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| www.garudaindia.in
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Scientific research is increasingly carried out by communities
of researchers that span disciplines, laboratories,
organizations and national boundaries. These activities
involve geographically distributed and heterogeneous
resources such as computational systems, scientific
instruments, databases, sensors, software components,
networks and people. Such large-scale and enhanced scientific
endeavors are carried out via collaborations on a global
scale in which information and computing technology
plays a vital role and are thus popularly termed as
e-Science.
Grid computing has emerged as one of the key computing
paradigms that enable the creation and management of
Internet-based utility computing infrastructure, called
Cyber-infrastructure, for realization of e-Science and
e-Business at the global level. Many national and international
projects around the world have been initiated to carry
out research and innovation activities that transform
the vision of e-Science and Grid computing into reality.
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The e-Science 2007 conference is
designed to bring together developers and users of e-Science
applications and enabling IT technologies from leading
international and interdisciplinary research communities.
The conference serves as a forum to present the results
of the latest research & product/tool developments,
and highlight related activities from around the world.
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Situated
at an altitude of 920 metres above sea level, Bangalore
is the principal administrative, cultural, commercial
and industrial centre of the state of Karnataka. The
city, which is spread over an area of 2190 square kilometres,
enjoys a pleasant and equable climate throughout the
year. Its tree-lined streets and abundant greenery have
led to it being called the 'Garden City' of India. However,
since local entrepreneurs and the technology giant Texas
Instruments discovered its potential as a high-tech
city in the early 1980s, Bangalore has seen a major
technology boom. It is now home to more than 250 high-tech
companies. Including homegrown giants like Wipro and
Infosys. Consequently, now Bangalore is called the 'Silicon
Valley' of India. Read
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