Title: Grid Content Evolution
1Grid Content Evolution Management
Institute for Remote Sensing Technology Innovatio
n Management and Technology Marketing
2Grid Content Evolution ManagementEnabling
e-Science for the Rest of Us
- Thilo Ernst
- Fraunhofer Institute for Computer Architecture
and Software Technology (Thilo.Ernst_at_first.fhg.de
) - Jochen Wauer
- DLR Institute for Remote Sensing Technology
Institute for Remote Sensing Technology Innovatio
n Management and Technology Marketing
3Scientific Software Just A Mouse Click Away (1)
Grid Content Evolution Management - e-Science
For The Rest Of Us T.Ernst, J.Wauer
- A 1968 vision
- ... Back to our hypothetical user. He seats
himself at his console .... He dials his
local computer and 'logs in' by presenting his
name, problem number, and password to the
monitor program. He calls for either a public
program, one of his own programs, or a
colleague's program that he has permission to
use. The monitor links him to it, and he then
communicates with that program...
- J.C.R. Licklider, "The Computer as a
Communication Device"
(Director,
ARPA-Information Processing Techniques Office) - Did he just mean telnet?
4e-Science a contemporary Definition
Grid Content Evolution Management - e-Science
For The Rest Of Us T.Ernst, J.Wauer
- e-Science is about global collaboration in key
areas of science and the next generation of
infrastructure that will enable it. - large scale science that will increasingly be
carried out through distributed global
collaborations enabled by the Internet.
Typically, a feature of such collaborative
scientific enterprises is that they will require
access to very large data collections, very large
scale computing resources and high performance
visualisation - The Grid is an architecture proposed to bring
all these issues together and make a reality of
such a vision for e-Science - e-Science will change the dynamic of the way
science is undertaken () - (Source UK Research Council
e-Science Core Programme)
5The entire story?
Grid Content Evolution Management - e-Science
For The Rest Of Us T.Ernst, J.Wauer
- Grid computing / e-Science still focus on
high-demand, large-scale applications - Evolution high performance computing ? Grid
computing ? e-Science renders an emphasis on
such applications understandable - But when mature Grid e-Science technologies are
available they will likely be attractive to, a
wealth of smaller (and computationally less
demanding) research efforts - e-Science will
become ubiquitous () - But for this to happen, these technologies must
develop additional characteristics unrelated to
the original HPC focus of the Grid movement
6Scientific Software Just A Mouse Click Away (2)
Grid Content Evolution Management - e-Science
For The Rest Of Us T.Ernst, J.Wauer
- 2003 Are we there?
- Internet WWW are ubiquitious and have
revolutionized the exchange of scientific
information - But progress w.r.t. scientific software lacks
behind when compared with the ease of accessing
scientific documents today - Reuse by download requires installation or
even porting limiting factor for broad exchange - Distributed computing technologies exist (remote
shells, CORBA, Java-RMI, Web Services) but there
is no reliable, ubiquitous infrastructure to
which Lickliders request could be addressed.
Answer No.
7Scientific Software Just A Mouse Click Away (3)
Grid Content Evolution Management - e-Science
For The Rest Of Us T.Ernst, J.Wauer
- ... New question Why?
- in much of real life science
- (non-Computer) Scientists, beyound a reasonable
limit of extra effort, simply dont have time
and/or motivation to do our (CS/IT) work - - build, deploy, maintain e-Science-supportin
g platforms- integrate scientific applications
into these platforms on a regular basis- and
learn how to do all that in the first place
Scientist ? Computer Scientist
8How did the Web succeed as a publishing medium?
Grid Content Evolution Management - e-Science
For The Rest Of Us T.Ernst, J.Wauer
Characteristics Enabling factors, time Evolutionary advantage
1. easy to use in read-mode for almost everybody Browsers 1993Search engines 1994 moreconsumers
2. easy to write without web developer background LaTex2HTML, MS-Office web integration 1996 moreproducers
3. collaboration/community support (Cross-site links 1990) community portals 1999 Mutual reinforcement community / medium
4. support for traditional editorial processes content management systems 1999 organize content growth,integrate with print media
5. infrastructure ubiquitous, commoditized, reliable ISPs/hosters become an industry (1998) Specialization / division of work
9Towards Broad e-Science what is missing?
Grid Content Evolution Management - e-Science
For The Rest Of Us T.Ernst, J.Wauer
- For e-Science/Grid technology to achieve the role
of the primary collaboration medium in broad
scientific computing, it seems desirable to
develop similar platform survival
characteristics - 1. Ease of use for passive users (consumers)
Grid/Science portals / Desktops - 2. Ease of use for producers (authors of
services) - ? - 3. Collaboration support at the core of the
Grid / e-science movement - 4. Support for editorial processes - ?
- 5. Infrastructure gets ubiquitous commoditized
Industry interest
10DLR VirtualLab an e-Science precursor (1)
Grid Content Evolution Management - e-Science
For The Rest Of Us T.Ernst, J.Wauer
- technology transfer project 2000-02 (50)
- make scientific software accessible from
every web browser (like scientific documents
already are) - tap unexploited application potential
- promote technology transfer as well as
scientific exchange (internally, too!) - make better use of this part of DLRs scientifÃc
output
11DLR VirtualLab an e-Science precursor (2)
Grid Content Evolution Management - e-Science
For The Rest Of Us T.Ernst, J.Wauer
- online at http//vl.nz.dlr.de
- Pre-Grid (dedicated cluster)
- Zope/Python,OpenPBS, mySQL, OpenLDAP, ...
- a specialized ASP platform for an
interesting class of scientific software - IEEE CiSE, Feb. 2003
- project now continues as a DLR/Fraunhofer
collaboration
12DLR VirtualLab Concepts for broad adoption of
e-Science(1)
Grid Content Evolution Management - e-Science
For The Rest Of Us T.Ernst, J.Wauer
- Care about the process
- keep the barrier to entry low both for
consumers and for producers - learn from publishing (traditional
web-based) - use staging !
13DLR VirtualLab Concepts for broad adoption of
e-Science(2)
Grid Content Evolution Management - e-Science
For The Rest Of Us T.Ernst, J.Wauer
Make life easy for consumers producers - dont
exclude important classes of users - black-box
integration no internal modifications
whatsoever - Provide cheap UIs through
generation - strive to re-use existing (G)UIs -
Integration tools, perhaps web-based
14DLR VirtualLab Concepts for broad adoption of
e-Science(2)
Grid Content Evolution Management - e-Science
For The Rest Of Us T.Ernst, J.Wauer
Make life easy for consumers producers - dont
exclude important classes of users - black-box
integration no internal modifications
whatsoever - Provide cheap UIs through
generation - strive to re-use existing (G)UIs -
Integration tools, perhaps web-based
ID(na'Lambda', Name pe'_NF and
_Lambda_use', precondition ty'FloatType',
type de'0.5', default value
ce'Lambda gt 0.0', constraint
un'mu_m', physical unit an'Input
wavelength') annotation
15DLR VirtualLab Concepts for broad adoption of
e-Science(2)
Grid Content Evolution Management - e-Science
For The Rest Of Us T.Ernst, J.Wauer
Make life easy for consumers producers - dont
exclude important classes of users - black-box
integration no internal modifications
whatsoever - Provide cheap UIs through
generation - strive to re-use existing (G)UIs -
Integration tools, perhaps web-based
16DLR VirtualLab Concepts for broad adoption of
e-Science(3)
Grid Content Evolution Management - e-Science
For The Rest Of Us T.Ernst, J.Wauer
- Integrate human-readable information with
executable (software) resources - online help and background info
- (computational) service search engines for
managing the new e-Science resource deluge - Structured metadata are good, but documentation
can serve as a good fallback fingerprint
17Conclusions
Grid Content Evolution Management - e-Science
For The Rest Of Us T.Ernst, J.Wauer
- e-Science will likely evolve to broad/ubiquitous
e-Science - support not only HPC users but the
broader/general scientifc computing community - to help that process, make life easy for
- A widely deployed Grid-based e-science
infrastructure is a publshing medium- support
the process by content management, leveraging
suitable technologies
Grid content producers - strive for allowing black-box integration of apps (G)UIs - provide integration tools
Grid content consumers - dont exclude important groups - simple browser-based access for occasional users remains valuable