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The following list details each workshop phase
of growth for the Global Grid Forum.
20th
Open Grid Forum (OGF20/EGEE 2nd User Forum - May 2007)
19th
Open Grid Forum (OGF19 - January/February 2007)
18th
Global Grid Forum (GGF18/GridWorld - September 2006)
17th
Global Grid Forum (GGF17 - May 2006)
16th
Global Grid Forum (GGF16 - February 2006)
GridWorld/15th
Global Grid Forum (GridWorld/GGF15 - October 2005)
14th Global
Grid Forum (GGF14 - June 2005)
Over 350 participants from around the world gathered at the Westin
Michigan Ave Hotel in downtown Chicago for GGF’s Fourteenth
Global Grid Forum.
13th Global
Grid Forum (GGF13 - March 2005)
Over 475 participants from 26 different countries attended GGF13
in Seoul, March 13-16, 2005, hosted by KISTI (Korean Institute of
Science and Technology Information) and GFK (Grid Forum Korea).
12th Global
Grid Forum Workshop (GGF12 - September 2004)
GGF12 was held in Brussels, Belgium September 20-23 2004. The meeting
gathered ~500 grid enthusiasts, practitioners and experts.
11th Global
Grid Forum Workshop (GGF11 - June 2004)
GGF11 was held in Honolulu, Hawaii, June 6-10 2004. The meeting
gathered ~500 grid enthusiasts, practitioners and experts.
10th Global
Grid Forum Workshop (GGF10 - March 2004)
GGF10 was held in Berlin, Germany, March 9-13 2004. The meeting
gathered ~600 grid enthusiasts, practitioners and experts. The first
telecom meetings was also held during this meeting.
9th Global
Grid Forum Workshop (GGF9 - October 2003)
GGF9 was held in Chicago, Illinois, October 5 -8 2003. The meeting
gathered ~600 grid enthusiasts, practitioners and experts.
8th Global
Grid Forum Workshop (GGF8 - June 2003)
GGF8 was held in Seattle, Washington June 24-27, 2003. The meeting
gathered ~700 grid enthusiasts, practitioners and experts.
7th Global
Grid Forum Workshop (GGF7 - March 2003)
GGF7 was held in Tokyo, Japan March 4-7, 2003. The meeting gathered
~780 grid enthusiasts, practitioners and experts for the first GGF
held in the Asia-Pacific.
6th Global
Grid Forum Workshop (GGF6 - October 2002) - WORKING GROUP SESSION
ONLY
GGF6 was held in Chicago, Illinois, USA from 15-17 October 2002.
The meeting gathered ~450 pre-registered participants to 20 research
group sessions, 60+ working group sessions...40+ documents entered
the formal documentation process as a result of this meeting.
5th Global
Grid Forum Workshop (GGF5 - July 2002)
GGF5 was held in Edinburgh, Scotland 21-24 July 2002. The meeting
gathered ~850 pre-registered participants to ~23 talks in plenary
session, 16 BOFs, 20 research group sessions, 23 working group sessions
and ~10, 519 meetings in the hallways, hotels, castles and bars.
4th Global
Grid Forum Workshop (GGF4 - February 2002)
GGF4 was held in Toronto, Ontario Canada, 17-20 February 2002.
3rd Global
Grid Forum Workshop (GGF3 - October 2001)
GGF-3 was held in Frascati, Italy (near Rome) 7-10 October 2001.
Despite the tragic world events, GGF-3 had over 250 participants
from over 20 countries. There were over 12 new WGs presented during
the GGF3 BOFs, indicative of the growth in the scope of areas requiring
standards development.
2nd Global
Grid Forum Workshop (GGF2 - July 2001)
GGF-2 was the first workshop held in the US following the formation
of Global Grid Forum in October 2000. GGF-2 was held July 15-18,
2001 in Washington, DC, USA. GGF-2 had roughly 350 participants
from over 20 countries and over 150 organizations. Over 40 document
drafts were discussed at GGF-2, including a draft outlining an official
GGF document series process.
1st Global
Grid Forum Workshop (GGF1 - March 2001)
GGF1 was the first workshop held outside of the U.S. and the first
workshop following a merger of the Grid Forum with eGrid (European
Grid Forum) and the Asia-Pacific Grid Forum community. GGF1 was
hosted by the Amsterdam Science and Technology Center in Amsterdam,
The Netherlands on 4-7 March 2001. GGF1 had over 350 participants
from 28 countries and over 190 organizations. Roughly 220 participants
were from Europe, 120 from North America, 2 from Africa, and 15
from Asia-Pacific countries. 45 Grid Working Drafts were discussed
at GGF-1.
The Fifth
Grid Forum Workshop (GF5 - October 2000)
GF5 was hosted by Sun Labs and held at the Verizon Learning Center
in Marlborough, Massachusetts on October 15-18, 2000. GF5 was the
largest to date with over 190 participants from a dozen countries
and over 100 organizations. Thirty participants were from Europe
and ten from Asia-Pacific countries. GF5 also had the largest industrial
participation to date with over 30 individuals from industry. 25
Grid Working Drafts were discussed at GF5.
The Fourth
Grid Forum Workshop (GF4 - July 2000)
GF4 was hosted by Microsoft and Microsoft Research and held at the
Microsoft campus in Redmond, Washington on July 10-12, 2000. GF4
had over 120 participants from 60 organizations and 8 countries.
The Third
Grid Forum Workshop (GF3 - March 2000)
GF3 was hosted by the San Diego Supercomputer Center (SDSC) on the
campus of the University of California-San Diego (UCSD) on March
22-24, 2000. GF3 had over 160 participants from 70 organizations
in 8 countries.
The Second
Grid Forum Workshop (GF2 - October 1999)
The Second Grid Forum Meeting was held at Northwestern's Chicago
Campus on October 19-21, 1999. GF2 had over 130 participants from
60 organizations and 5 countries.
The First
Grid Forum Workshop (GF1 - June 1999)
The number of Grid initiatives combined with the overlap
in people, technologies, and challenges of these early initiatives
encouraged a number of Grid researchers and managers to convene
the first “Grid Forum workshop”, which was hosted by
the NASA Numerical Aerospace Simulation (NAS) and in particular
the Information Power Grid (IPG) program, held at the NASA Ames
Research Center from June 16-18, 1999. Organizers expected
perhaps 50 people, however attendance was over 150 from some 50
organizations and 4 countries, clearly indicating great interest
in the concept. There was considerable enthusiasm for the establishment
of a more permanent Grid Forum. The groundwork for that body,
including the initial working group organization and discussion,
was laid at this workshop.
A set of overheads summarizes the goals and agenda
of the meeting. Another page provides additional details on the first
Grid Forum meeting, including the purpose and format and links to
presentations given by representatives of various groups in attendance.
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