wiki:WorkShop14

Version 42 (modified by davea, 10 years ago) (diff)

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The 10th BOINC Workshop

A workshop on BOINC and volunteer computing will be held 29 Sept - 2 Oct at the SZTAKI Institute in Budapest, Hungary.

The objective of this workshop is to share information about BOINC and projects using it, through presentations and informal discussions, in an open and friendly atmosphere. The workshop aims to stimulate new developments and activities related to volunteer computing, and to guide the future development of BOINC.

The workshop is for researchers, scientists and developers with significant experience or interest in BOINC. Areas of interest include:

  • BOINC on Android
  • GPU, multi-thread, VM-based, and Android applications
  • Data-intensive applications
  • Multi-user projects
  • Remote job submission
  • Integration with hubs, clouds, grids, and desktop grids

All participants will have the opportunity to present and discuss their work. Slides will be published on the web, but there will be no papers or proceedings.

Registration

The workshop is free but attendance is limited. If you are interested in attending, or have any questions, please contact David Anderson, indicating your areas of interest.

Venue

The workshop will be held at

SZTAKI Institute
18-22 Victor Hugo St.
Budapest 1132

Information about transportation and lodging is here: http://www.lpds.sztaki.hu/lpds/contact

The Institute is convenient to public transportation, hotels, and the historic center of Budapest. Many thanks to Peter Kacsuk and Robert Lovas for making the venue available to us.

Schedule

The workshop will consist of two activities:

  • Talks: All participants are encouraged to give a short (20-30 min) talk describing their activities and plans related to volunteer computing. These talks do not have to be polished, or present results. Please send your talk title to David Anderson.
  • Hackfest: On the 2nd and 3rd days of the workshop we'll divide into groups, to hack, document, discuss or learn some aspect of BOINC. Please come with ideas.

To allow more time for hackfest projects, we're extending the workshop to 4 days. However, you're welcome to attend only the first 2 or 3 days.

Monday 29 Sept

  • 9:30 - 12:00: talks
    • Robert Lovas: Introductory remarks
    • David Anderson: A Brief History of BOINC
  • 13:00 - 15:00: talks
    • Ivgeny Ivashko: BOINC:FAST conference: results and plans
    • Rom Walton: Support for VM applications
    • Robert Lovas: Report on crowd computing related activities from IDGF (2013-2014)
    • Pete Jones: Volunteer computing at CERN
    • Filip Rydio: Possible Optimizations of Large Recurrent Neural Networks in CUDA
  • 15:30 - 17:30: talks
    • Christian Beer: The future of Rechenkraft.net e.V.
    • Matt Blumberg: Greetings from GridRepublic!
    • Yuri Gordienko: Trends in computing power used by various BOINC communities
    • Nikita Gordienko and Yuri Gordienko: Volunteer Measurements as the next evolution stage of BOINC
    • Valter Cavecchia: TN-Grid & gene@home

Tuesday 30 Sept

  • 9:00 - 12:00: talks
    • Mark McAndrew: Charity Engine
    • Jozsef Kovacs: Integration of European Grid Infrastructure with BOINC - latest steps and applications
    • Attila Marosi: Modelling volunteer and desktop grid computing
    • Adam Visegradi: Efficient Reliability in Volunteer Storage Systems with Random Linear Coding
    • Keith Uplinger: World Community Grid
    • Nicolas Baldeck: Using BOINC for building the "wikipedia" of real-time weather forecasting
  • 13:00 - 15:00: talks
    • Thomas Mielke: Techniques for Rapidly Integrating, Computing, and Analyzing Scientific Models with Heterogenous Grid Systems
    • Wenjing Wu: Atlas@home
    • Bruce Allen: Einstein@Home
    • Arnaud Legrand: modeling volunteer data archival
    • Arnaud Legrand and Wenjing Wu: job replication in CAS@home
  • 15:30 - 17:30: discussion of volunteer computing and BOINC; plan hackfest projects.

Wednesday 1 Oct

  • 9:00 - 17:00: hackfest

Thursday 2 Oct

  • 9:00 - 17:00: hackfest

Attendees (tentative)

  1. Bruce Allen, Max Planck Institute
  2. David Anderson, UC Berkeley
  3. Tomi Asp, CERN
  4. Nicolas Baldeck, Open Meteo Foundation
  5. Christian Beer, Rechenkraft.net (RNA World)
  6. Matt Blumberg, GridRepublic
  7. Andy Bowery, Oxford
  8. Valter Cavecchia, CNR-IMEM, TN-Grid
  9. Claire Adam Bourdarios, LAL (Orsay)
  10. Philip Fowler, Oxford (maybe)
  11. Francisco Sanz García, Bifi
  12. Yuri Gordienko, NAS Ukraine
  13. Nikita Gordienko, NAS Ukraine
  14. Evgeny Ivashko, Karelian Resarch Centre RAS
  15. Peter Jones, CERN
  16. Jozsef Kovacs, SZTAKI
  17. Arnaud Legrand, INRIA
  18. Robert Lovas, SZTAKI
  19. Attila Marosii, SZTAKI
  20. Mark McAndrew, Charity Engine
  21. Thomas Mielke, MindModeling@Home
  22. Jonathan Miller, Oxford
  23. Filip Rydio, Asteroids@home
  24. Rytis Slatkevičius, GridRepublic
  25. Keith Uplinger, IBM
  26. Adam Visegradi, SZTAKI
  27. David Wallom, Oxford
  28. Rom Walton, UC Berkeley
  29. Wenjing Wu, IHEP
  30. Andrei Zinchenko, National Academy of Science of Ukraine

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