GHC Presentation: Introducing the Computing Community Consortium

“Introducing the Computing Community Consortium – Facilitating Visions
for Our Future” was a presentation I attended this first afternoon
of the
Grace Hopper Celebration of Women in Computing
here in Orlando, Florida.
Susan Graham of U.C. Berkeley presented information about the
newly-created Computing Community Consortium
(CCC) which is funded by the
U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) and was established by the Computing
Research Association (CRA). CCC is to create venues for community
participation in developing research visions and stimulating new research
activities. The CCC website says:

      Under an agreement with the National Science Foundation, CRA will establish a consortium of computing experts that will provide scientific leadership and vision on issues related to computing research and future large-scale computing research projects.
      Under the three-year, $6 million agreement, CRA will create the Computing Community Consortium (CCC) to identify major research opportunities and establish “grand challenges” for the field. The CCC will create venues for community participation for developing visions and creating new research activities.

It is interesting (if confusing) to listen to unfamiliar
professional jargon. Although I helped to teach a class at U.C. Berkeley
Engineering for many years, I have never formally been a part of a
university. I have also never worked for the government. So, the steady
flow of new acronyms and organization/funding assumptions used in describing
CCC took some immediate mental translation. In fact, because of these
language barriers, I am not entirely sure I understand how CCC works, so
this is a hard blog entry to write.

As an example of the kind of research CCC supports, Jen Rexford of Princeton
talked about Geni (Global Environment for Network Innovations), a project with the goal of creating an academic
grass-roots community to improve Information Technology infrastructure.
Creating a new Internet, thinking from scratch to create a new
long-term vision, seems to be at least part of Geni’s work. More on the

Geni initial design and science plan
is available. Dr. Rexford
said that the research community needs to think big to play a lead role
in how the Internet will evolve.

I asked about the relationship of this academic research community
with the open source community as well as with industry. I wanted to know
if CCC’s visionary work was mostly to be done by academic researchers or
would include a larger technical community. In my question, I used the
example of Sun’s OpenSolaris open source community to illustrate the kind of work and complex
communication that goes into creating technology collaboratively. From
Dr. Graham’s answer, I think that CCC will mostly focus on academic work but
individual CCC projects will get some input from industry. Dr. Graham said
that industry had a shorter term vision while the academic research
community developed visions more than 5 years out. In my experience,
industry does create longer-term visions. We talked after the presentation
and I hope to discuss the question further.

Official
GHC 2007 Blogger
. You may comment on this blog by visiting the
GHC Forum. You
can find me at
http://blogs.sun.com/katysblog
.

Solaris and OpenSolaris are trademarks or registered trademarks of Sun Microsystems, Inc. in the U.S. and other countries.

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