DocumentCode
19351
Title
A Scientist´s Guide to Cloud Computing
Author
Tsaftaris, Sotirios A.
Author_Institution
IMT Inst. for Adv. Studies Lucca, Northwestern Univ., Lucca, Italy
Volume
16
Issue
1
fYear
2014
fDate
Jan.-Feb. 2014
Firstpage
70
Lastpage
76
Abstract
New tools (some commercial and even public), have made it so that dealing with the cloud and running large-scale processing can be rather easy and efficient. Cloud´s appeal for science is clear: simplicity, elasticity (that is, the availability of large resources on the spot by launching as many instances as needed), true reproducibility (the virtual machine and the code running on that machine can be made public together with the data, when necessary), the ability to cover a large span of open questions previously unattainable due to a possible lack of computing power, and most importantly, democratization of science (since anyone has access to large computing power). PiCloud (www.multyvac.com) is one of the first commercial entities with a special focus on making scientific computing in the cloud simple for the users. PiCloud provisions AWS instances transparently to the user, acting as a middleware between AWS and the user. Their provisioning technology allows PiCloud to compete for the lower cost spot instances on Amazon.
Keywords
cloud computing; middleware; natural sciences computing; virtual machines; Amazon; PiCloud; cloud computing; middleware; science; scientific computing; virtual machine; Cloud computing; Computer applications; Linux; Neuroimaging; Scientific computing; cloud computing; scientific computing;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Computing in Science & Engineering
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1521-9615
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MCSE.2014.12
Filename
6756844
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