ACADEMIA
Teragrid's Campus Champions: Users get help from a familiar face
TeraGrid’s Campus Champions program makes it easier for campus-based researchers and educators to access free, readily available computational resources from 11 NSF-funded national supercomputing centers and TeraGrid Resource Provider sites across the country. “Our initial plan was to engage about a dozen campuses during the first year,” said Scott Lathrop, TeraGrid’s area director for education, outreach, and training. “The ultimate goal is to get at least one Champion in every state, along with the U.S. Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico and more as interest and demand warrant.” Led by Kay Hunt of the Rosen Center for Advanced Computing at Purdue University, the effort is intended to reach not only traditional research institutions, but also minority-serving institutions and “Experimental Program to Stimulate Competitive Research” (EPSCoR) schools. | ||
An additional advantage is that assistance is likely to come from a familiar face. “The customer is far more comfortable talking to me because in most cases they know me on a first-name basis,” said Roger Moye, Linux cluster administrator in the Research Computing Support Group and a Campus Champion at Rice University in Texas. Nurit Haspel, a post-doctoral researcher in computational structural biology at Rice, said the TeraGrid and Campus Champions have enabled her to accelerate her research into protein conformation and functionality “by a great deal.” The Champions will get together at theTeraGrid annual conference, June 22-25 in Arlington, Virginia, to learn more about TeraGrid and share information about strategies and opportunities. —Greg Kline, Purdue University SOURCE: International Science Grid this Week http://www.isgtw.org/ |