Monday, June 19, 2006, 16.10-17.30 - Grim
Grids for Scientific Computing (Part 1 of 2)
(part 2)
Organizer and Chair person:
Oxana Smirnova, Lund University, Sweden
Grid technologies are still evolving, with standards yet to be defined and reliable production-level solutions yet to be found. Nevertheless, Grid already stepped out of the cradle and slowly but steadily finds its way to the world of the modern information technologies. Early testers and adopters of this innovative technology are researchers in various fields of science, primarily those that traditionally require massive computational resources. Destined by the virtue of their occupation to investigate new phenomena, they provide most valuable feedback to the Grid technology developers, helping to shape the designs and define the roadmaps. Historically, researchers in High Energy Physics were the first to appreciate the Grid idea, not just as the consumers, but also as the key developers of many current solutions.
This minisymposium brings together several cases of using Grids for scientific computing. The presentations will cover the full range of scientific Grid computing activities, starting with development of core Grid software components, continuing to Grid-enabling of scientific applications, and on to providing computing infrastructure and resources. All these efforts contribute to addressing the Grand Challenges of Scientific Computing.
- 16.10-16.30 ARC (Nordugrid) - AliEn (ALICE) interoperation [#162]
Csaba Anderlik
- 16.30-16.50 Roadmap for the ARC Grid middleware [#163]
Mattias Ellert, Paula Eerola, Tord Ekelöf, Michael Grønager, John Hansen, Sigve Haug, Aleksandr Konstantinov, Balázs Kónya, Farid Ould-Saada, Oxana Smirnova, Anders Wäänänen
- 16.50-17.10 A distributed Tier1 with NorduGrid/ARC [#164]
Michael Grønager
- 17.10-17.30 Distributed Data Management for the World's largest Machine [#165]
Sigve Haug