High Performance Distributed Computing (HPDC) Fourteen Registration Now
Open
http://www.caip.rutgers.edu/hpdc2005/
HPDC combines the advances in research and technologies in high speed
networks, software, distributed computing and parallel processing to deliver
high-performance, large-scale and cost-effective computational, storage and
communication capabilities to a wide range of applications. The intent of this
meeting is to provide a forum in which researchers report on new ideas and
technical insights, application teams express the challenges of constructing
wide area or scalable high performance applications, and technology creators
report on future developments. The Fourteenth IEEE International Symposium on
High-Performance Distributed Computing will be a forum for presenting the
latest research findings on the design and use of parallel and distributed
systems for high end computing, collaboration, data analysis, and other
innovative applications.
HPDC is the premier conference for high-performance distributed systems
and grid computing systems. Come see the latest developments this July in
In addition to the keynotes the results of the latest research from
around the world will be presented, as well as two half-day tutorials, the
first on the Globus toolkit, and the second on Autonomic Computing.
As in past years two exciting workshops proceed the full conference.
The first, CLADE (Challenges of Large Applications in Distributed Environments)
The goal of CLADE is to encourage innovation by addressing the complex issues
that arise in large-scale applications of distributed computation, and to
promote the development of innovative applications that effectively use
distributed resources and adapt to a wide range of heterogeneity and dynamics
in space and time. This includes development, deployment, management and
evaluations of large scale applications in science, engineering, medicine, business,
economics, education, and other disciplines, on Grids and other distributed
heterogeneous and dynamic computing environments.
The second workshop is High-Performance Interconnects for Distributed
Computing. The purpose of HPI-DC is to explore the confluence of WAN
technologies with high performance interconnects, as applicable or applied to
realistic high end applications. The intent is to create a venue that will act
as a bridge between researchers developing tools and platforms for high-performance
distributed computing, end user applications seeking high performance
solutions, and technology providers aiming to improve interconnect and
networking technologies for future systems.
Please visit http://www.caip.rutgers.edu/hpdc2005/
for more information and to register for HPDC.
See you there.
Andrew Grimshaw