CALL FOR PARTICIPATION
A call for participation to the joint EGI-GÉANT Symposium is open until Tuesday 19 August. Cloud providers and integrators of community clouds offerings, cloud specialists, cloud users and other stakeholders from the research and education community to participate by submitting proposals for presentations and workshops.
WHO SHOULD ATTEND THE CONFERENCE
KEY DATES
European Researchers use a large and increasing range of web facilities to support their work, including from collections of publications and published data, collections of data with restricted access, and remote access to experimental equipment.
Managing multiple user ids is becoming onerous. There are several active Single Sign On initiatives which aim to help with this. This session will be an opportunity for people planning to provide or use Single Sign On services to meet each other and coordinate this work.
European Researchers use a large and increasing range of web facilities to support their work, including from collections of publications and published data, collections of data with restricted access, and remote access to experimental equipment.
Managing multiple user ids is becoming onerous. There are several active Single Sign On initiatives which aim to help with this. This session will be an opportunity for people planning to provide or use Single Sign On services to meet each other and coordinate this work.
EUDAT is holding its 3rd Conference in De Meervaart, at the RDA 4th Plenary venue. The EGI Conference participants are warmly invited to join at the networking cocktail starting at 17:30 in the foyer area of the conference centre. It will be an excellent opportunity to network and share a drink together.
EUDAT will host a poster session for organisations, initiatives and projects to showcase their data related activities and results and EGI participants are welcome to submit an application for a poster to be displayed during the networking cocktail.
Travel directions See the EGI Conference overview page
Showcase your activities and results at the EUDAT 3rd Conference Networking Cocktail The 3rd EUDAT Conference, 24-25 September 2014, De Meervaart, will address key themes in the area of data infrastructures and is particularly of interest for data practitioners, infrastructure providers and the researchers who use them as well as computer scientists and policy makers. Even if you are attending another event organised in conjunction with the EUDAT conference you are welcome to attend the networking cocktail and display a poster taking advantage of the broad and rich audience attending the meeting.
The poster will be on display throughout the 2 days event and will be of special focus during the networking cocktail on 24th September from 17:30 onwards (De Meervaart Foyer). For more details and poster application visit poster session.
More and more consumers are expressing concerns about the lack of control, interoperability and portability. Why? Because they are central to avoiding vendor lock-in, whether at the technical, service delivery or business level, thus ensuring broader choice. As a user, open standard interfaces protect you from vendor lock-in, so you avoid significant migration costs you would face when open interfaces are not provided.
For a European research provider interoperability means more efficient resource utilisation. The EGI federated cloud is prime example of this. Through a decade of peer collaborative work in Europe and beyond, the experts behind FedCloud have gained considerable expertise in standards development and implementation, laying the foundation for interoperability testing and fairer competition. This expertise is now also supporting interoperability between Europe and Brazil through EUBrazil Cloud Connect.
The Cloud Interoperability Plugfest project, Cloud Plugfests, is an international co-operative community series designed to promote interoperability efforts on cloud-based software, frameworks, and standards among vendors, products, projects and implementations. The series supports ongoing and continuing interoperability efforts among and between the sponsoring organisations, and with the cloud community at large. These efforts include organised software demonstrations, in-person developer gatherings, and continuous access to professional-grade cloud testing frameworks and tools.
The Plugfest will see Brazilian participation for the very first time. EUBrazil Cloud Connect will test the OCCI implementation of fogbow, middleware that has been developed by the Federal University of Campina Grande. This new connecting bridge with Brazil focuses on a new implementation of OCCI API (fOCCI) as well as an extension to accommodate requests for resources exploited in an opportunistic way. This workshop is also an opportunity to showcase growing international interest in interoperability testing and why the Plugfest is important to certify compliance of the implementation with the specification.
Reducing ambiguity through standards profiling
A Standard very often supports multiple use cases in its specification text which can lead to ambiguity and a lack of real interoperability across different interfaces. Ambiguity is a fundamental challenge for interoperability standards and key to maximising interoperability. A profile on a standard clarifies in an unambiguous way how a standard has to be interpreted, explaining how to implement it based on your specific use case.
As a starting point for this, CloudWATCH has created a portfolio of European and international use cases on technical, policy and legal requirements. The common standards profiles derived from these use cases will be tested around the federation of cloud services.
This challenging work is part of CloudWATCHs mission to making an active contribution to standards and certification, driving interoperability as critical to boosting innovation in Europe.
CloudWATCH use case portfolio - insights from standards groups
The workshop will take a brief look at the standardisation landscape today. It will identify some of the most important requirements that existing standards can meet. Interactive discussions will then explore possible pathways to filling gaps, either through new standards or extensions to existing standards. The workshop will wrap up with an overview of the benefits of interoperability and how it is set to become a hot topic around best practices in the business community in 2015.
Organisers: Fraunhofer FOKUS and EGI.eu
Since January 2014, EGI has been running a dedicated Pay-for-Use Proof of Concept (PoC) to understand how new business models can augment the traditional free at the point of use delivery model.
Activities have picked up as of May with a dedicated task in EGI-InSPIRE PY5.
Initial results of the first 6-months were summarised in a dedicated report and presented at the EGI-InSPIRE EC review in June (see material).
Moving into the “2nd Phase” of activities, these 2, 90-min sessions serve as a checkpoint in activities in order to review, discuss and plan the final work before preparing the final report by the end of the year and allow for input from the wider community to help shape future activities.
The sessions offer a mix of presentations and ample discussion opportunities around the following topics: PoC overview and results to date, business model and pricing schemes, technical tools and development, call for participation, pre-commercial Procurement and public procurement of innovative solutions, legal and policy aspects.
Welcome & introduction, the EGI & GÉANT perspectives, the national view
More and more consumers are expressing concerns about the lack of control, interoperability and portability. Why? Because they are central to avoiding vendor lock-in, whether at the technical, service delivery or business level, thus ensuring broader choice. As a user, open standard interfaces protect you from vendor lock-in, so you avoid significant migration costs you would face when open interfaces are not provided.
For a European research provider interoperability means more efficient resource utilisation. The EGI federated cloud is prime example of this. Through a decade of peer collaborative work in Europe and beyond, the experts behind FedCloud have gained considerable expertise in standards development and implementation, laying the foundation for interoperability testing and fairer competition. This expertise is now also supporting interoperability between Europe and Brazil through EUBrazil Cloud Connect.
The Cloud Interoperability Plugfest project, Cloud Plugfests, is an international co-operative community series designed to promote interoperability efforts on cloud-based software, frameworks, and standards among vendors, products, projects and implementations. The series supports ongoing and continuing interoperability efforts among and between the sponsoring organisations, and with the cloud community at large. These efforts include organised software demonstrations, in-person developer gatherings, and continuous access to professional-grade cloud testing frameworks and tools.
The Plugfest will see Brazilian participation for the very first time. EUBrazil Cloud Connect will test the OCCI implementation of fogbow, middleware that has been developed by the Federal University of Campina Grande. This new connecting bridge with Brazil focuses on a new implementation of OCCI API (fOCCI) as well as an extension to accommodate requests for resources exploited in an opportunistic way. This workshop is also an opportunity to showcase growing international interest in interoperability testing and why the Plugfest is important to certify compliance of the implementation with the specification.
Reducing ambiguity through standards profiling
A Standard very often supports multiple use cases in its specification text which can lead to ambiguity and a lack of real interoperability across different interfaces. Ambiguity is a fundamental challenge for interoperability standards and key to maximising interoperability. A profile on a standard clarifies in an unambiguous way how a standard has to be interpreted, explaining how to implement it based on your specific use case.
As a starting point for this, CloudWATCH has created a portfolio of European and international use cases on technical, policy and legal requirements. The common standards profiles derived from these use cases will be tested around the federation of cloud services.
This challenging work is part of CloudWATCHs mission to making an active contribution to standards and certification, driving interoperability as critical to boosting innovation in Europe.
CloudWATCH use case portfolio - insights from standards groups
The workshop will take a brief look at the standardisation landscape today. It will identify some of the most important requirements that existing standards can meet. Interactive discussions will then explore possible pathways to filling gaps, either through new standards or extensions to existing standards. The workshop will wrap up with an overview of the benefits of interoperability and how it is set to become a hot topic around best practices in the business community in 2015.
Organisers: Fraunhofer FOKUS and EGI.eu
Since January 2014, EGI has been running a dedicated Pay-for-Use Proof of Concept (PoC) to understand how new business models can augment the traditional free at the point of use delivery model.
Activities have picked up as of May with a dedicated task in EGI-InSPIRE PY5.
Initial results of the first 6-months were summarised in a dedicated report and presented at the EGI-InSPIRE EC review in June (see material).
Moving into the “2nd Phase” of activities, these 2, 90-min sessions serve as a checkpoint in activities in order to review, discuss and plan the final work before preparing the final report by the end of the year and allow for input from the wider community to help shape future activities.
The sessions offer a mix of presentations and ample discussion opportunities around the following topics: PoC overview and results to date, business model and pricing schemes, technical tools and development, call for participation, pre-commercial Procurement and public procurement of innovative solutions, legal and policy aspects.
More and more consumers are expressing concerns about the lack of control, interoperability and portability. Why? Because they are central to avoiding vendor lock-in, whether at the technical, service delivery or business level, thus ensuring broader choice. As a user, open standard interfaces protect you from vendor lock-in, so you avoid significant migration costs you would face when open interfaces are not provided.
For a European research provider interoperability means more efficient resource utilisation. The EGI federated cloud is prime example of this. Through a decade of peer collaborative work in Europe and beyond, the experts behind FedCloud have gained considerable expertise in standards development and implementation, laying the foundation for interoperability testing and fairer competition. This expertise is now also supporting interoperability between Europe and Brazil through EUBrazil Cloud Connect.
The Cloud Interoperability Plugfest project, Cloud Plugfests, is an international co-operative community series designed to promote interoperability efforts on cloud-based software, frameworks, and standards among vendors, products, projects and implementations. The series supports ongoing and continuing interoperability efforts among and between the sponsoring organisations, and with the cloud community at large. These efforts include organised software demonstrations, in-person developer gatherings, and continuous access to professional-grade cloud testing frameworks and tools.
The Plugfest will see Brazilian participation for the very first time. EUBrazil Cloud Connect will test the OCCI implementation of fogbow, middleware that has been developed by the Federal University of Campina Grande. This new connecting bridge with Brazil focuses on a new implementation of OCCI API (fOCCI) as well as an extension to accommodate requests for resources exploited in an opportunistic way. This workshop is also an opportunity to showcase growing international interest in interoperability testing and why the Plugfest is important to certify compliance of the implementation with the specification.
Reducing ambiguity through standards profiling
A Standard very often supports multiple use cases in its specification text which can lead to ambiguity and a lack of real interoperability across different interfaces. Ambiguity is a fundamental challenge for interoperability standards and key to maximising interoperability. A profile on a standard clarifies in an unambiguous way how a standard has to be interpreted, explaining how to implement it based on your specific use case.
As a starting point for this, CloudWATCH has created a portfolio of European and international use cases on technical, policy and legal requirements. The common standards profiles derived from these use cases will be tested around the federation of cloud services.
This challenging work is part of CloudWATCHs mission to making an active contribution to standards and certification, driving interoperability as critical to boosting innovation in Europe.
CloudWATCH use case portfolio - insights from standards groups
The workshop will take a brief look at the standardisation landscape today. It will identify some of the most important requirements that existing standards can meet. Interactive discussions will then explore possible pathways to filling gaps, either through new standards or extensions to existing standards. The workshop will wrap up with an overview of the benefits of interoperability and how it is set to become a hot topic around best practices in the business community in 2015.
Organisers: Fraunhofer FOKUS and EGI.eu
This session will present the "Challenges" for Operational Security on federated Cloud operations in terms of the developments needed for security policy, procedures and monitoring with a view to moving to "Solutions" over the coming year or two.
More and more consumers are expressing concerns about the lack of control, interoperability and portability. Why? Because they are central to avoiding vendor lock-in, whether at the technical, service delivery or business level, thus ensuring broader choice. As a user, open standard interfaces protect you from vendor lock-in, so you avoid significant migration costs you would face when open interfaces are not provided.
For a European research provider interoperability means more efficient resource utilisation. The EGI federated cloud is prime example of this. Through a decade of peer collaborative work in Europe and beyond, the experts behind FedCloud have gained considerable expertise in standards development and implementation, laying the foundation for interoperability testing and fairer competition. This expertise is now also supporting interoperability between Europe and Brazil through EUBrazil Cloud Connect.
The Cloud Interoperability Plugfest project, Cloud Plugfests, is an international co-operative community series designed to promote interoperability efforts on cloud-based software, frameworks, and standards among vendors, products, projects and implementations. The series supports ongoing and continuing interoperability efforts among and between the sponsoring organisations, and with the cloud community at large. These efforts include organised software demonstrations, in-person developer gatherings, and continuous access to professional-grade cloud testing frameworks and tools.
The Plugfest will see Brazilian participation for the very first time. EUBrazil Cloud Connect will test the OCCI implementation of fogbow, middleware that has been developed by the Federal University of Campina Grande. This new connecting bridge with Brazil focuses on a new implementation of OCCI API (fOCCI) as well as an extension to accommodate requests for resources exploited in an opportunistic way. This workshop is also an opportunity to showcase growing international interest in interoperability testing and why the Plugfest is important to certify compliance of the implementation with the specification.
Reducing ambiguity through standards profiling
A Standard very often supports multiple use cases in its specification text which can lead to ambiguity and a lack of real interoperability across different interfaces. Ambiguity is a fundamental challenge for interoperability standards and key to maximising interoperability. A profile on a standard clarifies in an unambiguous way how a standard has to be interpreted, explaining how to implement it based on your specific use case.
As a starting point for this, CloudWATCH has created a portfolio of European and international use cases on technical, policy and legal requirements. The common standards profiles derived from these use cases will be tested around the federation of cloud services.
This challenging work is part of CloudWATCHs mission to making an active contribution to standards and certification, driving interoperability as critical to boosting innovation in Europe.
CloudWATCH use case portfolio - insights from standards groups
The workshop will take a brief look at the standardisation landscape today. It will identify some of the most important requirements that existing standards can meet. Interactive discussions will then explore possible pathways to filling gaps, either through new standards or extensions to existing standards. The workshop will wrap up with an overview of the benefits of interoperability and how it is set to become a hot topic around best practices in the business community in 2015.
Organisers: Fraunhofer FOKUS and EGI.eu
PANELITS:
CESNET: Miroslav Ruda,
IBERGRID: Enol Fernández,
GRNET: Panos Louridas,
SWITCH: Simon Leinen