9,386 research outputs found
e-Social Science and Evidence-Based Policy Assessment : Challenges and Solutions
Peer reviewedPreprin
Cloudbus Toolkit for Market-Oriented Cloud Computing
This keynote paper: (1) presents the 21st century vision of computing and
identifies various IT paradigms promising to deliver computing as a utility;
(2) defines the architecture for creating market-oriented Clouds and computing
atmosphere by leveraging technologies such as virtual machines; (3) provides
thoughts on market-based resource management strategies that encompass both
customer-driven service management and computational risk management to sustain
SLA-oriented resource allocation; (4) presents the work carried out as part of
our new Cloud Computing initiative, called Cloudbus: (i) Aneka, a Platform as a
Service software system containing SDK (Software Development Kit) for
construction of Cloud applications and deployment on private or public Clouds,
in addition to supporting market-oriented resource management; (ii)
internetworking of Clouds for dynamic creation of federated computing
environments for scaling of elastic applications; (iii) creation of 3rd party
Cloud brokering services for building content delivery networks and e-Science
applications and their deployment on capabilities of IaaS providers such as
Amazon along with Grid mashups; (iv) CloudSim supporting modelling and
simulation of Clouds for performance studies; (v) Energy Efficient Resource
Allocation Mechanisms and Techniques for creation and management of Green
Clouds; and (vi) pathways for future research.Comment: 21 pages, 6 figures, 2 tables, Conference pape
myTea: Connecting the Web to Digital Science on the Desktop
Bioinformaticians regularly access the hundreds of databases and tools that are available to them on the Web. None of these tools communicate with each other, causing the scientist to copy results manually from a Web site into a spreadsheet or word processor. myGrids' Taverna has made it possible to create templates (workflows) that automatically run searches using these databases and tools, cutting down what previously took days of work into hours, and enabling the automated capture of experimental details. What is still missing in the capture process, however, is the details of work done on that material once it moves from the Web to the desktop: if a scientist runs a process on some data, there is nothing to record why that action was taken; it is likewise not easy to publish a record of this process back to the community on the Web. In this paper, we present a novel interaction framework, built on Semantic Web technologies, and grounded in usability design practice, in particular the Making Tea method. Through this work, we introduce a new model of practice designed specifically to (1) support the scientists' interactions with data from the Web to the desktop, (2) provide automatic annotation of process to capture what has previously been lost and (3) associate provenance services automatically with that data in order to enable meaningful interrogation of the process and controlled sharing of the results
Harnessing the Power of Many: Extensible Toolkit for Scalable Ensemble Applications
Many scientific problems require multiple distinct computational tasks to be
executed in order to achieve a desired solution. We introduce the Ensemble
Toolkit (EnTK) to address the challenges of scale, diversity and reliability
they pose. We describe the design and implementation of EnTK, characterize its
performance and integrate it with two distinct exemplar use cases: seismic
inversion and adaptive analog ensembles. We perform nine experiments,
characterizing EnTK overheads, strong and weak scalability, and the performance
of two use case implementations, at scale and on production infrastructures. We
show how EnTK meets the following general requirements: (i) implementing
dedicated abstractions to support the description and execution of ensemble
applications; (ii) support for execution on heterogeneous computing
infrastructures; (iii) efficient scalability up to O(10^4) tasks; and (iv)
fault tolerance. We discuss novel computational capabilities that EnTK enables
and the scientific advantages arising thereof. We propose EnTK as an important
addition to the suite of tools in support of production scientific computing
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