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DAILY NEWS AND INFORMATION
FOR THE GLOBAL GRID COMMUNITY /
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Special Features:
SINGAPORE GRID TO BOOST GRID
COMPUTING
Varsity, Intel, IBM launched a Grid to let users learn about
supercomputing.
Think of the power of thousands of computers at your fingertips per second and
you have the Grid Innovation Zone (Giz).
It is a joint effort by the National University of Singapore (NUS) and tech
giants Intel and IBM, to let students, researchers and businesses learn how to
harness such supercomputing capabilities.
Being able to tap the power of thousands of PCs to run applications which
need
this kind of computing muscle -- like animation and complex scientific
calculations -- without worrying whether the machine can cope, is seen as the
next big thing in technology.
Last November, Singapore launched the National Grid Pilot Platform, which
pools the computing resources of several key research institutions here,
including those under the Agency for Science, Technology and Research
(A*Star), Nanyang Technological University and NUS.
Both Grids depend on high-speed networks for smooth data flow. The National
Grid, for instance, has a bandwidth of 1 Gb per second, which means data could
move almost 19,000 times faster compared with a dial-up modem's 56 kb per
second speed.
Giz@NUS will serve as a testing ground for pilot projects on Grid
computing,
so users can see how they can benefit from such shared resources. It will also
serve an educational role.
The deputy director of NUS' computer center, Tan Chee Kiow, told The
Straits
Times, "This early exposure will cultivate tech-savvy students who can
eventually lead in a Grid-enabled economy."
Grid computing is still in its infancy, and several issues that directly
concern it, like security and policy, have yet to be worked out.
On top of that, for Grid computing to reach a broader market, organizations
must be able to buy solutions that have been tested and for which one entity
can provide overall support, said Phil Sargeant, a director at technology
research firm Gartner.
This may be the role for set-u per second like Giz@NUS and the National
Grid.
Said Cheok Beng Teck, director of the National Grid Office, which manages
the
National Grid, "My agency is prepared to help institutions and companies set
up their Grid and, in turn, link up to the National Grid."
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