Founding Corporate Members Meeting June 11, 2002 Quo Vadis CITRIS? by Ruzena Bajcsy.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
INDIANAUNIVERSITYINDIANAUNIVERSITY GENI Global Environment for Network Innovation James Williams Director – International Networking Director – Operational.
Advertisements

Electric Vehicles Industrial Cluster - NPO IKEM Corp. (Business entity of EVIC) Changing the Government Agenda of EU's poorest countries using the power.
Overview Why are we here today? Daniel Kirschen, UW Anjan Bose, WSU.
Introduction Build and impact metric data provided by the SGIG recipients convey the type and extent of technology deployment, as well as its effect on.
OneM2M Technical Requirements - Driven by EU BUTLER and IEEE PAC - Group Name: WG1 (REQ) Source: Friedbert Berens, FBConsulting Sarl,
High Performance Commercial Buildings Initiative December 21, 2007 Energy efficiency, demand response, and Smart Buildings The CITRIS project funded by.
Smart Growth Planning Tab. “We express our values by what we build…” What we build on and near campus should exemplify our strong appreciation for supporting.
International Telecommunication Union Committed to connecting the world 4 th ITU Green Standards Week Paolo Gemma WG2 Coordinator, ITU-T Focus Group on.
GENI: Global Environment for Networking Innovations Larry Landweber Senior Advisor NSF:CISE Joint Techs Madison, WI July 17, 2006.
CCTC Background Process coordinated by NASDCTEc 42 states, DC, and one territory involved in development Modeled the process and outcomes of Common Core.
Chicago’s Broadband Strategy TOWARDS AFFORDABLE, UNIVERSAL TECHNOLOGY ACCESS City of Chicago Richard M. Daley, Mayor Department of Innovation and Technology.
1 UC Santa Cruz Foundation Board Meeting Sung-Mo (Steve) Kang Dean, Baskin School of Engineering April 5, 2002.
Smart Buildings and Smart Energy CITRIS Kickoff meeting – Sept J. Rabaey College of Engineering, University of California at Berkeley.
CITRIS James Demmel EECS and Mathematics Depts. University of California at Berkeley Center For Information Technology Research.
FCM MEETING1 CITRIS Founding Corporate Members Meeting Thursday, February 27, 2003 University of California Berkeley - University of California Davis University.
Finale’ cs294-8 Design of Deeply Networked Systems Spring 2000 David Culler & Randy Katz U.C. Berkeley
Connecting the Invisible Extremes of Computing David Culler U.C. Berkeley Summer Inst. on Invisible Computing July,
Societal Scale Civil Infrastructure Gregory L. Fenves Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering UC Santa Cruz.
BITS Berkeley Information Technology & Systems A New Research Center at UCB September 17, 2001.
Smart Buildings and Smart Energy CITRIS Kickoff meeting – Sept J. Rabaey College of Engineering, University of California at Berkeley.
Global City Teams Challenge Funding Opportunities.
Update on Current Research Agenda Jim Demmel, Chief Scientist EECS and Math Depts. UC Santa Cruz.
Intel ® Research mote Ralph Kling Intel Corporation Research Santa Clara, CA.
Smart Home Technologies CSE 4392 / CSE 5392 Spring 2006 Manfred Huber
A Survey of Mobile Phone Sensing Michael Ruffing CS 495.
Tanenbaum & Van Steen, Distributed Systems: Principles and Paradigms, 2e, (c) 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc. All rights reserved DISTRIBUTED SYSTEMS.
IT Governance Steering Committee December 2, 2010.
SMART BUILDING Yousef Awwad Te-Yuan Huang Newlin Rajkumar Group No.11.
1 CITRIS OVERVIEW April 2004 UC BERKELEY UC DAVIS UC MERCED UC SANTA CRUZ Ruzena Bajcsy.
INTERNET2 COLLABORATIVE INNOVATION PROGRAM DEVELOPMENT Florence D. Hudson Senior Vice President and Chief Innovation.
Tufts Wireless Laboratory School Of Engineering Tufts University “Network QoS Management in Cyber-Physical Systems” Nicole Ng 9/16/20151 by Feng Xia, Longhua.
Tanenbaum & Van Steen, Distributed Systems: Principles and Paradigms, 2e, (c) 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc. All rights reserved DISTRIBUTED.
Fostering worldwide interoperability ICT & Environment Activities in Korea Byoung Moon Chin Vice President, TTA Global Standards Collaboration (GSC) 14.
Experience you can trust. Knowledge2006 – Technology Roundtable Dan Ruiz
Utilizing Science & Technology and Innovation for Development Enabling a Smart Campus using Distributed Smart-Solar Marriott Hotel- Amman, August 12th,
Energy efficient sensor networks SRA Ambient Intelligence 2008.
Journey to a Real Time Enterprise
Center For Information Technology Research In The Interest Of Society A Partnership for California’s Future University Industry Government R. H. Katz,
Science & Technology Centers Program Center for Science of Information National Science Foundation Science & Technology Centers Program Bryn Mawr Howard.
Security and Privacy in Smart Communities By: Dr. Tan Hanh, Dr. Hoang Xuan Dau Posts and Telecommunications Institute of Technology (PTIT), Hanoi, Vietnam.
CSL Global Infotech Prof Chong Tow Chong Executive Director Science & Engineering Research Council Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR)
TRUST NSF Site Visit, Berkeley, March, 2007 Sensor Networks: Technology Transfer Stephen Wicker – Cornell University.
Network Weaving Community of Practice December 12, 2013 C&NN Grassroots Leaders WELCOME.
1 The Bethesda Hospitals’ Emergency Preparedness Partnership 2009 Strategic Plan.
DOE Wireless and Sensing Honeywell DOE Wireless and Sensing Program.
Networked Embedded and Control Systems WP ICT Call 2 Objective ICT ICT National Contact Points Mercè Griera i Fisa Brussels, 23 May 2007.
Illinois Century Network Illinois Broadband Opportunity Partnership – East Central Project.
1 Ubiquitous Computing Nov. 15, 2006 Ki-Joune Li.
Systems Wireless EmBedded Wireless Sensor Nets Turning the Physical World into Information David Culler Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences University.
Spotlight: Personal Natural Resource Consumption Profiler Younghun Kim, Zainul Charbiwala, Akhilesh Singhania, Thomas Schmid, Mani B. Srivastava Networked.
ProActive Infrastructure Eric Brewer, David Culler, Anthony Joseph, Randy Katz Computer Science Division U.C. Berkeley ninja.cs.berkeley.edu Active Networks.
1970 Campus Dr. Evanston, IL. 
Workshop: Food, Energy and Water Nexus in Sustainable Cities Beijing October 20-21, 2015 Nada Marie Anid, Ph.D. Dean School of Engineering and Computing.
Information Technology Services Strategic Directions Approach and Proposal “Charting Our Course”
Course, Curriculum, and Laboratory Improvement (CCLI) Transforming Undergraduate Education in Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics PROGRAM.
Budget & Legislative Update Staff Senate August 5, 2015 Charles D. Leffler Vice Chancellor for Finance and Administration.
Societal-Scale Computing: The eXtremes Scalable, Available Internet Services Information Appliances Client Server Clusters Massive Cluster Gigabit Ethernet.
Understanding IT Infrastructure Lecture 9. 2 Announcements Business Case due Thursday Business Analysis teams have been formed Business Analysis Proposals.
Cyberinfrastructure Overview of Demos Townsville, AU 28 – 31 March 2006 CREON/GLEON.
© 2016 IBM Corporation How to grow from a smart solution to a smart city Smart Cities – Driving a New Economy: How to grow from a smart solution to a smart.
CITRIS James Demmel EECS and Mathematics Depts. University of California at Berkeley Center For Information Technology Research.
1 Enabling Smart Cities/Campuses to Serve the Internet of People Florence Hudson Senior Vice President & Chief Innovation Officer Internet2 TNC16 June.
EUB Brazil: IoT Pilots HORIZON 2020 WP EUB Brazil: IoT Pilots DG CONNECT European Commission.
Medium Access Control. MAC layer covers three functional areas: reliable data delivery access control security.
The NSRC cultivates collaboration among a community of peers to build and improve a global Internet that benefits all parties. We facilitate the growth.
Ayushman: Pervasive Health Monitoring System and Testbed
TRUST:Team for Research in Ubiquitous Secure Technologies
Natural Hazard Mitigation
IBM Pervasive Computing Visit June 9, 1997
Karen Bartleson, President, IEEE Standards Association
Presentation transcript:

Founding Corporate Members Meeting June 11, 2002 Quo Vadis CITRIS? by Ruzena Bajcsy

Goals for Today Inform you on where we are and where we are going Seek your advice on the intellectual agenda for CITRIS in the following areas: –Organization –Resources –Interaction between: –FCMs and the UC CITRIS alliance –UC CITRIS and the state of California –UC CITRIS and the universe

CITRIS Operating Income Statement May 31, 2002 Operating Revenue1,328,25454% Research Revenue1,129,50246% Total revenue2,457,756 Operating Expenses 731,33940% Research Expenses1,088,59560% Total expenses1,819,934Net surplus 637,822

Current and Near Term Space Intel Lab in Power Bar Building on Shattuck CommerceNet incubator at Bancroft and Shattuck Hearst Mining (August 2002) –BID (Berkeley Institute of Design) Cory Renovation –At 20K ASF, by summer 2003

The New CITRIS Building Construction will begin in summer 2003 Architectural plans are well underway It will house the Microfabrication Laboratory (Professor Howe will give more details) Remaining space will be allocated to other CITRIS related projects

New Distributed System Architectures Societal-Scale Applications CITRIS Scientific Strategy Societal-Scale Applications Technological Breakthroughs New Sensors/actuators Wireless communication Security and Reliability Human/Computer interaction Applications Pull Technology Push Sensing and actuation Huge Scale Can’t fail

Technology Invention in a Social Context: Quality of Life Impact  Energy Efficiency  Transportation Planning  EducatioTechnology Invention in a Social Context: Quality of Life Impact  Energy Efficiency  Transportation Planning  Education

 Monitoring Health Care  Land and Environment  Disaster Response Technology Invention in a Social Context: Quality of Life Impact

The CITRIS Model Core Technologies ApplicationsFoundations Reliablity Reliablity Availability Availability Security, Security, Algorithms Algorithms Social, policy issues Social, policy issues Distributed Info Systems Distributed Info Systems Micro sensors/actuators Micro sensors/actuators Human-Comp Interaction Human-Comp Interaction Prototype Deployment Prototype Deployment Initially Leverage Existing Initially Leverage Existing Expertise on campuses Expertise on campuses Societal-Scale Information Systems Societal-Scale Information Systems(SIS)

CITRIS Applications Saving Energy – Arens Transportation Systems – Demmel SensorNets and their many applications – Culler We are now exploring the current efforts in Security, Privacy and Critical Infrastructure Protection to Global Security in discussions with: –UCB Dean of Public Policy –Institute of International Studies –UC Davis Institute on Bioterrorism

CITRIS Applications (2) Smart Classrooms – Paul Wright Dealing with Data Sets – Wilensky and Varian –In addition to the data sets work you will hear about - we are exploring with UC museums how to design easy access to their various collections Large Networks – Howe and Yoo –In addition to large networks we are exploring applications for telemedicine (surgery)

Societal-Scale Systems “Client” “Server” Clusters Massive Cluster Gigabit Ethernet Secure, non-stop utility Diverse components Adapts to interfaces/users Always connected MEMS Sensors Scalable, Reliable, Secure Services Information Appliances

Energy Monitoring Network Arch sensor net GW control net GW 20-ton chiller PC scada term modbus UCB power monitor net PC telegraph MYSQL Browser

Where Can CITRIS Make a Difference? In deployment of IT research results on LARGE SCALE (which cannot be implemented or deployed by one or two faculty members) In deployment of IT in societal problems

What Does This Require? Setting up large test beds and/or Providing the glue between existing test beds/data sets Sustained support for Engineering staff!

Examples Summer 2002 we are installing 300 MOTEs in all 6 floors of Cory Hall, connected to adhoc wireless network, measuring light and temperature Final results from each floor will be transmitted to a secure UCB website in physical plant Network will serve as research infrastructure for other CITRIS sensor projects The vision is to analyze this data and provide for feedback control Goal is to spread network to all of Engineering and ultimately all of UCB

We Seek Your Advice on the Following Issues Improving cooperation within the Northern California UC alliance (sharing of resources, facilities, students, visitors…) Increased communication between the CISIs and Sacramento How to respond to world-wide requests from Universities and their local corporations regarding CITRIS collaboration

What Does CITRIS Need? More Industrial Partners How do we increase the number of supporting corporations –Platinum Corporate Members? –Associate Corporate Members? We are soliciting not just your advice, but also your approval on reasonable engagement models for new corporate members and outside Universities seeking to partner with CITRIS