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PrimeurWeekly 31 March 2008
>Special
>One more time, CERN of Geneva selects the Italian E4 Computer Engineering and Super-Micro Computers Inc. for further expanding its computational capacity
>EuroFlash
>IBM announces European Cloud Computing hub in Dublin
>ERINA Workshop organizers call for participation
>European Commission to organize information event on the fourth Call for proposals
>Silicon chips for optical quantum technologies
>Internet to revolutionize with KnowArc project
>The future of computing - carbon nanotubes and superconductors to replace the silicon chip
>Bull strengthens its Bio Data Center offering with a new NovaScale blade server
>BladeEngine for PRIMERGY Blade servers delivers unified network communications for advanced virtualization
>USFlash
>NEC to deliver SX-9 vector supercomputers to JAXA for new supercomputer system
>IBM and Academia launch Autonomic Research Collaboration for Cloud Computing
>South African Grid School calls for participation
>Sun awarded $44 million Department of Defense contract to develop microchip interconnect system
>Allegro releases latest version - Allegro 8.0
>Argonne and DOT open transportation research, computing centre
>DedicatedNOW to release Virtual Clustered hosting leveraging 3Tera's AppLogic utility computing platform
>Emerging technologies will marginalize IT's role in business intelligence (BI), according to Gartner
>SGI Altix ICE Momentum thunders on with powerful new blade enclosures and options
>HP expands virtualization capabilities of HP ProLiant servers with support of industry-leading partners
>Dell and Egenera partnering to simplify data centre management
>Weston Geophysical achieves a 25% reduction in debugging time with the TotalView Debugger
>Yahoo! & CRL to collaborate on cloud computing research
>Verari Systems announces new Storage Group Business Unit
>SGI collaborates with newly established National Incident Management Systems and Advanced Technologies Institute to enhance national safety
>IBM announces nr. 1 UNIX benchmark and compelling economics for HP users to switch
>SGI-powered traffic and transportation simulation enables planning for traffic efficiency and emergency evacuation
>Oracle achieves world record result on the SAP SD-Parallel Standard Application Benchmark
>Lockheed Martin wins $344 million contract to support Defense Department high performance computing centres
Internet to revolutionize with KnowArc project
Lund 26 March 2008 First there was the Internet ­and now the time is ripe for Grid, a new technology that will turn a regular PC into a sort of supercomputer. The World Wide Web was first developed at CERN, the European laboratory for high-energy physics in Geneva. Physicists are also behind the development of Grid technology, now within the framework of the EU project KnowArc, with partners in seven countries. Lund University in Sweden is playing a key role. The first Grid software packages were developed there for full-scale operation. The technological co-ordination of KnowArc is now also centred there.
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What got physicists interested in Grid technology is CERN's new particle accelerator, LHC. It will be producing enormous amounts of data that needs to be stored and processed. In the last few days the Swedish government minister in charge of research, Lars Leijonborg, visited CERN and announced that Sweden should invest in Grid technology and that the country will take the international lead in its development. In the research bill to be introduced this autumn, new funding will be allocated to what is being called "e-Science". In other words, this commitment will not be made at the expense of other research.

The Internet revolutionized how we exchange information and thus stimulated the advent of digital technology in all aspects of life. Thanks to the Internet, masses of data can be transferred and made available. But this is not enough if data is also to be processed, in connection with scientific calculations, for instance.

Today's technology is based on the data and the resources needed to process it being in one and the same place. Grid technology strives to allow transparent collaboration in terms of processor power, storage space, and data-collection tools in the form of scientific instruments even though they may be distributed geographically. The user doesn't even need to know the location of the computing capacity and the data masses being used. This technology has scored major successes in recent years. Software solutions have been developed to support teamwork between applications on different computers. Theoretical models and trial configurations have gradually been replaced by practically functioning and efficient distributed computer infrastructures both within and between countries.

The technological development and co-ordination of KnowArc is directed by Balázs Kónya at the Department of Physics, Lund University. The local Lund group that works with Grid technology is directed by Oxana Smirnova, who stated: "The Internet can be likened to transport routes; the Grid net is both a transport route and a factory. To physicists, Grid technology will be necessary now that LHC will be producing tremendous amounts of data. Other sciences that also generate large amounts of data are waiting in the wings, including biomedicine, genetics, proteomics, and radio astronomy. But ultimately we hope that Grid technology will be of use to all computer users, just as the World Wide Web has been."

More information is available at the KnowArc project website.
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Source: Lund University

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