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Comment: added question to Projects talks (10:15-11:30)

Time

Session 1

Notes

 WEDNESDAY

             ITANA                                

 

THURSDAY

Advanced CAMP

 

7:30-8:30

Breakfast

 

8:30-9:00

Introductions and Goals of the Workshop
Bob

Provide set of issues to report on
per Chas examples below

9:00-10:00


CI Salad: Defining the Problem 
What needs must CyberInfrastructure for the Humanities meet? Two Mellon-funded projects, SEASR and Bamboo, are trying to determine the leading problems to be solved to support digital humanties efforts and the frameworks, tools, and services needed to solve them. This session will brief us on what has been learned up to this early point in these projects, the approach each is taking, and the relationships they'd like to develop between their efforts and others.

Chad Kainz, SEASR (Ken)

10:00-10:15

Break

 

10:15-11:30

Service Oriented Projects in Higher Ed
There are several community source service oriented efforts which address issues particular to higher education.  In this session we will explore these efforts and hear experiences of developers and early adopters.




Jens to ask Kuali Rice/Student
Fedora - Ken
Do we want to mention Kuali/Fedora explicitly?  I think we're confirmed on a Kuali speaker. 

11:30-1:00

Lunch

 

1:00-2:15

Computing as a Service
What tools and frameworks do we develop to make research computing into a service oriented endeavor?  The OGSA and several Cloud Computing vendors are developing standards to create a grid-like architecture based on Web Services.  This session will explore the current state of cloud computing and how higher ed can utilize these services.


Leif to find cloud computing speaker.
Jim to ask Jim Dornan and Mark Vanderwiele

Other vendors? Amazon, Google, MS?
Bob to look into UW CS contacts.
OGSA (Ken)

2:15-2:30

Break


2:30-3:45


Panel: ESBs and Widely-distributed Services
Many large organizations use Enterprise Service Bus products to integrate services.  While loosely-coupled technically, these deployments tend to be single-organization and centrally-managed.  A panel of ESB experts will reflect on the applicability of technology and methods to multi-organization, decentralized, serendipitous, project-centric service environments.


Dennis Gagnon (Ken)
ISI - Ewa Deelman (Bob)

MULE, JBoss, IBM -  possibly global routing table ESB

3:45-4:00

Break

 

4:00-5:00

Discussion Groups: Data Models, Governance, Service Discovery
As higher ed moves from a centralized, single institution model of enterprise information to a more service oriented, federated approach, we will need to alter our data models, reconsider our governance, and improve service discovery.  In this session, we will break out into three groups: Data Models, Governance, and Service Discovery and discuss how each of these is disrupted by these new approaches and what we can do and have done to mitigate these disruptions.


Orchestration/Information discovery: How do you go about finding information of interest and cross linking your results?  But where does infrastructure stop and governance begin? Or is it a design pattern instead of an infrastructure component?


Breakout room needed for this session only.

5:30-7:00

Reception

Offer an unconference: Set up blank poster boards around the room with markers and have folks write their own topic(s) on the board for discussion in that area of the room.

 

 

 

 FRIDAY

 

 

7:30-8:30

Breakfast

 

8:30-9:30



Panel: Privacy and Policy
This session will discuss privacy and policy issues that loosely coupled and distributed environments create or illuminate, such as
operational policy and procedures across sites, trust among organizations to share and manage well-run services, and maintain appropriate privacy policy.


Blakely (Bob), Lori Crantor?, Tracy Mitrano?

EGEE - Bob Cowles (Tom)

9:30-10:30


Discussion Group Report-outs and Lightning Talks
As a follow up to the previous day's discussion groups, attendees will provide short reports of their breakout session. We'll then move into Lightning Talks: Do you have a practice or interesting approach to share? Or would you like to connect up with someone with a similar challenge and collaborate on a solution? These very short talks will provide a final chance for attendees to discuss a good idea or opportunity for peer networking.

 

10:30-11:00

Break

 

11:00-Noon


Wrap-up and Findings
The program committee will lead a discussion session to summarize the final points from the last day and develop any conclusions and next steps.


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