Denis Caromel, UNSA-CNRS-INRIA-IUFDenis Caromel is full professor at INRIA and University of Nice-Sophia Antipolis. He is also member of the Institut Universitaire de France (IUF), a multi-disciplinary national academia that select a few professors (1 % all over France) based on the excellence of their research records. His research interests include parallel, concurrent, and distributed object-oriented, and GRID programming. Altogether, he has published more than 60 scientific papers in referred and international journals and conferences, and edited 5 volumes of Lecture Notes. He gave many invited talks on Object and Distributed Computing at various universities around the world (including Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Berkeley, Stanford, ISI, USC, Electrotechnical Laboratory Tsukuba, Univ. of Sydney, Univ. of Adelaide, Univ. Federal de Rio, University College London, European Science Foundation). He was also an invited visiting scientist at various universities and research institutions (including Digital System Research Center in Palo Alto, and NASA Langley Research Center in Hampton, Virginia). He serve(s/d) many academic conferences, at various functions (Conference Chair, Program Committee Chair, Organizer Chair, Tutorials Chair). |
Presentation: "Panel - J2EE"
Track:
Scalable and Grid Computing (J2EE)
Time: To be announced Location: Plenary Room Presentation: "Programming, Composing, Deploying, for the GRID"
Track:
Scalable and Grid Computing (J2EE)
Time: Monday 14:15 - 15:15 Location: Room 1
Abstract: INRIA and ObjectWeb consortium for Open-source middleware
http://www.objectweb.org/
http://ProActive.objectweb.org/
Full professor at University of Nice-Sophia, INRIA-CNRS team OASIS,
Member of Institut Universitaire de France (IUF)
French initiative "Grid 5000", European Network of Excellence "CoreGrid"
Many people believe that components will play an important role in future
parallel and distributed systems, and probably will be the key technology
for GRIDs.
To explore such techniques, this talk first gives a very general
introduction to Grid and components, and illustrates their concepts with
a practical platform. We present the main ideas of hierarchical and
distributed components. To master complexity of programming and deploying on
the Grid, a component can actually span over several machines, migrate
from a set of machines to another one.
Recently, we have a developed an object-oriented applications that we have
been executing on 252 processors at once. This concrete application will be
used as an illustrating example.
This talk will include on going and emerging standards: Web Services for the
Grid, OGSA-OGSI, and especially WSRF (Web Services Resource Framework), the
convergence between Web and Grid Services.
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