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UNDER construction: The agenda below is not the final one

This event is supported by INRIA, UIUC, NCSA, ANL and French Ministry of Foreign Affairs

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Schedule

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Affiliation

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Dinner Before the Workshop

7:00 PM

Only people registered for the dinner

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Workshop Day 1

Monday Nov. 25th

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

TITLES ARE TEMPORARY (except if in bold font)

 

Registration

08:00

 

 

 

 

 

Welcome and Introduction

Amphitheatre

Chair: Franck

08:30

Marc Snir + Franck Cappello

INRIA&UIUC&ANL

Background

Welcome, Workshop objectives and organization

 

 

08:45

Peter Schiffer

UIUC

Background

Welcome from UIUC Vice Chancellor for Research

 

 

09:00

Ed. Siedel

UIUC

Background

NCSA update and vision of the collaboration

 

 

09:15

Michel Cosnard

Inria

Background

INRIA updates and vision of the collaboration

 


9:30

Marc Snir

ANL

Background

Argonne updates and vision of the collaboration

 

 

9h45

Franck Cappello

ANL

Background

Joint-Lab, New Joint-Lab, PUF articulation

 

 

10:15

Break

 

 

 

 

Extreme Scale Systems and infrastructures

Amphitheatre

Chair: Marc Snir

10:45

Pete Beckman

ANL

 

Extreme Scale Computing & Co-design Challenges

 

 

11:15

John Towns

UIUC

 

Plenary talk

 
 11:45Gabriel AntoniuINRIA  Plenary talk 

 

12:15

Lunch

 

 

Plenary talk

 


13:45

Bill Kramer

UIUC

Blue Waters

BW Observations and new challenges

 


14:15

Marc Snir

UIUC

 

G8 ECS and international collaboration toward extreme scale

 

 

14:45

Rob Ross

ANL

 

Plenary talk

 
 15:15François PellegriniINRIA Plenary talk 
 15:45Break    

 

16:15

Yves Robert

INRIA

 

Plenary talk

 
 16:45Wen Mei HwuUIUC 

Plenary talk

 
 17:15Adjourn    

 

18:45

Bus for Diner

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Workshop Day 2


Tuesday Nov. 26

 

 

 

 

 

Applications, I/O, Visualization, Big data

Amphitheatre

Chair: Rob Ross

08:30

Greg BauerUIUC  Plenary talk

 

 

09:00

Matthieu Dorier

INRIA

 

Plenary talk

 
 

09:30

Dries Kempe

ANL

 

Plenary talk

 

 

10:00

Venkat Vishwanath

ANL

 

Plenary talk

 

 

10:30

Break

 

 

 

 

 

11:00

Babak Behzad

UIUC

 

Plenary talk

 

 

11:30

McHenry, Kenton Guadron

UIUC

 

Plenary talk

 

 

12:00

Lunch

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Mini Workshop1

Resilience

Room 1030

Chair: Yves Robert

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

13:30

Leonardo

ANL

 


 

 

14:00

Tatiana

INRIA

 


 

 

14:30

Mohamed Slim Bouguera

INRIA

 


 

 

15:00

Ana Gainaru

UIUC

 


 

 

15:30

Break

 

 

 

 

 

16:00

Sheng Di

INRIA

 


 

 

16:30

Frederic Vivien

INRIA

 


 

 

17h00

Weslay Bland

ANL

 


 

 

17H30

Adjourn

 

 

 

 

 

19:00

Bus for Diner

 

 

 

 

       

Mini Workshop2

Numerical Agorithms

Room 1040

Chair: Bill Gropp

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

13:30

Luke Olson

UIUC

 

  
 14:00 Prasanna BalaprakashANL   

 

14:30

Hushang

INRIA

 


 

 

15:00

Jed Brown

ANL

 

 

 

 

15:30

Break

 

 

 

 

 

16:00

Pierre Jolivet

INRIA

 


 
 16:30Vincent BaudouiTotal&ANL   
 17:00Stefan WildANL   

 

17:30

Adjourn

 

 

 

 

       

 

19:00

Bus for diner

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Workshop Day 3


Friday Nov. 27

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Mini Workshop3


 

 

 

 

 

 

 Programming models, compilation and runtime.

Room 1030

Chair: Marc Snir

08:30

Grigori Fursin

INRIA

 

 

 

 

09:00

Maria Garzaran

UIUC

 


 


09:30

Jean-François Mehaut

INRIA

 


 
 10:00Break    

 

10:30

Pavan Balaji

ANL

 


 

 

11:00

Rafael Tesser

INRIA

 


 

 

11:30

Emmanuel Jeannot

INRIA

 


 

 

12:00

Closing

 

 

 

 

 

12:30

Lunch

 

 

 

 

       

 

18:00

Bus for diner

 

 

 

 

Mini Workshop4

Large scale systems and their simulators

Room 1040

Chair: Bill Kramer

 

 

 

 

 

 


08:30

Sanjay Kale

 

 


 

 

09:00

Arnault Legrand

 

 


 


09:30

Kate Kahey

 

 


 

 

10:00

Break

 

 

 

 


10:30

Gille Fedak

 

 


 

 

11:00

Jeremy Henos

 

 


 

 

11:30

TBD

 

 


 

 

12:00

Closing

 

 

 

 

 

12:30

Lunch

 

 

 

 

       
 18:00Bus for diner    

Abstracts

Kenton McHenry

NSF CIF21 DIBBs: Brown Dog

The objective of this project is to construct a service that will allow for past and present un-curated data to be utilized by science while simultaneously demonstrating the novel science that can be conducted from such data. The proposed effort will focus on the large distributed and heterogeneous bodies of past and present un-curated data, what is often referred to in the scientific community as long-tail data, data that would have great value to science if its contents were readily accessible. The proposed framework will be made up of two re-purposable cyberinfrastructure building blocks referred to as a Data Access Proxy (DAP) and Data Tilling Service (DTS). These building blocks will be developed and tested in the context of three use cases that will advance science in geoscience, biology, engineering, and social science. The DAP will aim to enable a new era of applications that are agnostic to file formats through the use of a tool called a Software Server which itself will serve as a workflow tool to access functionality within 3rd party applications. By chaining together open/save operations within arbitrary software the DAP will provide a consistent means of gaining access to content stored across the large numbers of file formats that plague long tail data. The DTS will utilize the DAP to access data contents and will serve to index unstructured data sources (i.e. instrument data or data without text metadata). Building off of the Versus content based comparison framework and the Medici extraction services for auto-curation the DTS will assign content specific identifiers to untagged data allowing one to search collections of such data. The intellectual merit of this work lies in the proposed solution which does not attempt to construct a single piece of software that magically understands all data, but instead aims at utilizing every possible source of automatable help already in existence in a robust and provenance preserving manner to create a service that can deal with as much of this data as possible. This proverbial “super mutt” of software, or Brown Dog, will serve as a low level data infrastructure to interface with digital data contents and through its capabilities enable a new era of science and applications at large. The broader impact of this work is in its potential to serve not just the scientific community but the general public, as a DNS for data, moving civilization towards an era where a user’s access to data is not limited by a file’s format or un-curated collections.

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