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Press Release 08-066
A CluE in the Search for Data-Intensive Computing

Unique relationship between Google, IBM and NSF allows academic computing research community to access large-scale computer cluster

An artist's rendition of a server farm, showing rows of computers planted like crops.

Data clusters, also called data centers or server farms, contain as many as 90,000 servers.
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April 23, 2008

The Computer and Information Science and Engineering (CISE) directorate at the National Science Foundation (NSF) released a solicitation for proposals for the new Cluster Exploratory (CluE) initiative. The CluE program was announced in February as a part of a relationship between Google, IBM and NSF. NSF hopes this initiative will help lead to innovations in the field of data-intensive computing, as well as serve as an example for future collaborations between the private sector and the academic computing research community.

CluE will provide NSF-funded researchers access to software and services running on a Google-IBM cluster to explore innovative research ideas in data-intensive computing. NSF will allocate cluster computing resources for a broad range of proposals which will explore the potential of this technology to contribute to science and engineering research and produce applications which promise to benefit society as a whole.

"The software and services that run on these data clusters provide a brand new paradigm for highly parallel, highly reliable distributed computing, especially for processing massive amounts of data," said Jeannette Wing, assistant director for CISE at NSF. Academic researchers have expressed a need for access to similar computing resources that will allow them to engage and explore this emerging and pervasive model of computing.

In the last five years, private sector companies have launched a number of highly effective Internet-scale applications powered by massively scaled, highly distributed computing resources known as data clusters. Sometimes referred to as data centers or server farms, these clusters contain as many as 90,000 servers, each co-located with hundreds of gigabytes of data. These increases in network capacity and fundamental changes in computer architecture are encouraging software developers to take new approaches to computer-science problem solving.

Until now, such resources have not been easily available or affordable for academic researchers. In October 2007, Google and IBM created a large-scale computer cluster of approximately 1600 processors to give the academic community access to otherwise prohibitively expensive resources. Earlier this year, NSF joined with two companies to assist with this effort, and the CluE initiative was born. "With the CluE initiative," Wing said, "through the software and services provided by Google and IBM, the academic research community will now have access to such resources."

This new relationship expands access to this research infrastructure to academic institutions across the nation. In an effort to create greater awareness of research opportunities using data-intensive computing, NSF is now soliciting proposals from academic researchers who will then be selected by NSF to have access to the cluster. NSF will also provide support to the researchers to conduct their work while Google and IBM will cover the costs associated with operating the cluster and other support to the researchers.

Wing noted that the initiative is looking for proposals that focus on data-intensive applications and "not cluster computing per se. We are not looking for scientific applications that are based primarily on solving massive numbers of partial differential equations since high-end computing resources are available for such research already."

From this initial solicitation of the CluE initiative, NSF expects to award up to $5 million spread between 10 and 15 awards, depending on availability of funds. Selected projects will be funded up to $500,000, for durations of up to two years.

-NSF-

Media Contacts
Dana W. Cruikshank, NSF (703) 292-8070 dcruiksh@nsf.gov

Program Contacts
Jim French, NSF (703) 292-8930 jfrench@nsf.gov

Related Websites
More information about the CluE initiative and links to the solicitation: http://www.nsf.gov/cise/clue/index.jsp

The National Science Foundation (NSF) is an independent federal agency that supports fundamental research and education across all fields of science and engineering, with an annual budget of $6.06 billion. NSF funds reach all 50 states through grants to over 1,900 universities and institutions. Each year, NSF receives about 45,000 competitive requests for funding, and makes over 11,500 new funding awards. NSF also awards over $400 million in professional and service contracts yearly.

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Jeannette Wing, assistant director for CISE at NSF, discusses the CluE solicitation.
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Jeannette Wing, assistant director for CISE at NSF, discusses the CluE solicitation.
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Last Updated:
April 23, 2008
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Last Updated: April 23, 2008