Ads by TechWords

See your link here
Subscribe to our e-mail newsletters
For more info on a specific newsletter, click the title. Details will be displayed in a new window.
Computerworld Daily News (First Look and Wrap-Up)
Computerworld Blogs Newsletter
The Weekly Top 10
More E-Mail Newsletters 
 

Data Finds a Place on the Grid

Vendor support and standards are just evolving, but companies are looking to share data across grids.

April 5, 2004 12:00 PM ET

Computerworld - The data grid has been playing second fiddle to the compute grid when it comes to media attention. But companies and public institutions searching for better ways to share and manage large amounts of data are beginning to take notice.


A compute grid allows users to take the computing resources in a distributed and heterogeneous environment, manage those disparate resources as one and focus them on problem solving.


A data grid acts in a similar way. It has a middleware layer and metadata framework to give users a centralized view of distributed data without physically centralizing the data.


That means the data can be located on Windows, Unix or Linux systems running multiple formats. It can be structured or unstructured and can consist of different media types. A data grid and a compute grid can operate together—the principles are the same.


But there are limits to what a grid can do. A grid, for instance, doesn't offer a means for discovering and categorizing unstructured data. What the data grid provides is a standards-based framework for interconnecting that information once those tasks are addressed.


Data-grid technology is in the early-adopter phase, drawing the interest of research institutions with large and scattered data repositories, such as Pfizer Global Research & Development in Groton, Conn., and the University of Arkansas Center for Advanced Spatial Studies in Fayetteville, as well as research consortiums such as the European Union's DataGrid project, led by particle physics research center CERN.


Data grids will find broader applications as standards mature and technology problems, such as managing security in a grid's distributed environment, are solved, say analysts and users.


"I think the whole promise of grid is pretty exciting," says Paul Lewis, director of research information architecture at Pfizer. But more work is needed, he adds.


Seeking Support


Products that support data in a grid environment are emerging. For example, Pfizer uses Avaki Inc.'s data-grid software. The Center for Advanced Spatial Studies takes advantage of the grid capabilities in Oracle 10g, Oracle Corp.'s flagship database.


But the very concept of grids involves interconnectedness among disparate applications and data sources. Until vendors include standards-based grid capabilities, interfaces and processes in their products, data-grid adoptions are going to be limited.


"Vendors have got to step up and say, 'We're going to make our products grid-enabled,' " says Lewis. "If more vendors grid-enable products, it makes our job easier, because then we can plug in more computers when we need more capacity."


Emerging data-grid products, such as Avaki's, are being used within companies. But some of the leading thinkers behind the data-grid effort imagine developing systems that connect large numbers of enterprises, entire supply chains and customer bases.

"The equivalent of the Internet Protocol for remote access to data is still a work in progress," says Ian Foster, senior scientist and head of the Distributed Systems Lab at Argonne National Laboratory in Illinois and co-director of the grid standards effort at the Globus Alliance.



Additional Resources

POLL RESULTS
Accelerate your knowledge of the IT world you inhabit by viewing the results of a series of polls taken by your IT peers. These polls of 100+ IT professionals each are available for full viewing. They cover key topics such as virtualization, processor performance, green IT, cloud computing and many others. Be a part of the buzz.
WHITE PAPER
Technology is complex. Keeping it running productively shouldn't be. To that end, you want to minimize the number of solutions needed in-house to simplify operations, maintenance, and support. Kodak offers a best-practices model. One company provides support for both scanner and software, for fast problem resolution without vendor finger-pointing. Download now!
WHITE PAPER
Utilizing demand intelligence improves the precision of pricing, product assortments, channel/store placement, and promotion, which are all essential for sustainable revenue management performance. Learn more, download this free whitepaper today.

White Papers & Webcasts

MarketVibe: Communications and Collaboration Needs at Business Organizations
In April 2009, IT and business leaders were invited to participate in a survey on business communications and collaboration solutions. The goal of...  

How to Reduce Eclipse BIRT Development Effort for Data Visualizations
Web applications can come with a long list of visualization requirements for structured data. By delivering your output through the BIRT Interactive Viewer,...

The Value of Network and Application Visibility by Aberdeen
This survey-based paper analyzes best practices for improving application visibility and analysis. This paper can help serve as a guideline for organizations looking...  

Legacy IT Modernization - Practical Reality
(Source: BluePhoenix) Corporate budgets continue to tighten. Organizations are looking at ways to reduce operating costs and eliminate unnecessary expenses while at the...

The CIO's New Guide to Design of Global IT Infrastructure
Is it possible to eliminate the impact of distance? This paper explores the 5 key principles successful CIOs are using to redesign IT...  

Interactive Guide: Getting Started with Data Governance
In this online interactive guide, Andrew White, Research VP with lead analyst firm Gartner, answers these questions to help get you on the...

2007 Gartner Magic Quadrant Report
Riverbed positioned in Leaders Quadrant of Gartner Magic Quadrant for WAN Optimization Controllers. Analyzing strengths vs. cautions, Gartner helps organizations looking to acquire...  

Why Now is the Right Time for the Linux Desktop
(Source: Novell) Faced with tighter budgets, enterprises are rethinking their desktop strategies to deliver the same - if not better - services and...

Five Steps to Successful IT Consolidation
Has your Enterprise made the strategic decision to consolidate remote site IT infrastructure into central data centers? Then you have probably discovered that...  

Agile Enterprise Content Management (ECM) for Rapid ROI
(Source: IBM) Content rich business processes are a core feature of daily operations at just about any organization today. Very often these essential...

 

SAS Information Management Kit

SAS is the leader in business intelligence and analytical software and services. Only SAS offers leading data integration, storage, analytics and business intelligence applications within a comprehensive enterprise intelligence platform. SAS gives 97 of the top 100 companies in the 2007 Fortune 500 THE POWER TO KNOW®.

Webcast: The Information Management Roadmap
Imagine high-quality data, cleansed, analyzed and delivered throughout your organization. Join Computerworld, IT visionary Thornton May and a panel of experts to learn how SAS® can help you make it happen.

View this webcast 
Research Report: Information Management Initiatives at Midsize and Large Organizations
See the top-line results of this Computerworld sponsored survey to see how IT and business leaders are handling information management implementation.

Download this report 
White Paper: Information Management: Better Information for Winning Decisions.
This white paper explains how the SAS Information Evolution Model aids companies in assessing how they use this information to make strategic decisions and drive business.

Download this white paper