FEBRUARY 17, 2005--The
Cyberinfrastructure Partnership (CIP), a joint,
NSF-funded effort of the San Diego Supercomputer
Center (SDSC) and the National Center for Supercomputing Applications
(NCSA), this week launched Cyberinfrastructure Technology Watch
(CTWatch, http://www.ctwatch.org/).
CTWatch is an online source of news, analysis,
and commentary that aims to keep the national science and engineering
research communities informed on, and involved in, the latest
developments in shared cyberinfrastructure. Developed at the Innovative
Computing Laboratory (ICL) at the University
of Tennessee, Knoxville, under the leadership of ICL Director
Jack Dongarra, CTWatch will offer its first quarterly issue on
February 18.
A companion blog, designed as a community
forum for breaking news, provocative ideas, and interactive discussion,
is slated for March.
Each issue of CTWatch will center on a topic
with currency and importance for the broad collection of communities
and groups who are interested in cyberinfrastructure. The inaugural
issue focuses on "Trends in High Performance Computing."
In the first issue, Susan Graham, computer science professor emeritus
at the University of California, Berkeley, and Mark Snir, head
of the University of Illinois at Urbana- Champaign's computer
science department, summarize and highlight the key elements of
the recent report
of the National Research Council on the future of supercomputing.
In addition, the leaders of the Top500 team offer incisive analysis
of the results of their latest survey. Dan Reed, director of the
University of North
Carolina's Renaissance Computing Institute, provides a community
update on the influential work of the Presidential Information
Technology Advisory Committee (PITAC); and Microsoft's Jim Gray
and his colleagues argue for a new paradigm for data-intensive
computational science.
CTWatch is part of a coordinated endeavor
by SDSC and NCSA to help define, create, and deploy a national
cyberinfrastructure for science and engineering research. The
need for an infrastructure to support next-generation research
has never been greater. As the NSF Blue Ribbon Panel on Cyberinfrastructure
concluded in 2003, emerging multi-disciplinary research environments
and advanced science and engineering applications require a massive
assemblage of hardware, software, and people. Moreover, organizations
will need to work together to coordinate the shared use of computers,
storage, networking, instruments, and visualization technologies
serving a wide variety of communities.
The SDSC-NCSA response to this critical need
is the Cyberinfrastructure Partnership (CIP), a collaboration
between the two centers that will provide a model for close cooperation
in building a national cyberinfrastructure.
"The size of the computational problems
to be solved and the amounts of data being generated and consumed
are all growing explosively," said Thom Dunning, director
of NCSA. "Collaborative research at such scales will push
both the component technologies and the design integration problems
of cyberinfrastructure to their limits."
"We intend CTWatch to provide stimulating
and thoughtful ideas from the frontier of cyberinfrastructure,"
said Fran Berman, director of SDSC. "As Cyberinfrastructure
evolves, CTWatch can provide a venue for describing and discussing
emerging cyberinfrastructure technologies, trends and opportunities,
and serve as forum for the larger community involved in building
and using cyberinfastructure."
Jack Dongarra, executive editor of CTWatch,
noted that the creation of the publication presents a unique opportunity.
"Cyberinfrastructure is especially exciting because innovative
computing research, cutting-edge technology, and groundbreaking
science all converge there. CTWatch represents a new grass-roots
approach to engaging the research community by showcasing specific
areas of computing research and their potential
impact on the scientific community at large."
Visit the CTW site at
http://www.ctwatch.org/
Related links:
www.ncsa.uiuc.edu
www.sdsc.edu