Grids in the News
CERN@school brings real research to life
Wednesday 05 May 2010
CERN Courier
LHC technology set for a googlewhack
Monday 03 December 2008
LabNews
Global computer grid helps UK develop next generation internet search engine
Monday 03 November 2008
PublicTechnology.net
Global computer grid used by UK
Monday 03 November 2008
Women in Technology
Search engines tap into world of sound and vision
Saturday 11 October 2008
The Telegraph
CERN/ Si è acceso Grid, il cervello da 15 milioni di Gigabyte(Italian)
Thursday 09 October 2008
Il Sussidiario
Virtual bodies, real treatments(Box out near the bottom)
Friday 04 October 2008
New Scientist
Grid of 100,000 computers heralds new internet dawn
Monday 29 September 2008
The Times(gets it wrong again, less so this time)
Coverage from the LHC Switch on period
Wednesday 10 September 2008(approximately)
CNET,
ZDNET,
IT Pro,
Special focus on the Large Hadron Collider
Friday 05 September 2008
Physics Today
Mega Grid for Mega Science
Friday 29 August 2008
The R&D Daily
Coming soon: superfast internet
This is the original article from The Sunday Times which equated the Grid with a replacement for the Internet, which it is not (see here for a discussion of the facts and fictions in the article). Following it is a list of the article's it generated:
The Sunday Times
The Scotsman,
Media Outlet,
Toronto Sun,
Tech Tree,
Business Standard,
TechRadar,
Memphis Rap,
The Times of India,
Web Pro News,
Smart Company,
MSN,
News.com,
TechShoutt,
Goa Herald,
IT Wire,
The Mirror,
Broadband reports,
Audioholics,
Dvice.com,
Domain B,
PC Mag,
Crunch Gear,
DNA India,
IT Web,
The Inquirer,
Editors Weblog,
Tec Tonic,
Campus Progress,
IDW Online,
Web User,
Press TV,
Hard OCP,
Audioholics,
Breaking News (Trinidad and Tobago),
Engadget,
Techshout,
Scenta,
Sir Alan Sugar Opens Queen Mary Cluster
Thursday 3 May 2007
Jack Schofield's Blog(Guardian Online)
The Register
The Evening Standard - 3 May 2007
The Daily Mail - 4 May 2007
Channel 4 News (Online)
The Sun
The Daily Record
The Telegraph
HPCWire
New £30m funding for British part of international computer Grid
Wednesday 4 April 2007
Imperial College, News & Events
'Me-Science' the New e-Science
Monday 9 October 2006
A special feature for GridToday written by Helen Thomson from GridPP
GridToday
Avian Flu Data Challenge
Wednesday 3 May 2006
GridPP's involvement in the avian flu data challenge (press release) has been reported in many different places:
BBC
Grid Today [2]
ElectronicsWeekly.com
PublicTechnology.net
Innovations Report
Silicon.com,
CNET
Physorg.com
eMaxHealth
ZDNet,
Technology News Daily
MedIndia
All Headline News
Medical News Today
PPARC Calls for Next Phase of Particle Physics Computing
Monday 24 April 2006
Grid Today
GridPP/PPARC/LCG press release 'Maiden
Flight' for LHC Computing Grid Breaks Gigabyte-per-Second Barrier :
15 February 2006
silicon.com
The Inquirer
The Register (Higgs
Boson a-go-go)
ZDnet
Interactions
PhysOrg.com
Mumbai Newsline
World's biggest grid seeks secrets of the universe
24 November 2005
Silicon.com
Particle smasher gets a super-brain
21 May 2005
New Scientist
GridPP/PPARC/CCLRC press release UK Particle Physicists Prepare for Data Torrent:
26 April 2005
eGov monitor
The Inquirer
Publictechnology.net
Gridtech
RCUK
The CERN version of the release was reported in:
The Register
PhysOrg.com
SpaceDaily
GridPP/EGEE/PPARC press release World's largest computing grid surpasses 100 sites:
16 March 2005
Sciencedaily.com
Wisconsin Advanced Technology Advocates
Graduate Engineer
scienceblog.com
GridPP Collaboration enters a new phase
Septemeber 2004
CERN Courier
GridPP/PPARC press release The Grid
becomes a reality (for All Hands 2004):
1 September 2004
Slashdot
The Register
ZDnet and ZDnet comment
BritainUSA.com
South African Broadcasting Corporation
Network IT week
IT week
Publictechnology.net
EE Times
Innovations report
Grid Today
PC Pro
SpaceRef.com
IT World
Higher Education Research
News
GridPP/CERN/PPARC press release CERN recognizes UK's outstanding contribution to Grid computing:
2 June 2004
Primeur
Publictechnology.net
Interactions.org
The Oxford Trust
Scienceblog.com
GridPP/PPARC/EGEE press release From Testbed To Reality: Grid Computing Steps up a Gear:
1 April 2004
Scienceblog.com
Publictechnology.net
Innovations report
Interactions.org
Grid Today
Supercomputing online.com
Storage network solutions Europe
An open source Grid for science Get ready for the Grid PPARC Press Release on GridPP2
Building the next IT revolution Turbo-charge your computer Computing net promises vast power Huge computing power goes online Welcome to the grid: unlimited PC power at your fingertips NEC HPCE and ClusterVision Install Large Computer Clusters
at UK e-Science Centre Liverpool Uni opts for Dell, Red Hat in supercomputer cluster Cern scientists build the web of the future
eDiamond
PC World Reviews Globus Toolkit
The summary on Globus reads:
"While getting a grid running using the current version of Globus is
certainly possible, it would require a fairly intensive development
effort, and most businesses should opt for the already commercialized
solutions.
That said, Globus is already being used for grids maintained by NASA, IBM,
and six scientific organizations (including CERN) in the European DataGrid
Project. For mere IT mortals, Globus's benefits and features will likely
be incorporated into the products of other companies in this story, all of
which maintain an active interest in Globus. For now, expect this toolkit
to remain more the stuff of the academic world than the business one."
It seems clear that the range of additional development tools beyond the
Globus Toolkit such as those provided by CONDOR-G, the EU DataGrid and
elsewhere will be required in the development years ahead.
NeSc Opening by Gordon Brown
Internet2, Geant and the Grid
IBM Announces Worldwide Participation in Grid Initiatives
Powering up the Grid
UK scientists expect £100M to build super-fast internet
Spring 2004
Public Service Review Europe
February 2004
HE and Research Opportunities (HERO)
17 December 2003
EETimes UK
Information Security Bulletin
Science Daily
Supercomputing online
Publictechnology.net
Spaceref.com
Space Daily
About physics
ACM Tech news
In Spanish:
Noticias de la Ciencia y la Tecnolog�a
In Portuguese:
Cepromat
Ag�ncia FAPESP
October 2003
Physics World
20 October 2003
BBC News
5 October 2003
BBC News
30 September 2003
BBC News
3 July 2003
The Guardian
23 June 2003
ClusterVision Press Release
Primeur Monthly
11 June 2003
The Register
2 April 2003
Computing
18 October 2002
The government, Oxford University and IBM are investing �4.5m
to develop a grid computing system to help the diagnosis and
treatment of breast cancer. See:
University of Oxford Press Release,
Computing and
The Register.
30 September 2002
Globus has now reached the stage where it is being reviewed by the
PC press. The
review assesses the Globus and other toolkits in terms of
security,
data management, resources and administration.
25 April 2002
Read reports from
BBC News,
The Guardian,
The Scotsman and
Computing.
8 November 2001
Experiments being run on Geant and
Internet2 want to take distributed computing
to a new level. When the Very Large
Hadron Collider near Geneva becomes
operational in 2005, terabytes of data will
start pouring out of Cern. There are simply
not enough supercomputers in the world to
deal with that amount of data.
Read the
Guardian Article.
2 August 2001
Including a UK component covered by
BBC News and discussed on
Slashdot.org
28 June 2000
Supercomputer centres around the world are linking up over the
internet to create a new generation of enormously powerful
machines. The networks of supercomputers are needed because some
problems in science are just too large for any one machine to tackle by
itself. The software used to link supercomputers is also being used to
give access to high performance computers to universities and
research organisations with limited resources.
See
BBC News Online
4 March 2000
British scientists are preparing an ambitious plan to
build a new internet for the next generation. The
Grid, as it is provisionally known, will work far more
quickly and reliably than today's internet. It should
eventually enable computer users to receive exactly
the information they want from anywhere in the
world, within seconds - and without having to go
through a tortuous search process.
See
The Financial Times
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