The Rapide™ Language effort focuses on developing a new technology for building large-scale, distributed multi-language systems. This technology is based upon a new generation of computer languages, called Executable Architecture Definition Languages (EADLs), and an innovative toolset supporting the use of EADLs in evolutionary development and rigorous analysis of large-scale systems.
Bioengineering and health research is a big deal around here. In this game you can become familiar with the language by unscrambling the words that have to do with health and biology.
The Stanford Computer Forum is a cooperative venture that encourages collaboration between the Computer Science Department, the Computer Systems Laboratory, and the Information Systems Laboratory at Stanford, and 60+ companies located in Silicon Valley, the rest of the U.S., Asia, and Europe.
RaPIDS: Rapid Prototyping of Intuitive Discovery at Stanford
Federated Searching
Federated searching is a strategy for simultaneously searching a number of online resources and pooling the results into one interfiled result set. As part of the RaPIDS (Rapid Prototyping of Intuitive Discovery at Stanford) initiative, SULAIR is experimenting with federated searching as a means of giving scholars a broad view of disparate resources held across many different, isolated systems. For this effort, SULAIR is working with Deep Web Technologies. The company’s federated searching system, Explorit Research Accelerator, is currently powering a number of science, technology and government search portals, including National Digital Library for Agriculture (NDLA), Science.gov, Scitopia, and WorldWideScience.org. SULAIR has developed with Deep Web Technologies three demonstrations of federated searching within the Stanford environment: