Title: Infrastructure for a Knowledge Based Economy
1Infrastructure for a Knowledge Based Economy
- Walter Stewart
- June 12, 2006
2- What I hope to do is provide you with perhaps a
different context for your work. - Context is everything.
- When you are up to your ass in alligators.
3- e-Infrastructure
- Intelligent Infrastructure
- e-Science Infrastructure
- Cyberinfrastructure
- Grids
4- FIRST, ID LIKE TO START WITH A STORY
5 6- The First Cars Looked Like Buggies
- The First Aeroplanes Looked Like Steamers and
Pullmans - WE HAVE TO BE CAREFUL HOW WE CONSTRAIN THE FUTURE
BY THE WAY THE PAST CONSTRAINS OUR IMAGINATION
7- WE MUST BE ESPECIALLY CAREFUL OF IDEOLOGY
- One generations revolutionaries are frequently
the next generations reactionaries.
8- As we replace the infrastructure of 1999, do we
uncritically clone it with the 2006/7 version
faster, smaller, cheaper? - Or do we recognize that there is cause to develop
whole new orders and types of infrastructure to
take us towards the end of the first decade of
the new millennium and beyond?
9- That cause is data and the fact that we have
begun a knowledge economy.
10 - So what about a knowledge based economy?
- What are the raw materials?
- Where are the raw materials?
- What are the processing stages?
- Where does processing happen?
- What are the finished products?
- Who is needed to create the finished products?
- Where are the markets?
11 - What are the raw materials?
- DATA
12- Given the relative growth of Bandwidth, Moores
Law, and Data, we clearly need a new model.
Data
Performance
Moores Law
Bandwidth
06
96
Source Gartner Group, June 2003
13 http//www.sims.berkeley.edu/research/projects/how
-much-info/ http//www.sims.berkeley.edu/research
/projects/how-much-info-2003/
14 - Note 2002 before
- Serious deployment of RFID
- Serious deployment of sensor networks
- Serious deployment of Grid Computing
- The LHC
- A number of new Telescopes, Synchrotrons, Shake
Tables - Development of Wireless Networks
15 - Sure much of it is noise!
- Thats why it needs processing or refining.
16 - Where are the raw materials?
- Just about everywhere!
17 - What are the processing stages?
- Ingest
- Storage
- Mining
- Processing
- Visualization
- Dissemination
- Multiple Reuse
18 - Where does processing happen?
- Multiple locations
- On the network
- Who cares?
19 - What are the finished products?
- Knowledge
20 Who is needed to create the finished
products? Multi-locational, multi-disciplinary,
multi-organizational teams
21 Where are the markets? Everywhere!
22 - A Disruptive Technology
- Team rather than individual
- Lateral rather than vertical
- Iterative rather than finished
- Network based rather than locational
- Intangible rather than tangible
- Managed complexity rather than imposed simplicity
- Access rather than ownership
- Trust rather than control
- Operating costs rather than capital costs
23 - A Disruptive Technology
- Team rather than individual
- Iterative rather than finished
- Network based rather than locational
- Intangible rather than tangible
- Managed complexity rather than imposed simplicity
- Access rather than ownership
- Trust rather than control
- Operating costs rather than capital costs
Note None of these are technical issues!
24 - CONSIDER THE COSTS OF NOT
- BUILDING IT
- USING IT
- REORGANIZING AROUND IT
- AND CONSIDER THE COSTS OF NOT BEING IN THE LEAD
25- INFRASTRUCTURE AND THE BOTTOM LINE
- ORGANIZATIONS WHICH CANNOT MAKE EFFICIENT,
EFFECTIVE USE OF THEIR RAW MATERIALS FAIL
26- This is not the future it is now
- It is being built, and not just as a research
project - Bank of America
- Credit Suisse/First Boston
- Pratt and Whitney
- Novartis
- Boeing
27- LINKED, THE NEW SCIENCE OF NETWORKS -
- Albert-Laszlo Barabasi,
- Emile T. Hoffman Professor of Physics, University
of Notre Dame
28 RIDING REDUCTIONISM WE RUN INTO THE HARD WALL
OF COMPLEXITY
29- COMPLEXITY NEEDS A DIFFERENT APPROACH AND A
DIFFERENT INFRASTRUCTURE
30- Lessons From History
- the lever, the catapult, the wind,
- the horse, the steam engine, internal
- combustion, the jet engine, nuclear
- power
- All productivity spikes have been as a
- consequence of harnessing
- unprecedented power
31-
- We are now engaged in bring the process
- from the realm of physical force to the
- realm of the mind.
- Separating the grunt work from the
- insight
- We dont even have commonly
- understood language to describe
- what we are about.
-
-
32A Guide to Grid Computing
- Solving the Human IO problem
- its a question of the medium
- Building Communal Intelligence
- its also a question of the medium
- the oil and gas example
33-
- Is the possibility of genuine communal
- intelligence the basis of the next big
- productivity spike?
- GRID OR CYBERINFRASTRUCTURE IS TECHNOLOGY THAT
MAKES COMMUNAL INTELLIGENCE POSSIBLE IN
HETEROGENEOUS, DISTRIBUTED ENVIRONMENTS -
34- Again, this is context.
- Id ask you to think about these questions as you
go about your work and particularly as you think
of your future work.
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