| S'pore
Outlines Permanent Grid Plan
25 Apr 2003
The National Grid Project Office is aiming to create a permanent
inter-grid between National University of Singapore (NUS),
Nanyang Technological University (NTU), Institute of High
Performance Computing (IHPC) and the Singapore Massachusetts
Institute of Technology Alliance.
By Louis Chua
The National Grid Project Office is aiming to create a permanent
inter-grid between National University of Singapore (NUS),
Nanyang Technological University (NTU), Institute of High
Performance Computing (IHPC) and the Singapore Massachusetts
Institute of Technology Alliance. The Pilot Platform Grid
project aims to create a more permanent grid. Targeted to
be ready at the third quarter of this year, the Pilot Platform
Grid will be running live applications on a more permanent
basis.
"We hope to start small and build success stories," said
Lee Hing Yan (left), deputy director, National Grid Project
Office. "When people find value in it, we will expand
on it." Lee was speaking at the first Physical Science
and Grid Computing Symposium which was held recently. The
National Grid Project Office was set up in 1 January 2003
to facilitate the long-term goal of transforming the Singapore
economy using grid computing.
Presently,
there is an inter-grid between NTU, IHPC and NUS known
as the Science and Engineering
Research grid (SER-grid).
This is a test bed grid used for experimental purposes such
as trying out different middleware. "However, this inter-grid
is not always on," admitted Lee. According to Professor
Teo Yong Meng, the understanding of grid systems is already
relatively well developed and has leveraged on knowledge
gathered in the past for distributed computing. However,
he said, the grid programming model still has some limitations.
For example, it is not clear how debugging of grid software
should be done.
Participants at the symposium agreed that there is a need
to design better middleware and tools for engineers to use,
and to create a more powerful and user friendly interface.
More research and development is also needed in the areas
of collaborative visualisation and to develop new techniques
to map parallel applications in grids.
For grid computing to have a prominent role in the commercial
world, it must also first prove that it brings economic benefits,
said IHPC professor Kurichi Kumar.
"Sharing is a dirty word," said Teo. It gives
the connotation of being free which does not quite gel with
the commercial world. Grid computing, according to Teo, is
meant to take advantage of under-utilised resources and not "free" as
in without costs.
Benjamin Khoo, IT Availability Specialist at IBM and co-author
of an IBM Redbook on high performance computing, said one
way to commercial viability is to have the grids exposed
as services for which users will pay or earn, depending on
whether they are providing the services or consuming the
services.
The National Grid Project Office is at http://www.ngp.org.sg/.
Read this article online at http://computerworld.com.sg/pcwsg.nsf/unidlookup/
27479A2A7A25CC8248256D08000E9706?opendocument
[Source:
Computerworld Singapore Vol. 9 Issue No. 24, 25 April - 1
May 2003]
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