logo

EnterTheGrid - PrimeurWeekly

EnterTheGrid - PrimeurMagazine is the largest Grid and Supercomputer information source in the world. PrimeurWeekly delivers the news each week in your e-mail box.

>PrimeurMagazine
>PrimeurLive!
>EnterTheGrid
>Analysis
>Backissues
>Calendar
>Subscribe
>Advertise
>Contact
PrimeurWeekly 07 July 2008
>EuroFlash
>Making sure the internet delivers
>Members of PRACE supercomputing project adopt TotalView Debugger
>European initiative on Grid computing, Biomedical Informatics and Nanoinformatics
>Huygens supercomputer at SARA installed
>Grid computing school shares teaching resources through digital library and behind-the-scenes blog
>Spain-based Repsol and Barcelona Supercomputing Center use IBM supercomputer
>IBM and ETH scientists advance supercomputing simulations to improve diagnosis of osteoporosis
>World's fastest Ethernet compute cluster relies on Woven Systems 10 Gigabit Ethernet Fabric
>Armed with 13-fold increase in compute power, HLRN inaugurates new SGI supercomputer
>New logic: the attraction of magnetic computation
>e-IRG meeting in Lugano: Discussion on active e-Infrastructures Education and Training
>Fourth Pan-Galactic BOINC Workshop calls for participation
>Grid Computing Now! launches environmental competition "Grid computing for a greener planet"
>New ServerView Virtual-I/O Manager provides fast-track to virtualization
>USFlash
>QLogic announces support for IBM iDataPlex system
>IBM supercomputer in Canada bolsters cancer research
>SensorWeb 2.0 software released
>QLogic achieves near-native Fibre Channel I/O performance on Windows server 2008 Hyper-V
>QLogic unveils 8Gb fibre channel for SANbox 9000 switch
>QLogic 8Gb Fibre Channel Switches and HBAs receive Tolly 'First and Foremost' Certification as part of HP solution
>Oracle unveils BEA's role in product strategy for next-generation middleware
>Sun and Intel break million-messages-per-second barrier for Thomson Reuters Market Data System
>Univa UD unveils new data centre automation strategy and leadership team
>ISO to provide insurers better analytic solutions with SAS
>UC San Diego researchers identify potential new drug candidates to combat 'bird flu'
>Researchers use supercomputer to track pathways in myoglobin
>Alert Logic launches new version of Log Manager
>Dell FlexAddress simplifies blade deployment and management
e-IRG meeting in Lugano: Discussion on active e-Infrastructures Education and Training
Lugano 04 July 2008 The 14th e-IRG meeting was held in Lugano on 26th and 27th of June, 2008. The e-IRG is an inter-governmental policy body comprising national delegates from more than 30 European countries. The e-IRG members meet on a regular basis to reach consensus on policies in order to provide relevant recommendations on the shared use of electronic resources in Europe. The highlight of the meeting was the Education and Training Task Force (ETTF) report that proposes strategic actions to establish, promote and resource the Grid and e-Science curricula in Europe. The ETTF report has been a major European effort and has already been noted on the international level, e.g. in the Open Grid Forum (OGF).
Advertisement
Visit our sponsors
Advertisement
Visit our sponsors

The ETTF report states that EU investments in e-Infrastructure require adequate investments in education in order to allow EU Member States to fully develop and exploit these technologies for academic, industrial, governmental and medical research and innovation. Coordinated development of e-Infrastructures across the EU is vital to maintain Europe's competitive edge in the knowledge-based economy, supporting advances in science, industry and education. A shortage of skills and knowledge, a need to optimize the use of e-Infrastructures, benefits to industry and academia, and the relationship of education and development to EU policy provisions are the key motivations for increased investments in the field.

The report stresses a need to invest in education in appropriate computational thinking or digital-systems judgments in every scientific, medical, engineering and humanities first degree. This allows graduating students to fully contribute to the knowledge economy with an appreciation of the potential of e-Infrastructures and rich information sources, and well prepares them to make competent ethical and socio-economic judgments about their use. According to the ETTF, there is also a need to invest in education of specialists via undergraduate and Masters courses and to develop a critical mass of experts who will innovate both in the provision and exploitation of e-Infrastructures and e-Science methods. Furthermore, Doctoral and Postdoctoral training programmes for intellectual, business and educational leaders, who will drive innovation across the European Research Area, have to be developed.

The Lugano meeting also reformulated the e-IRG vision and mission statements. They were reformulated four years after the original proposals, to reflect the broadening scope and maturation of the e-Infrastructures and to flexibly support the needs of the user communities that may use the European e-Infrastructure in response to European spearhead initiatives that have - within their scope - successfully realised parts of the vision.

The new e-IRG vision statement is: The e-IRG vision for the future is an open e-Infrastructure enabling flexible cooperation and optimal use of all electronically available resources.

The e-IRG mission statement is: The e-IRG mission is to pave the way towards a general-purpose European e-Infrastructure.

The next e-IRG workshop and delegates meeting will be held in Paris on 21st and 22nd October, 2008.

Advertisement
Visit our sponsors
Advertisement
Source: e-IRGSP2

EnterTheGrid - Primeur

James Stewartstraat 248

1325 JN Almere

The Netherlands

http://enterthegrid.com/primeur

mailto:primeur [AT] enterthegrid [DOT] com

© EnterTheGrid - PrimeurWeekly