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Microsoft, NSF Team for
Cloud Research
February 4, 2010
Microsoft
and the National Science Foundation (NSF) have made an agreement that
will offer individual researchers and research groups selected through
NSF's merit review process free access to advanced cloud computing
resources. By extending the capabilities of powerful, easy-to-use PC
applications via Microsoft cloud services, the program is designed to
help broaden research capabilities, foster collaborative research
communities, and accelerate scientific discovery. Projects will be
awarded and managed by NSF.
Microsoft will provide cloud computing research projects identified by
NSF with access to Windows Azure for a three-year period, along with a
support team to help researchers quickly integrate cloud technology into
their research. Windows Azure provides on-demand compute and storage to
host, scale and manage Web applications on the Internet through
Microsoft datacenters. Microsoft researchers and developers will work
with grant recipients to equip them with a set of common tools,
applications and data collections that can be shared with the broad
academic community, and also provide its expertise in research, science
and cloud computing.
"Cloud computing can transform how research is conducted, accelerating
scientific exploration, discovery and results," said Dan Reed, corporate
vice president, Technology Strategy and Policy and eXtreme Computing at
Microsoft. "These grants will also help researchers explore rich and
diverse multidisciplinary data on a large scale."
Today,
scientists are operating in a world dominated by data, thanks to
increasingly inexpensive sensors and a growing trend toward
collaborative data projects. Analyzing and synthesizing this mass of
data remain a challenge. The goal of the new program is to make simple
yet powerful tools available that any researcher can use to extract
insights by mining and combining diverse data sets.
"We've entered a new era of science--one based on data-driven
exploration--and each new generation of computing technology, such as
cloud computing, creates unprecedented opportunities for discovery,"
said Jeannette M. Wing, assistant director for the NSF Computer and
Information Science directorate. "We are working with Microsoft to
provide the academic community a novel cloud computing service with
which to experiment and explore, with the grander goal of advancing the
frontiers of science and engineering as we tackle societal grand
challenges." |