Special Section -- World Community Grid:
IBM LAUNCHES ITS WORLD COMMUNITY GRID
IBM, along with representatives of the world's leading science, education and
philanthropic organizations, launched World Community Grid, a global
humanitarian effort that applies the unused computing power of individual and
business computers to help address the world's most difficult health and
societal problems.
World Community Grid will harness the vast and unused computational power of
the world's computers and direct it at research designed to help unlock
genetic codes that underlie diseases like AIDS and HIV, Alzheimer's and
cancer, improve forecasting of natural disasters and support studies that can
protect the world's food and water supply. Anyone can volunteer to donate the
idle and unused time on a computer by downloading World Community Grid's free
software and registering at www.worldcommunitygrid.org.
"World Community Grid represents a new model for philanthropic giving," said
Linda Sanford, IBM senior vice president of Enterprise On Demand
Transformation, and chairperson of World Community Grid's Advisory Board. "IBM
is involved in World Community Grid because just as we do for clients, we're
committed to bringing the best technologies forward to address critical
societal and health issues. World Community Grid demonstrates that government,
business, and society can be the direct beneficiary of innovation if we are
willing to rethink the way innovation and science both develop and prosper."
The first project of World Community Grid, the Human Proteome Folding Project,
is sponsored by the Institute for Systems Biology, an internationally known
non-profit research institute dedicated to the study and application of
systems biology. The Human Proteome Folding Project hopes to identify the
proteins that make up the Human Proteome and, in doing so, better understand
the causes and potential cures for diseases like malaria and tuberculosis.
Further projects are to be selected by a newly created World Community Grid
Advisory Board that will evaluate proposals from leading research, public and
not-for-profit organizations seeking to conduct humanitarian research using
grid computing technology. The Board is expected to oversee five to six
projects a year.
"World Community Grid will enable researchers around the globe to gather and
analyze unprecedented quantities of data to help address important global
issues, including public health issues," said Elaine Gallin, an Advisory Board
Member for the initiative and the Program Director for Medical Research at the
Doris Duke Charitable Foundation. "I am very pleased to serve as an advisor
for this project, which promises to harness grid computer technology to
address complex clinical research questions and will inspire us to look beyond
the technological limitations that have historically restricted us from
addressing some of our most intractable problems."
The advisory board of World Community Grid includes members of some of the
world's most prestigious scientific, research and charitable organizations,
including the National Institutes of Health, the Doris Duke Charitable
Foundation, the Markle Foundation, the Mayo Clinic, Oxford University, the
World Health Organization and the United Nations Development Programme.
IBM has donated the hardware, software, technical services and expertise to
build the infrastructure for World Community Grid and provides hosting,
maintenance and support.
In addition, IBM is joined in the project by United Devices, a leader in grid
solutions, which plans to aggregate the idle power of participating PCs and
laptops into its existing worldwide grid. IBM and United Devices previously
worked together to create the Smallpox Research Grid, which created a grid of
more than two million volunteers from 226 countries to speed the analysis of
some 35 million drug molecules in the search for a treatment for Smallpox.
Results were delivered to the U.S. Department of Defense for further study
late last year.
By some estimates, there are more than 650 million PCs in use around the
world, each a potential participant in World Community Grid. Grid computing is
a rapidly emerging technology that can bring together the collective power of
thousands or millions of individual computers to create a giant "virtual"
system with massive computational strength. Grid technology provides
processing power far in excess of the world's largest supercomputers.
World Community Grid is built from computing time donated by thousands of IBM
employees, as well as scores of PCs and laptops from computer users around the
world. World Community Grid is powered by IBM technology, which includes IBM
eServer p630 and x345 systems and IBM's Shark Enterprise Storage Server
running IBM DB2 database software and the AIX and Linux operating systems. IBM
DB2 software can support millions of SQL queries a day as it manages the data
provided by potentially millions of computers working in concert.
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