Special Features:
GGF LEADERSHIP SELECTS HP'S MARK LINESCH AS NEXT GGF CHAIR
The Global Grid Forum announced the selection of Mark Linesch of HP as the
next GGF chair. As vice president for HP's Adaptive Enterprise Program,
Linesch has worked extensively on Grid and next-generation distributed
computing architectures and solutions. The search process for the next GGF
chair was initiated in March of this year after Charlie Catlett announced he
would be stepping down at the end of five years as chair of the GGF. Numerous
candidates from industry, academia and the research communities were nominated
from which the search committee underwent an extensive review process and
narrowed the group to a shortlist of finalists. The list and the candidates
were presented to the GGF governing bodies who, after further interviews and
review, selected Linesch by an overwhelming consensus as the next chair of the
GGF.
During Catlett's five years, the GGF has grown from a small group of primarily
academic researchers to become the preeminent Grid standards body today, with
over 50 technical groups and participation from over 30 countries and 500
organizations worldwide. GGF's flagship architecture, the Open Grid Services
Architecture (OGSA), was developed through the efforts of individuals from 60
companies and 40 research institutions and leverages the work of the Web
services community in partnering organizations including DMTF, IETF, OASIS and
W3C. GGF will be gathering for its next meeting Sept. 20-23 in Brussels,
Belgium, to hear experiences from numerous Grid veterans who have deployed
Grids within their commercial enterprises.
As GGF chair, Linesch will be dedicated full time to GGF activities -- funded
by HP but working independently on behalf of the entire community to continue
the critical architecture and standards work needed for pervasive Grid
computing.
"I am honored to be selected to lead this next critical phase of GGF and Grid
standards development and want to thank Charlie Catlett for his outstanding
leadership over the last five years," said Linesch. "Grid computing, based on
open, industry standards is providing the distributed computing platform for
research collaboration, and new scientific discovery throughout the world
today. The work of the Grid community is also enabling exciting new business
opportunities for Grid related products and services. This is a great
opportunity for research and industry and I am excited to be able to
contribute."
"Today, GGF is comprised of several vital, collaborating communities," said
Catlett. "Over the past several years the science and research community that
initially created GGF has been working shoulder to shoulder with not only
end-users but also with product developers from industry. This collaboration
has been a key to our success, and today products are emerging based on GGF
standards and our flagship flagship Open Grid Services Architecture, OGSA.
Mark's experience in the marketplace and as a technical leader will be vital
to strengthening these important collaborations to create solid standards and
frameworks."
"The number and quality of candidates we considered spoke volumes about the
strength of the GGF Organization and it's leadership as the key driver of Grid
standards over the past five years. Mark's selection comes at a pivotal point
for the GGF as it works closer with industry to ensure the standards created
are relevant to both the academic & industrial communities" said Ian Baird,
chief business architect & vice president of marketing of Platform Computing,
and a member of GGF's Advisory Committee and chair search committee. "Mark's
business acumen will be instrumental in further engaging the business
community while maintaining the critical support and involvement of the
research and academic communities who form the very foundation of the
organization."
About GGF
Global Grid Forum (GGF; www.ggf.org) is a globally distributed
community of product developers, researchers, technologists and end-users of
Grid technologies working together to develop best practices and technical
standards to create a foundation for Grid computing applications, products and
services. Established in 1999, the GGF community is comprised of thousands of
participants from 50 countries and over 500 organizations. GGF is supported by
over 50 sponsor member companies and over 25 sponsoring research laboratories,
programs and universities.
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