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Mardi Gras Conference 2008 Invited Speakers
The 15th Mardi Gras Conference will have three keynote speakers:
Keynote Speaker: Satoshi Matsuoka, Tokyo Institute of Technology, The NAREGI Project, National Institute of Informatics, Japan
To Distribute or Not to Distribute, That is the Question in Petascale and Beyond
While there is general consensus that computing platforms underlying the
grid infrastructures will continue to evolve, variance in the speed of
technology acceleration in HPC is causing many of the assumptions
made in the early days of grid to no longer hold. Such divergence in the
metrics, as well as wider proliferation of related technologies such as
Web2.0 and Clouds, will be changing the optimal design of the overall
grid infrastructure towards more centralization of resources, much like
the modern-day Internet with its two tier-structure of clients versus
the datacenters. Based on our recent experiences with our TSUBAME
supercomputer, which is currently Japan's fastest machine according to
the Top500, and its next petascale generation design thereof,
we will discuss the future design of multi-petascale grids with such
machines being constituent massive resource nodes instead of vast
distribution, as well as more advanced notions of computing where
distribution of compute resources might be fundamental.
Keynote Speaker: Carl Reed, Open Geospatial Consortium, USA
GRID computing in the Geospatial Web: The role of standards
For millennia, philosophers and academicians have understood that
location and the properties of location - or geography - dictate the
form and function of human activity. Every human activity happens
somewhere and "somewhen". More recently, scientists and researches have
increasing relied on geospatial information, including observations from
static and dynamic sensing systems, to better understand and model the
complex global dynamics of the earth's atmosphere and oceans. The
volume of location based content collected is increasing exponentially.
Given the environmental and political issues facing humanity, the
ability to discover, access, filter, and integrate geospatial data using
standard interfaces and content models in support of simulation and
modeling systems is more critical than ever. At the same time, there is
a tremendous need for the computing power necessary to properly use and
reuse these data in decision support and modeling applications. It is at
this juncture where the work of the OGC community on geospatial
standards and the work of the GRID community intersect. This
presentation will discuss the issues and potential solutions for the
integration of geospatial content and services into the GRID
infrastructure to create a geospatially enabled GRID. Topics such as
federated catalogues and registries, content interoperability, the
integration of real time sensor systems, and authentication will be
addressed.
Keynote Speaker: Larry Smarr, Calit2, USA
2008 - The Year of Global Telepresence
The concept of Telepresence is at least fifty years old, being quite
pervasive in science fiction of the 1950s and 1960s. By the late 1980s
prototypes using commercial telecommunications were being carried out by
research labs in industry and universities, several of which I was
involved with. Today, the California Institute for Telecommunications
and Information Technology, a UCSD/UCI partnership, has a variety of
projects underway exploring persistent 1-10 gigabit/s optical paths
connecting people and devices on local, regional, national, and global
scales. We are also developing large scale visualization walls, termed
"OptIPortals," containing tens to hundreds of millions of pixels, which
create large "pixel real estate" for remote collaboration. As part of
our digital cinema project, CineGrid, we are experimenting with using
four thousand line resolution (4k) video streams carried over dedicated
gigabit/sec optical light paths to establish a Telepresence on a global
scale. In 2008, many national and international sites will link up their
OptIPortals over 1 or 10 gigabit/s light paths, with embedded HD or
digital cinema streams, creating a global-scale collaboratory.
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