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   KEYWORDS : GRID COMPUTING
News Resources Bibliography
One grid to rule them all -- Staff  -- Economist  -- October 07, 2004

Physicists met to discuss plans to link supercomputing centers worldwide into a massive global grid that will help process super collider data.

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Supercomputing platform built for gaming -- Will Knight  -- New Scientist  -- May 09, 2002

A distributed supercomputer games network now in development could for the first time enable more than a million people to play graphics-rich games together via the internet. When the "Butterfly Grid" is up and running, its creators say that online games will run faster, be more reliable and may never need to shut down for maintenance.

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Grid helps science go sky-high -- Mark Ward  -- BBC News  -- May 02, 2002

Astronomers could be among the first to reap the rewards of plans to turn the internet into a vast pool of computer processing power. The three-year Astrogrid project is attempting to give astronomers a common way of accessing and manipulating diverse data archives.

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The Worldwide Computer -- David P. Anderson and John Kubiatowicz  -- Scientific American  -- March 01, 2002

An operating system spanning the Internet would bring the power of millions of the world's Internet-connected PCs to everyone's fingertips.

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Collision Course: Beating Moore's Law by 2006 will take teamwork -- Neil McAllister  -- San Francisco Gate  -- February 14, 2002

CERN researchers are turning to "Grid Computing" to achieve their goal of a "thousand times more computing power by 2006." They are developing the distributed-computing network to help process the 10 petabytes of data likely to be generated by the Large Hadron Supercollider.

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The Grid: A New Infrastructure for 21st Century Science -- Ian Foster  -- Physics Today  -- February 01, 2002

As computer networks become cheaper and more powerful, a new distributed computing paradigm is poised to transform the practice of science and engineering.

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So clever it's almost alive -- Jonathan Leake  -- The Sunday Times  -- September 09, 2001

Computers could be about to evolve from desktop beasts into something rather brighter. IBM has announced plans to start building the first "self-conscious" computer system - a network of super-computers so sophisticated that it could amount to a new form of life.

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US building mega computer -- Mark Ward  -- BBC News  -- August 14, 2001

Forget supercomputers. The US Government is building an incredibly powerful computer. Next year it hopes to throw the switch on a massive distributed computing system, dubbed the Teragrid, that can carry out over 13 trillion calculations per second.

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National Science Foundation to Fund Supercomputer -- Staff  -- New York Times  -- August 09, 2001

The National Science Foundation said it will spend $53 million to build a massive computing grid that will be the most powerful of its kind ever completed and could lead to ground-breaking research that would have otherwise taken years, if not decades, to complete.

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A Grid of Supercomputers -- Jeffrey Benner  -- Wired News  -- August 09, 2001

The National Science Foundation is funding a project to link four U.S. supercomputer centers together into one massive "grid" style computer. Scientists involved in the project said the facility would help researchers understand the origins of the universe, cure cancer, unlock secrets of the brain, predict tornadoes, and save lives in an earthquake.

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