies that unify the
notion of Service-Oriented Architectures, Grid and utility computing; and
empower both service providers and consumers to operate based on their
individual needs is rapidly growing.
The Gridbus Project at the University of Melbourne has been carrying out
R&D
and leading the creation of number of Cluster and Grid technologies to realize
service-oriented grid and utility computing. The project focused on the design
and development of (A) tools that transform existing applications into
master-worker style applications; (B) high-level services that enable
publication of application services in a market-like environment; (C) grid
economy paradigm for distributed resource and users management; and (D)
resource aggregators that discover distributed data and applications services
at runtime and map application tasks to resources based on their cost,
capability, performance, and user's QoS demands such the deadline and budget
limits. To realise this massive goal of creating a service-oriented and
utility computing environment, the Gridbus project has been collaborating and
interacting with application domain experts and industries both nationally and
internationally. Some of our existing partners include School of Physics at
Melbourne, WEHI for Medical Research (Melbourne), Osaka University (Japan),
and Sun Microsystems (USA).
The aim of Gridbus workshop is to bring together our existing collaborators
and new researchers to develop new collaborations. The workshop will feature a
series of short informal presentations with major emphasis on discussion:
evaluating what has been achieved so far (possibly with live demonstration),
identifying what works, what doesn't, and identifies opportunities for
collaborative R&D.
As a open and informal forum, the workshop is designed to promote the
exchange
of ideas and collaborations among different scientific and business
communities.
Scope
Overall topics of interest include but are not limited to:
- Service-Oriented Grid Architectures
- Utility Computing
- Programming Models and Environments
- Remote Data Access and Management
- Grid Middleware and Toolkits
- Data Intensive Computing and WorkFlow Management
- Internet-based Computing Models
- Performance Evaluation and Modeling
- Grid Information Services
- Grid Security Issues
- Web Services and Technologies
- Grid Economy
- Resource Management and Scheduling
- Grid Applications
- Advance Resource Reservation and Scheduling
- Scientific, and Industrial and Social Implications
If you wish to participate or present your thoughts on unifying
service-oriented grid and utility computing, please contact the workshop
coordinator by June 5, 2003.
Workshop Coordinator:
Rajkumar Buyya, University of Melbourne. Email: raj@cs.mu.oz.au
Workshop Venue
Dept. of Computer Science and Software Engineering, Theatre 3 (ICT-205),
ICT
Building, University of Melbourne
Street Address: ICT Building, 111, Barry Street, Carlton, Melbourne, VIC
3053,
Australia Phone: +61 3 8344 1344
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