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December
6, 2004
UCSD Engineers Join International
Consortium To Advance ‘Invisible’ Computing
By Doug Ramsey
Computer scientists
and electrical engineers from the University of California,
San Diego (UCSD), have joined a consortium of mostly European
scientists setting out to network together the billions of electronic
devices in everyday use.
The Reconfigurable
Ubiquitous Networked Embedded Systems (RUNES) project aims to
expand and simplify existing and future networks of devices
and embedded systems. Between now and April 2007 when the project
is slated to end, it will create a standardized computing infrastructure
that can adjust itself to different environments and different
demands placed on it.
“The goal is
to create systems that link together all the ‘invisible’
computers around us, and make their power available for multiple
new applications,” said Rajesh Gupta, who holds the QUALCOMM
Endowed Chair in Embedded Microsystems in UCSD’s Jacobs
School of Engineering. “This project will create vital
new applications from healthcare and transport systems to manufacturing
and disaster recovery.”
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| RUNES
targets networks with distributed resource and location-aware
computing. This graphic describes the critical network system
management, and the lines portray communication among event
processors, aggregators and sensor networks. |
The RUNES project is
supported by research funding from the European Union’s
Sixth Framework Programme. Major industry partners include Kodak
and Ericsson. The consortium has 22 partners from six European
countries, plus Australia and the United States. Only two U.S.
universities are represented: UC Berkeley and UCSD. Gupta and
three other scientists affiliated with the California Institute
for Telecommunications and Information Technology [Cal-(IT)²]
will participate in the RUNES project at UCSD: Ericsson research
scientist Per Johansson; assistant professor in residence Ingolf
Krueger; and Ramesh Rao, director of the San Diego division
of Cal-(IT)², a partnership of UCSD and UC Irvine.
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| UCSD
researchers involved in the RUNES project include (l-r):
Cal-(IT)2 UCSD division director and ECE professor Ramesh
Rao; CSE professor Rajesh Gupta; CSE assistant professor
in residence Ingolf Krueger; and Cal-(IT)2/Ericsson researcher
Per Johannson. |
The UCSD participants
are members of Cal-(IT)²’s Adaptive Systems Laboratory.
With funding from Ericsson and the UC Discovery Grant program,
lab scientists are focusing on designing a wireless environment
that is ‘always on’ -- regardless of location.
“Cheap and low-powered
radio technologies, such as Bluetooth, and the rapid expansion
of the Internet, make it practical to network these devices
and systems,” said Rao, who holds the QUALCOMM Endowed
Chair in Telecommunications and Information Technologies in
the Jacobs School. “The market for embedded systems is
growing exponentially, but there are still many research challenges
in networking and other areas to be addressed before all these
systems can work together for the benefit of society.”
Only around 2% of the
billions of processors produced each year become the brains
of personal computers; most go into embedded systems that are
the essence of every modern electronic device, from toys to
traffic lights. They run factories and enable worldwide communication
and the flow of information, products, and people. Every home
in Europe and North America contains multiple embedded systems,
and most people carry several around with them, from phones
and watches to portable computers and music devices. The goal
of RUNES is to assess and overcome barriers to exploitation
of these technologies and to create standards that make it easy
for programmers to develop practical and profitable applications.
“RUNES will affect
how we live and do business,” says EU project officer
Franck Boissiere. “By joining existing devices and creating
opportunities for multiple new applications, we are enabling
the era of wearable computers, smart homes and a whole new generation
of health monitoring.”
One of the project’s
main outcomes will be adaptive and intelligent middleware systems
that make it easy and profitable for programmers to develop
new applications. As the programming that connects programs
to each other, or mediates between them, middleware is critical
to the networking of multiple devices. “New methods, tools,
and middleware infrastructures are needed to manage the complexity
in moving from mainly stand-alone hardware sensors to highly
distributed, networked and reactive systems,” said Cal-(IT)²’s
Krueger. “In these, both hardware and software sensors
will cooperate to allow a vast range of new applications.”
Krueger’s group is working on scalable design and programming
models and programming platforms for networked embedded systems
as they arise, for instance, in the automotive domain.
“Invisible, or
pervasive, computing is already all around us, and pervasive
networked computing is about to happen,” said
Steven Hailes, RUNES technical director and computer science
lecturer at University College London. “The challenge
now is to connect it all together and find standard ways to
get different types of devices working across different networks
to perform different functions in an ‘always on’
way. That is what RUNES is setting out to do.”
Part of the consortium’s
strength lies in the broad range of technical and scientific
expertise of its academic and industry partners. At launch,
participants included Kodak Ltd (UK), Sira Ltd (UK), University
College London (UK), University of Lancaster (UK), Ericsson
AB (Sweden), Ericsson Hungary (Hungary), Industrieanlagen-Betriebsgesellschaft
mbH (Germany), ConnectBlue AB (Sweden), Swedish Institute of
Computer Science AB (Sweden), Virtutech AB (Sweden), LiPPERT
Automationstechnik GmbH (Germany), Kungliga Tekniska Hogskolan
(Sweden), Rheinisch-Westfaelische Technische Hochskule Aachen
(Germany), Lund Institute of Technology (Sweden), Politecnico
di Milano (Italy), University of Patras (Greece), Universita
de Pisa (Italy), University of California, San Diego (USA),
University of California, Berkeley (USA), University of Queensland
(Australia), Victoria University (Australia), and National ICT
Australia.
Media Contacts:
Doug Ramsey for UCSD,
(858) 822-5825
Jonathon Rees
for RUNES, +44 20 7101 9132 (direct) +44 7989 975 077 (cell)
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