[Storage-research-list] CALL TO ELECTION until June 14, 2011: Steering & Project Selection Committee for NSF PRObE testbed (newmexicoconsortium.org/probe)

Garth Gibson garth at cs.cmu.edu
Thu Jun 9 16:41:05 EDT 2011



Election of Steering and Project Selection Committee for NSF PRObE testbed

Nominations are closed and its election time.  All individual that do or might serve as an NSF investigator or have a publishing track record in OS/HPC/Systems are encouraged to visit and vote:

http://www.newmexicoconsortium.org/probe/committee-voting

It should only take a couple of minutes to select up to 6 names and list your name, email, title, affiliation (or other qualifications).

Please vote -- if only to show us that you are interested in what PRObE is doing and get on our  "announce" mailing list.

NOMINEES FROM ACADEMIA (select up to 4):
		* Scott Brandt - UCSC
		* Steven Gribble - Washington
		* Anthony Joseph - Berkeley
		* Robert van Renesse - Cornell
		* Karsten Schwan - Georgia Tech
		* Margo Seltzer - Harvard
		* George Thiruvathukal - Loyola

NOMINEES FROM GOVERNMENT (select up to 1):
		* Ron Brightwell - Sandia National Laboratory
		* Ronald Minnich - Sandia National Laboratory
		* Robert Ross - Argonne National Laboratory

NOMINEES FROM INDUSTRY (selection up to 1):
		* John Wilkes - Google

The NSF-funded Parallel Reconfigurable Observational Environment (PRObE, newmexicoconsortium.org/probe) facility will be making thousands of computers available to systems researchers for dedicated use in experiments that are not possible or compelling at a smaller scale.  

At full production scale PRObE will provide at least two 1024 node clusters, one of 200 nodes, and some smaller machines with extreme core count and bleeding edge technology.  The first of these clusters are being constructed now and will be available this year.  The large clusters are retired equipment donated by DOE national laboratories. 

Researchers will have complete control of the hardware (can replace all levels of software, including the OS kernel, and inject both hardware and software failures) while they are running experiments  with dedicated resources for days or perhaps weeks. 

PRObE is a collaborative effort by the New Mexico Consortium (NMC), Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL), Carnegie Mellon University, and the University of Utah. It is sponsored by NSF, LANL, and USENIX. It is housed at NMC in the Los Alamos Research Park.  
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