The aim of the H2020 session at the EGI Community Forum is to introduce services of the RICH Consortium, work of National Contact Points and to introduce new calls in Horizon 2020 Work Programme European research infrastructures (including e-Infrastructure) for years 2016- 2017. Beneficiaries (users of virtual access and coordinators of first e-infrastructures Calls in H2020) will provide participants with useful tips (preparing proposals, creation of consortium, realization phase of the project, etc.).
Accelerated computing systems deliver energy efficient and powerful HPC capabilities. Many EGI sites are providing accelerated computing technologies to enable high performance processing such as GPGPUs or MIC co-processors. Currently these accelerated capabilities are not directly supported by the EGI platforms. To use the co-processors capabilities available at resource centre level, users must directly interact with the local provider to get information about the type of resources and software libraries available and which submission queues must be used to submit tasks of accelerated computing.
The session follows the one held in Lisbon in May, and will discuss the progress on the roadmap to achieve the federation of GPGPU or MIC co-processors capabilities across EGI HTC and Cloud platforms.
Service providers as well as user communities interested in the use of accelerated computing facilities across Europe are invited to participate bringing their requirements.
This closed session is for those who have been invited to join one of the three Expert Liaison Groups (ELG) convened as part of the recently funded EU EDISON project. EDISON has been established to support the development of the data science career path into a recognised profession. The three ELGs represent employers, universities and data experts, and will meet to contribute to the projects aim of supporting and accelerating the process of establishing data scientist as a certified profession.
EDISON will run for 24 months and has seven core partners from across Europe. The project is coordinated by Yuri Demchenko at the University of Amsterdam in the Netherlands.
See project website for further details on the aims and objectives of EDISON. http://edison-project.eu
On Friday, Nov 13th, two meetings of the INDIGO-DataCloud project will take place immediately after the conclusion of the EGI Community Forum. These meetings, reserved to invited INDIGO-DataCloud participants, are the INDIGO Project Management Boards (PMB) in the morning and the INDIGO Technical Boards (TB) in the afternoon. These two bodies steer the technical development of the INDIGO-DataCloud project, whose goal is to create an open Cloud platform for Science. INDIGO-DataCloud is an H2020 project, funded from April 2015 to September 2017, involving 26 European partners and based on use cases and support provided by several multi-disciplinar scientific communities and e-infrastructures. The project will extend existing PaaS (Platform as a Service) solutions, allowing public and private e-infrastructures, including those provided by EGI, EUDAT, PRACE and Helix Nebula, to integrate their existing services and make them available through AAI services compliant with GEANTs inter-federation policies, thus guaranteeing transparency and trust in the provisioning of such services. INDIGO will also provide a flexible and modular presentation layer connected to the PaaS and SaaS frameworks developed within the project, allowing innovative user experiences and dynamic workflows, also from mobile appliances.
In the conclusions on "open, data-intensive and networked research as a driver for faster and wider innovation" (May 28-29 2015) the Competitiveness Council welcomed "the further development of a European Open Science Cloud that will enable sharing and reuse of research data across disciplines and borders, taking into account relevant legal, security and privacy aspects".
The Council conclusions offer an opportunity of reflection on the experience gathered by the EGI Cloud Federation and other cloud initiatives worldwide addressing the needs of data-driven science. New challenges and requirements are emerging from Research Infrastructures EGI cooperates with in the context of the EC funded project EGI-Engage.
The workshop offers the opportunity to e-Infrastructure and Research Infrastructure providers, publicly funded and commercial cloud providers, data providers, international research collaborations and policy managers to gather and discuss how the needs of research are pushing the technology, policy and regulatory boundaries of cloud provisioning in Europe and worldwide.
The workshop will address topics including:
The expected outcome of the workshop is a position paper that defines the state of play of cloud services for research and identifies the barriers that an Open Science Cloud initiative could help removing to better support international research communities.
This closed session is for those who have been invited to join one of the three Expert Liaison Groups (ELG) convened as part of the recently funded EU EDISON project. EDISON has been established to support the development of the data science career path into a recognised profession. The three ELGs represent employers, universities and data experts, and will meet to contribute to the projects aim of supporting and accelerating the process of establishing data scientist as a certified profession.
EDISON will run for 24 months and has seven core partners from across Europe. The project is coordinated by Yuri Demchenko at the University of Amsterdam in the Netherlands.
See project website for further details on the aims and objectives of EDISON. http://edison-project.eu
On Friday, Nov 13th, two meetings of the INDIGO-DataCloud project will take place immediately after the conclusion of the EGI Community Forum. These meetings, reserved to invited INDIGO-DataCloud participants, are the INDIGO Project Management Boards (PMB) in the morning and the INDIGO Technical Boards (TB) in the afternoon. These two bodies steer the technical development of the INDIGO-DataCloud project, whose goal is to create an open Cloud platform for Science. INDIGO-DataCloud is an H2020 project, funded from April 2015 to September 2017, involving 26 European partners and based on use cases and support provided by several multi-disciplinar scientific communities and e-infrastructures. The project will extend existing PaaS (Platform as a Service) solutions, allowing public and private e-infrastructures, including those provided by EGI, EUDAT, PRACE and Helix Nebula, to integrate their existing services and make them available through AAI services compliant with GEANTs inter-federation policies, thus guaranteeing transparency and trust in the provisioning of such services. INDIGO will also provide a flexible and modular presentation layer connected to the PaaS and SaaS frameworks developed within the project, allowing innovative user experiences and dynamic workflows, also from mobile appliances.
In the conclusions on "open, data-intensive and networked research as a driver for faster and wider innovation" (May 28-29 2015) the Competitiveness Council welcomed "the further development of a European Open Science Cloud that will enable sharing and reuse of research data across disciplines and borders, taking into account relevant legal, security and privacy aspects".
The Council conclusions offer an opportunity of reflection on the experience gathered by the EGI Cloud Federation and other cloud initiatives worldwide addressing the needs of data-driven science. New challenges and requirements are emerging from Research Infrastructures EGI cooperates with in the context of the EC funded project EGI-Engage.
The workshop offers the opportunity to e-Infrastructure and Research Infrastructure providers, publicly funded and commercial cloud providers, data providers, international research collaborations and policy managers to gather and discuss how the needs of research are pushing the technology, policy and regulatory boundaries of cloud provisioning in Europe and worldwide.
The workshop will address topics including:
The expected outcome of the workshop is a position paper that defines the state of play of cloud services for research and identifies the barriers that an Open Science Cloud initiative could help removing to better support international research communities.