As
previously advertised, EGI and SHIWA are joining forces to run a combined workshop event that will be hosted by the Hungarian NGI in Budapest on 9-10
th of February 2012. A number of good contributions have now been received for the workshops
and registration for the event is now open for participants. The workshops will focus on the use of workflows in e-Science and in the European Grid Infrastructure in particular, and will aim to present ‘the art of the possible’ from the perspective of those involved in delivering the service, and try to explore ‘what is needed’ from the perspective of scientific researchers in the user community. In other words, we aim to put stakeholders (developers and users of grid services) together in one room so that we can collectively determine how best to advance ‘
Scientific workflow systems’ in this demanding and dynamic field.
Contributions have already been received as shown but further inputs will still be welcomed for consideration.
- A flexible zone model for data privacy and confidentiality in medical research (Wolfgang Kuchinke, Heinrich-Heine University Duesseldorf)
- Workflows in Astronomy: General Requirements and new implementations in SCI-BUS project (Ugo Becciani, INAF - Osservatorio Astronomico di Trieste)
- Biodiversity Virtual e-Laboratory (BioVeL): Robust biodiversity workflows running on the GRID (Giacinto Donvito, Italian Grid Initiative, INFN, Bari)
- SHIWA technology to enable the integration and collaboration of various workflow systems used in Europe (Peter Kacsuk, MTA Sztaki, Budapest)
- Globus-based Technologies for Supporting Advanced e-Science Workflows – An IGE Perspective (Ioan Lucian Muntean, University of Cluj Napoca, Romania)
- Agile Analysis Framework for Complex Iterations and Data Integration (Kristian Ovaska, Hautaniemi Lab, University of Helsinki)
- myExperiment 2.0 - Preserving Digital Research Objects Using the Wf4Ever Architecture (Stian Soiland-Reyes for School of Computer Science, University of Manchester)
Register here now and join us in Budapest in February to help define the future of scientific workflow on the grid.