cyberinfrastructure and network computing
DESCRIPTION
Distributed knowledge communities that collaborate and communicate across disciplines, distances and culture. How do we conduct big science in the future? This is from an IT administration perspective.TRANSCRIPT
Matthew Jett HallSummer 2009
Discover, Teach, & Learn
Effective Cyberinfrastructure
Cyberinfrastructure : What?
Distributed knowledge communities that collaborate and communicate across disciplines, distances and culture
Cyberinfrastructure Enables
DiscoveryTeachingLearningPatient Care
IT enables an organization and its people to be reliable, unified, agile, and responsive
Cyberinfrastructure : What?
Distributed knowledge communities that collaborate and communicate across disciplines, distances and culture
Virtual Communities
Collaboration
American Association of Universities: 62 Members
Brandeis University (1985) Brown University (1933) California Institute of Technology (1934) Carnegie Mellon University (1982) Case Western Reserve University (1969) Columbia University (1900) Cornell University (1900) Duke University (1938) Emory University (1995) Harvard University (1900) Indiana University (1909) Iowa State University (1958) The Johns Hopkins University (1900) Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1934) McGill University (1926) Michigan State University (1964) New York University (1950) Northwestern University (1917) The Ohio State University (1916) The Pennsylvania State University (1958) Princeton University (1900) Purdue University (1958) Rice University (1985) Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey (1989) Stanford University (1900) Stony Brook University-State University of New York
(2001) Syracuse University (1966) Texas A&M University (2001) Tulane University (1958) The University of Arizona (1985) University at Buffalo, The State University of New York
(1989) University of California, Berkeley (1900) University of California, Davis (1996) University of California, Irvine (1996) University of California, Los Angeles (1974) University of California, San Diego (1982)
University of California, Santa Barbara (1995) The University of Chicago (1900) University of Colorado at Boulder (1966) University of Florida (1985) University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (1908) The University of Iowa (1909) The University of Kansas (1909) University of Maryland, College Park (1969) University of Michigan (1900) University of Minnesota, Twin Cities (1908) University of Missouri-Columbia (1908) University of Nebraska-Lincoln (1909) The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (1922) University of Oregon (1969) University of Pennsylvania (1900) University of Pittsburgh (1974) University of Rochester (1941) University of Southern California (1969) The University of Texas at Austin (1929) University of Toronto (1926) University of Virginia (1904) University of Washington (1950) The University of Wisconsin-Madison (1900) Vanderbilt University (1950) Washington University in St. Louis (1923) Yale University (1900)
Across Disciplines, Distance, Time, & Institutions
National Institutes of Health: 27 Institutes and Centers
NIH provides leadership and financial support to researchers in every state and throughout the world
84% of the total NIH budget supports over 325,000 extramural scientists and
research personnel at more than 3,000 institutions
nationwide.
DOE National Labs
Vanderbilt University
22,192 employees 32,820 Telephones Many academic, professional, medical
disciplines333 acres, 18.2 million sq. ft.
238 buildings on Campus 100 Oaks Complex VMG Clinics Various diagnostics, lab work, and
imaging Geographic dispersion
Cyberinfrastructure : What?
Distributed knowledge communities that collaborate and communicate across disciplines, distances and culture
Computation
1.64 quadrillion Calculations per second [email protected] 13
Cyberinfrastructure : What?
Distributed knowledge communities that collaborate and communicate across disciplines, distances and culture
Workforce Development
Technical awarenessTechnical CompetenciesSecurity AwarenessWeb 2.0 Savvy
Science is bigger today
Multiple disciplines Many funding agencies Many institutions Many investigators Expensive, remote
instruments Mass data generation Outside the realm of human
cognition Computation and
visualization aid understanding
Discover, Learn, and Teach
Collaborate & Discover Web / video conference Fixed line and mobile phones Instant text and mobile messaging Application sharing and joint editing Extemporaneous Real Time & Immediate: across time & distance
Learn Expand the classroom Active participation Extend the hours of learning
Disseminate Time Shift
Lecture capture Digital content on-demand Digital distribution
Effective Networking Computing
Aligns investments to missionReduces systemic complexityDeploys standards and guidelinesRetains staff talent Maintains skillsAssures Long term SustainabilityOperates efficiently Focuses on flexibility, not rigidity
Effective IT Enables
business users by giving them easy ways to customize their environment and modify processes as their needs and roles evolve
understanding that changes occurs at the edge of the organization – not at the bureaucratic center
Leadership
Vision and Technology Leadership Skills and market currency Articulate , frequent, concise
communications
Daily Operations Management control and daily execution Regulatory and policy compliance Business interaction Mission engagement
IT Leadership
focuses the essential task of governing platform policies, security, access control, and overall strategy, without taxing their resources and turning IT into a bottleneck of business change.
drives standardization and leverages economies of scale, rather than simply automating structured processes.
Key Success Measures
Financial & HR IT Expense Management IT Expense Allocation People
Operational Reliability / Availability Serviceability Security