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Details of Grant 

EPSRC Reference: GR/T27488/01
Title: Rapid Prototyping Of Usable Grid Middleware
Principal Investigator: Coveney, Professor P
Other Investigators:
Essex, Professor JW Frey, Professor JG Gavaghan, Professor D
Brooke, Dr J
Researcher Co-Investigators:
Project Partners:
University of Southampton
Department: Chemistry
Organisation: UCL
Scheme: Standard Research (Pre-FEC)
Starts: 03 April 2005 Ends: 02 April 2007 Value (£): 331,136
EPSRC Research Topic Classifications:
Information & Knowledge Mgmt Networks & Distributed Systems
EPSRC Industrial Sector Classifications:
Information Technologies
Related Grants:
Panel History:  
Summary on Grant Application Form
This proposal brings together partners from the RealityGrid, Comb-e-Chem, Integrative Biology, & myGrid e-Science Pilot Projects, the EPSRC CCP5 DL-MESO project, and US collaborators working with RealityGrid who are working on a wide variety of scientific problems. The UK Open Middleware Infrastructure Institute is supporting this proposal and is contributing directly. The central aim of the proposal is to develop and apply lightweight grid middleware, for ease of installation, maintenance and manageability, by a variety of computational science groups with interests in condensed matter modelling and simulation in the physical and life sciences, through a process of rapid prototyping. The primary advantage of this approach is to avoid the middleware being developed in a vacuum, ignorant of end-user needs, and thereby to solve the pressing problem that applications are unable to use current UK and international Grids since the installed middleware does not provide sufficient support for scientifically productive applications. If UK eScience technologies are to be integrated within mainstream scientific and engineering research practise, it is clear that usability must play a central role; this project proposes to make a key contribution in this area.With our lightweight middleware, we can adjust the underlying conformance to proposed changes in standards in a matter of days to weeks. Although our original implementations have been based on OGSI, we look forward to the recently announced Web Services Resource Framework (WSRF), which, inter alia, allows us to define different web service interfaces to the same stateful resources. Scientific users will thus be able to easily exploit the services offered on the grid by the middleware, and indeed discover and propose new ones that are instantly useful in their research.
Key Findings
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Potential use in non-academic contexts
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Summary
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