June 27, 2002
Registration is open for the global iGrid 2002 event
this September 23-26 in Amsterdam. A showcase of 29 very-high-bandwidth
technical innovations and application advancements from 15 countries will
be on display. On September 25-26, two full-day Topical Meetings
(Symposia) will run concurrently with the demonstrations, featuring
invited keynote speakers on e-Science and Virtual Laboratory/Grid
developments.
IGrid 2002 will be held at the Amsterdam Science and
Technology Centre (WTCW), a world-class scientific research campus and
supercomputing hub where SURFnet's 2.5 Gigabit NetherLight circuit to the
StarLight in Chicago originates.
Grid computing is the emerging enabling technology for
facilitating multi-institutional and multi-disciplinary collaborations
worldwide, and underlies the iGrid 2002 high-speed networking
demonstrations of remote instrumentation control, tele-immersion,
real-time client server systems, multimedia, tele-teaching, digital video,
distributed computing and high-throughput, high-priority data
transfers.
The event itself will provide an international testbed
for applications scientists, computer scientists, artists, networking
engineers and commercial vendors to collaborate on a global scale, and
advance the state-of-the-art in high-performance computing and
communications.
The iGrid 2002 event, funded in part by the US National
Science Foundation and the Netherlands' GigaPort project, is a challenge
to scientists and technologists to optimally utilize experimental
networks.
Early registration ends August 1, 2002.
See www.igrid2002.org for details.
About SURFnet and NetherLight
SURFnet--the advanced national research network of the
Netherlands--recently established Netherlight, an optical testbed
connecting Amsterdam to Chicago at 2.5Gbps. This transoceanic link is the
first to enable very-high-speed interconnectivity of evolving experimental
networks in the US and Europe, and encourages other countries and
continents to also interconnect, creating a global experimental network
for advanced scientific research.
About StarLight
StarLight, the optical STAR TAP, is an advanced optical
infrastructure and proving ground for network services optimized for
high-performance applications. StarLight, funded by the National Science
Foundation, is being developed by the Electronic Visualization Laboratory
(EVL) at the University of Illinois at Chicago, the International Center
for Advanced Internet Research (iCAIR) at Northwestern University, and the
Mathematics and Computer Science Division at Argonne National Laboratory,
in partnership with Canada's CANARIE and Holland's SURFnet.
Contact:
Laura Wolf
Electronic Visualization Laboratory
laura@evl.uic.edu