SDSC
Announces Formation and Inaugural Workshop of Pacific Rim Applications
and Grid Middleware Assembly for International Collaboration
San Diego, CA -- March
11, 2002 -- The San Diego Supercomputer Center (SDSC) at the University
of California, San Diego (UCSD), today announced the formation and
inaugural workshop of the Pacific Rim Applications and Grid Middleware
Assembly (PRAGMA), an international initiative to establish sustained
collaborations and advance the use of the computational grid among
a community of investigators at the leading research institutions
around the Pacific Rim.
The first PRAGMA workshop,
chaired by Phil Papadopoulos, SDSC program director for Grid and
Cluster Computing, is being held March 11-12, 2002, at SDSC with
representatives from 10 countries and 15 institutions and international
technology organizations. Peter Arzberger of UCSD, who initiated
the PRAGMA effort, leads the National Science Foundation (NSF) grant
that supports PRAGMA activities. Through this initiative, Pacific
Rim institutions will collaborate more formally to develop grid-enabled
applications and share data, computing, and other resources throughout
the Pacific region.
"SDSC and the other
founding PRAGMA institutions want to bring together the individuals
who develop the technology with those who wish to exploit it to
make the grid easier to use for collaborative and integrative science,"
said Fran Berman, director of SDSC and the National Partnership
for Advanced Computational Infrastructure. "Many isolated approaches
have been used to build software and other components of the grid,
but it will take a global effort to make the global infrastructure
usable."
PRAGMA has been formed
to address the critical needs that must still be addressed to realize
the full potential of the grid. First and foremost is the need to
make the grid usable on a daily basis by the vast array of scientists.
Current grid application efforts are limited to large consortia
of researchers and institutions, and the barriers to daily grid
use for single researcher and small groups of researchers are enormous.
"U.S. participation
in international science and engineering collaborations, as recognized
by the National Science Board, is increasingly important to keep
abreast of new insights and discoveries," said William Chang,
senior program manager in the National Science Foundation's Office
of International Science and Engineering. "Making the grid
more commonplace for a more diverse set of applications groups is
essential. Just as research funding agencies have a diverse portfolio
of project size, Grid-enabled resources need a similar diversity."
SDSC, in conjunction
with the NSF, UCSD's Center for Research on Biological Structures,
and the California Institute for Telecommunications and Information
Technology (a joint venture of UCSD and UC Irvine), is helping launch
this initiative to build strong and sustained collaborations among
domain scientists and computing specialists who are building and
using grid infrastructure.
Based on existing collaborations,
PRAGMA partners will work to diversify the number and focus of grid-enabled
applications and to conduct applications and infrastructure research
of common interest. PRAGMA will enhance connections among individual
investigators by promoting visiting scholars' and engineers' programs,
building new collaborations, formalizing resource-sharing agreements,
and continuing trans-Pacific network deployment.
The following institutions
and organizations have joined PRAGMA or been invited to participate
in the inaugural workshop:
- Australian Partnership
for Advanced Computing and its partners, including Monash University
and the University of Sydney
- Bioinformatics Institute
of Singapore
- Computer Network Information
Center, Chinese Academy of Sciences
- Global Scientific
Information and Computing Center, Tokyo Institute of Technology
- Grid Technology Research
Center and Tsukuba Advanced Computing Center, National Institute
of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology
- Korea Institute of
Science and Technology Information
- National Center for
High-Performance Computing, National Science Council
- Research Center for
Ultra-High Voltage Electron Microscopy and the Cybermedia Center,
Osaka University
- STAR TAP/StarLight
initiative, supported by NSF and organized by the University of
Illinois at Chicago, Northwestern University and Argonne National
Laboratory
- Thai Social/Scientific
Academic and Research Network (ThaiSARN-3), National Electronics
and Computer Technology Center
- TransPAC initiative,
supported by NSF at Indiana University
- Universiti Sains Malaysia
- University of California
San Diego, the San Diego Supercomputer Center, the California
Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology (a
joint venture of UCSD and UC Irvine), and Center for Research
on Biological Structures
- University of Hyderabad
- About PRAGMA
PRAGMA is an open, international
initiative to establish sustained collaborations and advance the
use of the computational grid among a community of investigators
at the leading research institutions around the Pacific Rim. PRAGMA
is supported by the San Diego Supercomputer Center, the National
Science Foundation, and participating institutions. For information
on participating in PRAGMA activities, contact Phil Papadopoulos,
phil@sdsc.edu, 858-822-3628, Peter Arzberger, parzberg@ucsd.edu,
858-822-1079,or visit the PRAGMA Web site at http://pragma.ucsd.edu/.
About SDSC
The San Diego Supercomputer
Center (SDSC) is an organized research unit of UCSD and the leading-edge
site of the National Partnership for Advanced Computational Infrastructure
(NPACI). SDSC's mission is to develop and use technology to advance
science, and SDSC provides leadership both nationally and internationally
in computing, data management, biosciences, and other areas. As
a national laboratory for computational science and engineering,
SDSC is funded by the National Science Foundation through NPACI
and other federal agencies, the State and University of California,
and private organizations. For more information, see www.sdsc.edu
or contact David L. Hart, SDSC Communications, 858-534-8314, dhart@sdsc.edu.
Media Contact:
David L. Hart, SDSC
dhart@sdsc.edu
858-534-8314 |