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Image courtesy Steven Newhouse
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Where do National Grid Initiatives fit into EGI?
Newhouse: Individually, the NGI communities are coming together through the EGI Council. They have different levels of maturity in different countries, but they are all moving towards having sustainable national activities. What they are now doing is looking at how to bridge the gap between their own grid and other national grids. The role of EGI.eu is to coordinate that bridging and help enable collaboration between different countries. Many of the NGIs are already active within EGEE in various ways, and many of them want to continue and participate in the EGI project. So it certainly looks very promising at the moment.
Who will be in charge of EGI?
Newhouse: The coordinating body, EGI.eu, will be a foundation set up under Dutch law. The EGI Council, which will have representation from the NGIs and international research labs (EIROforum) which are part of the EGI collaboration, will appoint the EGI.eu board.
The EGI.eu director will manage everyday matters and work with the board to coordinate activities. The EGI council will govern the direction of the broader EGI collaboration on a longer term basis.
What will the shift to EGI mean for international scientific research?
Newhouse: One of the challenges at the moment is that some researchers have a three- or four- year applied science research project that needs to use distributed computing, but the coordination of these resources, currently EGEE, is a project only lasting two years. It’s a big commitment and a risk for a scientist to use something which might disappear half-way through their project. But the EGI model should completely eliminate this risk by assuring a long-term, sustainable coordination of these resources.
So, on a day-to-day level, when we move over from EGEE to EGI, the users of the infrastructure won’t see any significant changes. But longer term, as the infrastructure moves towards a more sustainable model, it will hopefully provide confidence for the research community to adopt this mode of distributed computing.
—Seth Bell, iSGTW
BONUS: Steven Newhouse talks about the Universal Middleware Distribution and standardization within EGI. Click here to listen to an audio clip of him on the Gridcast website.
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