Noteworthy

Summary of Key Lab Activities, January - June 2005

CGL research and development has thrived with 27 publications and 15 presentations. Three CGL students earned their PhDs and the Lab received two federal grants - one an SBIR with the Anabas Corp. Several mature software projects are underway with SERVOGrid integrating earthquake science research in Australia, China, Japan and the USA; novel forecasting algorithms supported by the Lab's Grid are gaining national attention. This technology is being developed to support crisis management with the POLIS center at IUPUI. Core grid technology in portals and messaging is regarded as best practice internationally and is being developed with many collaborators, including the UK, which is funding the NaradaBrokering work. The CGL collaboration environment GlobalMMCS is being developed with a focus on technology to support real-time video annotation. This has applications in sports training and is used in a project with the HPER School at IU and Chinese sports universities.

Four IU computer science projects to receive $4.5 million in NSF funding
Indiana University researchers will receive more than $4.5 million in new grants from the National Science Foundation to improve weather modeling, protect crucial scientific data and develop software that girds grid computing. (View article)
9/03
Dr. Fox speaks for PTL Spring Seminar Series
Fox discussed his current research in various aspects of Grid computing. View PowerPoint presentation)
2/03
Fox discusses peer-to-peer interactions
In the latest issue of Ubiquity, Community Grids Lab Director Geoffrey Fox writes about peer-to-peer interactions in Web brokering systems. The Community Grids Lab, one of the Pervasive Technology Labs at Indiana University, develops grid technology to allow a group of users' devices to work together without the use of a central site or server...(Go to Ubiquity's online article)
5/02 
This Pervasive Technology Labs Community Grids Web Portal
This Pervasive Technology Labs Community Grids Web Portal is based on Java Server pages (JSP) and uses Apache Technologies -- especially JetSpeed, and it is under development. Please help us, and report unexpected behaviors to the portal administration.  (View web site)
5/02


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