GENSS - Grid-Enabled Numerical and Symbolic Services is an EPSRC-funded project. It is a joint project between the Computer Science department at the University of Bath and the School of Computer Science and the Welsh e-Science Centre at Cardiff University. The project builds on current work on Mathematical Web Services in the MONET project at Bath and related projects at Cardiff. The project addresses the combination of Grid computing and Mathematical Web services, and their extension to deliver Mathematical Problem Analysis, and the code and the resources to compute the answers, using a common open agent-based framework. The research associate working at Cardiff will focus on Matchmaking techniques for advertising and discovery of Numerical Services.
A special issue of Annals of Mathematics and Artificial Intelligence based on presentations made at the first conference on Mathematical Knowledge Management at RISC-Linz in 2001.
The aim of the DIET project is to develop a set of tools to build computational servers. Huge problems can now be computed over the Internet thanks to Grid Computing Environments like Globus or Legion. Because most of current applications are numerical, the use of libraries like BLAS, LAPACK, ScaLAPACK or PETSc is mandatory. The integration of such libraries in high level applications using languages like Fortran or C is far from being easy. Moreover, the computational power and memory needs of such applications may of course not be available on every workstation. Thus, the RPC seems to be a good candidate to build Problem Solving Environments on the Grid. Several tools following this approach exist, like Netsolve, NINF, NEOS, or RCS.
W. Li, C. Li, L. Yang, M. Li, and X. Liu. Nongye Gongcheng Xuebao/Transactions of the Chinese Society of Agricultural Engineering, 27 (6):
198-202(2011)cited By (since 1996) 0.