National Internet2 Day

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Transcript National Internet2 Day

National Internet2 Day
- Sciences and Engineering
Overview
T. Charles Yun
Internet2, Program Manager
2004 March
Science and Engineering
•
Session will run from 10:45am to Noon
•
Outline
• Begin with a quick overview of Programs at Internet2
• Describe the Q&A period will be available at the end
• Introduce our three speakers
•
Additional information is available at the NID website and at
http://science.internet2.edu/
Slide 2
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2004 March 18
Application Communities
• Arts and Humanities
• Ann Doyle
• Health Science
• Mary Kratz
• Science and Engineering
• T. Charles Yun
Slide 3
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2004 March 18
Attributes of Advanced Apps
• Provide qualitative and quantitative
improvements in how we conduct research
and engage in teaching and learning
• Common attributes:
• Remote instrumentation and interactive
collaboration
• Distributed data storage and data mining
• Large-scale, multi-site computation
• Real-time access to remote resources
• Dynamic data visualization
• Shared virtual reality
Slide 4
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2004 March 18
Application Evolution
• Application communities evolve over
time to address changing needs,
goals and technology
• Program Managers connect
communities to work being done in
other areas
• International Collaboration,
Security, Protocol development,
device optimization
• What we do not do
• Run your project
• Lay wires, write code, etc.
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Before we begin
•
Slide 6
A reminder we will have a Q&A session after the talks have
concluded. There are three methods to get questions to
the speakers:
1. If you are using the Internet2 Commons, you can ask
questions interactively at the end of the session.
2. Questions can be sent via email to:
• [email protected]
3. The “Question Tool” which is available off the National
Internet2 Day website:
• http://events.internet2.edu/2004/Internet2Day/
• Click on “chat”
National Internet2 Day
2004 March 18
Our Speakers
E-VLBI (Astronomy)
• David Lapsley, Research Engineer, Haystack Observatory,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
HENP (Physics)
• Shawn McKee, Assistant Research Scientist, Physics
Department, University of Michigan
NEES (Earthquake Engineering)
• Tom Finholt, Research Associate Professor at the School of
Information, University of Michigan and the Director of the
Collaboratory for Research on Electronic Work
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Contact Info / Q & A
• T. Charles Yun
[email protected]
Internet2
3025 Boardwalk, Suite 100
Ann Arbor, Michigan 48108
• More Information
http://www.internet2.edu/
http://events.internet2.edu/2004/Internet2Day/
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Q&A Session
• Questions can be sent via email to:
[email protected]
• http://events.internet2.edu/2004/Internet2Day/
• Interactively for those using the Internet2 Commons
Slide 9
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www.internet2.edu
Slide 10
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2004 March 18
Transitions
• Charles will pass camera control at the end of his introduction to Alan
at Haystack.
• When Alan is done, he will (presumably) introduce David and slide over
2 feet.
• When David is done:
• Thank you for your time. I would now like to introduce Shawn
McKee who is in Ann Arbor. Shawn will talk about the ways in
which the physics community is using advanced networks.
• When Shawn is done:
• Thank you for your time. Tom Finholt is here with me in Ann Arbor
and will now talk about his work with the NEES collaboratory.
• When Tom is done:
• Thank you for your time. I would like to return to Charles who will
take us into the Question and Answer period.
Slide 11
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2004 March 18