26โ€“29 Mar 2018
Napoli, Italy
Europe/Zurich timezone

Contribution List

144 out of 144 displayed
Export to PDF
  1. Alessandra Doria (INFN, Napoli (IT)), Prof. Gaetano Manfredi (Federico II University)
    26/03/2018, 10:00
  2. Elizabeth Sexton-Kennedy (Fermi National Accelerator Lab. (US))
    26/03/2018, 10:20
  3. Xiaomei Zhang (Chinese Academy of Sciences (CN))
    26/03/2018, 10:40
  4. Eduardo Rodrigues (University of Cincinnati (US))
    26/03/2018, 10:55
  5. Peter Elmer (Princeton University (US)), Taylor Childers (Argonne National Laboratory (US))
    26/03/2018, 11:35
  6. 26/03/2018, 11:55
  7. Bernd Panzer-Steindel (CERN)
    26/03/2018, 13:30
  8. Mr Vincenzo Capone (Gร‰ANT)
    26/03/2018, 14:10

    Design and users' recommendations

    Go to contribution page
  9. Bernd Panzer-Steindel (CERN)
    26/03/2018, 14:20
  10. Helge Meinhard (CERN)
    26/03/2018, 14:50
  11. Martin Hilgeman (Dell)
    26/03/2018, 15:10
  12. Jason Rylands (Rittal)
    26/03/2018, 15:25
  13. 26/03/2018, 16:10
  14. Concezio Bozzi (CERN and INFN Ferrara)
    26/03/2018, 16:25
  15. Erica Snider (Fermilab)
    26/03/2018, 16:50
  16. Vincenzo Innocente (CERN)
    26/03/2018, 17:15
  17. Taylor Childers (Argonne National Laboratory (US))
    26/03/2018, 17:40
  18. Maria Girone (CERN), Simone Campana (CERN)
    27/03/2018, 09:00
  19. Mario Lassnig (CERN), Martin Barisits (CERN)
    27/03/2018, 09:05
  20. Benedikt Maier (Massachusetts Inst. of Technology (US)), Christoph Paus (Massachusetts Inst. of Technology (US))
    27/03/2018, 09:25
  21. Xavier Espinal Curull (CERN)
    27/03/2018, 09:40
  22. Brian Paul Bockelman (University of Nebraska Lincoln (US))
    27/03/2018, 09:55
  23. Jaroslava Schovancova (CERN), Gavin McCance (CERN)
    27/03/2018, 10:10
  24. 27/03/2018, 10:25
  25. Dr Charles Leggett (Lawrence Berkeley National Lab (US))
    27/03/2018, 11:00
  26. Vardan Gyurjyan (Jefferson Lab)
    27/03/2018, 11:30
  27. Thorsten Kollegger (GSI - Helmholtzzentrum fur Schwerionenforschung GmbH (DE))
    27/03/2018, 12:00
  28. Jamie Shiers (CERN), Mike Hildreth (University of Notre Dame (US)), Mike Hildreth (Department of Physics-College of Science-University of Notre Da)
    27/03/2018, 13:30
  29. Alessandro Di Girolamo (CERN), Davide Costanzo (University of Sheffield (GB)), Johannes Elmsheuser (Brookhaven National Laboratory (US)), Torre Wenaus (Brookhaven National Laboratory (US))
    27/03/2018, 13:30
  30. Sudhir Malik (University of Puerto Rico (PR))
    27/03/2018, 13:30
  31. Dr Martin Ritter (LMU / Cluster Universe), Martin Ritter (LMU Munich), Dr TBD
    27/03/2018, 13:40
  32. Sunje Dallmeier-Tiessen (CERN)
    27/03/2018, 13:50
  33. Frank Wuerthwein (UCSD)
    27/03/2018, 13:50
  34. Sebastian Lopienski (CERN)
    27/03/2018, 13:50
  35. Violaine Bellee (EPFL - Ecole Polytechnique Federale Lausanne (CH))
    27/03/2018, 14:00
  36. Gerardo Ganis (CERN)
    27/03/2018, 14:10
  37. Dario Berzano (CERN)
    27/03/2018, 14:10
  38. Andrej Filipcic (Jozef Stefan Institute (SI))
    27/03/2018, 14:10
  39. Marco Zanetti (Universita e INFN, Padova (IT))
    27/03/2018, 14:20
  40. Jamie Shiers (CERN)
    27/03/2018, 14:30

    Two specific sub-topics:

    • Offering LTDP Services to other HEP sites, e.g. "bit preservation" (and more?) for BaBar

    • A nascent sub-group of the existing EIROForum IT Working Group

    Go to contribution page
  41. Francesco Giacomini (INFN CNAF)
    27/03/2018, 14:30
  42. Alexei Klimentov (Brookhaven National Laboratory (US)), Kaushik De (University of Texas at Arlington (US))
    27/03/2018, 14:30
  43. Robert Kutschke (Femilab)
    27/03/2018, 14:40
  44. Joรฃo Fernandes (CERN)
    27/03/2018, 14:50
  45. Pia Astone (INFN - National Institute for Nuclear Physics)
    27/03/2018, 14:50
  46. Federico Stagni (CERN)
    27/03/2018, 14:50
  47. Peter Elmer (Princeton University (US))
    27/03/2018, 15:00
  48. Mike Hildreth (Department of Physics-College of Science-University of Notre Da), Mike Hildreth (University of Notre Dame (US))
    27/03/2018, 15:10
  49. Brian Paul Bockelman (University of Nebraska Lincoln (US))
    27/03/2018, 15:10
  50. 27/03/2018, 15:10
  51. Mark Neubauer (Univ. Illinois at Urbana Champaign (US))
    27/03/2018, 16:00
  52. Jim Pivarski (Princeton University)
    27/03/2018, 16:20
  53. Viktor Khristenko (CERN)
    27/03/2018, 16:40
  54. Rosen Matev (CERN)
    27/03/2018, 17:00
  55. Pere Mato Vila (CERN)
    27/03/2018, 17:20
  56. Eduardo Rodrigues (University of Cincinnati (US)), Oliver Gutsche (Fermi National Accelerator Lab. (US))
    27/03/2018, 17:40
  57. Christian Faerber (CERN)
    28/03/2018, 09:00
  58. Andrei Gheata (CERN)
    28/03/2018, 09:20
  59. Dr Martin Durant (Anaconda, Inc.)
    28/03/2018, 09:40
  60. Matti Kortelainen (Fermi National Accelerator Lab. (US))
    28/03/2018, 10:00
  61. 28/03/2018, 10:20
  62. Jose Flix Molina (Centro de Investigaciones Energรฉti cas Medioambientales y Tecno)
    28/03/2018, 11:00

    Mainly for non working group members. Intended to raise interest and stimulate contributions.

    Go to contribution page
  63. Graeme Stewart (CERN)
    28/03/2018, 11:00
    • Packaging requirements: what are the contentious points and how do we go forward?
    • How do we scale to multiple project which have completely different timescales and requirements in terms of software stacks?
    Go to contribution page
  64. Riccardo Maria Bianchi (University of Pittsburgh (US)), Thomas Mc Cauley (University of Notre Dame (US))
    28/03/2018, 11:00
  65. Riccardo Maria Bianchi (University of Pittsburgh (US)), Thomas Mc Cauley (University of Notre Dame (US))
    28/03/2018, 11:05

    A summary of what we proposed in the CWP in terms of common development work for the future and how we can proceed:

    • potential common base packages
    • server-client architecture as a possible solution to circumvent the issues of data access (in-framework tools) and limited/skimmed data (standalone tools)
    Go to contribution page
  66. Dr Ciril Bohak (University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Computer and Information Science)
    28/03/2018, 11:15

    The main problems in visualizing the particle collision events are the amount of data needed for good visualization and the need for high-performance graphical hardware. To overcome the need of sending the large amount of data to the end-user as well as need for high-performance graphical hardware, we propose the hybrid rendering solution which renders the final image in two parts: (1) highly...

    Go to contribution page
  67. Johannes Elmsheuser (Brookhaven National Laboratory (US))
    28/03/2018, 11:30

    Reason why these workloads are โ€œimportantโ€ in matters of cost.
    Focus on Run2 experience
    Run3 and HL-LHC will be covered in the afternoon session
    Summarise what we have, list of workloads
    Overview of the experience gained running these workloads (especially from non experiment members view)

    Go to contribution page
  68. Sergey Linev
    28/03/2018, 11:30
  69. Ben Couturier (CERN)
    28/03/2018, 11:30
    • What are the available/used tools?
    • What are their shortcomings?
    • Possible solutions to these shortcomings
    Go to contribution page
  70. Arturo Sanchez Pineda (Abdus Salam Int. Cent. Theor. Phys. (IT))
    28/03/2018, 11:45
  71. Gareth Douglas Roy (University of Glasgow (GB))
    28/03/2018, 11:45

    The metrics relevant for the workloads.
    Status of the measurement of these quantities for the different workloads.
    More detailed discussions either in the afternoon session or during dedicated meetings

    Go to contribution page
  72. Sandro Christian Wenzel (CERN)
    28/03/2018, 11:45
    • What are the available/used tools?
    • What are their shortcomings?
    • Possible solutions to these shortcomings
    Go to contribution page
  73. Giulio Eulisse (CERN)
    28/03/2018, 12:00
    • Does the Incubator model of Apache make sense for HSF?
    • As a project leaders what would make me move to HSF?
    • As a HSF reviewers what are the minimum requirement for incubating a project?
    Go to contribution page
  74. Leo Piilonen (Virginia Tech)
    28/03/2018, 12:00

    Development and deployment of a new virtual-reality educational tool for physics students (and for public outreach) in which the user experiences and interacts with the animated timeline of GEANT4-generated electron-positron collision events in the Belle II apparatus at the KEK laboratory in Japan. Lessons learned during the project and future plans.

    Go to contribution page
  75. Catherine Biscarat (LPSC Grenoble, IN2P3/CNRS)
    28/03/2018, 12:05

    Mapping the cost model to site relevant costs
    Walk through an simple example, motivation etc.

    Afternoon: Concrete example calculations, where to go from here, discussions

    Go to contribution page
  76. Eduardo Rodrigues (University of Cincinnati (US))
    28/03/2018, 12:15
    • What are the OpenSource conferences / workshops we should try to have a more โ€œactiveโ€ presence?
    • How can we get support from experiments, projects, home institutions to have people attend OpenSource events and be part of the OpenSource community?
    Go to contribution page
  77. Riccardo Maria Bianchi (University of Pittsburgh (US)), Thomas Mc Cauley (University of Notre Dame (US))
    28/03/2018, 12:15

    Open discussion on ideas for next steps towards possible joint projects and collaborations between HEP experiments.

    Preparation for the Phase-2 of the CWP process: "After the CWP".

    Go to contribution page
  78. Gloria Corti (CERN)
    28/03/2018, 13:30
  79. Andrea Valassi (CERN)
    28/03/2018, 13:30

    A presentation of tools and techniques needed to measure the performance metrics.
    15' presentation followed by 15' discussion

    Go to contribution page
  80. David Kelsey (Science and Technology Facilities Council STFC (GB))
    28/03/2018, 13:30

    GDPR Implications + Policy Harmonisation

    Go to contribution page
  81. Sandro Christian Wenzel (CERN)
    28/03/2018, 13:50
  82. Maarten Litmaath (CERN)
    28/03/2018, 13:55

    Authorisation Working Group Status

    Go to contribution page
  83. David Lange (Princeton University (US))
    28/03/2018, 14:00

    Run3 and HL-LHC , What will change?
    How can we โ€œfakeโ€ in a more realistic way these conditions until we have the code that handles data for these periods?
    Will there be an impact of the change of global architecture and what will it be, how can we quantify it?
    Starting with a 3-4 slide introduction, then interactive work and discussion.

    Go to contribution page
  84. John Derek Chapman (University of Cambridge (GB))
    28/03/2018, 14:10
  85. David Crooks (University of Glasgow (GB)), Vincent Brillault (CERN)
    28/03/2018, 14:20
    • Requirements for operational security in the future
    • Incident Response in new infrastructures
    • Threat Intelligence
    • Technology (inc. SOC WG status)
    • Traceability
    • IPv6 Security Aspects
    Go to contribution page
  86. Renaud Vernet (Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (FR))
    28/03/2018, 14:30

    Walk through the example
    Discussion on where to go from here

    Go to contribution page
  87. Marc Verderi (Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (FR))
    28/03/2018, 14:30
  88. Andrea Sartirana (Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (FR))
    28/03/2018, 14:50

    How to estimate resource needs for run periods.
    From several Excel sheets to a generic Python code with different configuration parameters by experiment.

    Starting from a simplistic Python script (needs to be prepared)
    Discussion and work on the code

    Go to contribution page
  89. Dr Farah Hariri (CERN)
    28/03/2018, 14:50
  90. 28/03/2018, 15:00
  91. Tatsumi Koi (SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory (US))
    28/03/2018, 15:10
  92. Markus Schulz (CERN)
    28/03/2018, 15:20

    First attempt at giving a high-level summary of the technical session

    Go to contribution page
  93. Andreas Joachim Peters (CERN)
    28/03/2018, 16:00
  94. Jim Pivarski (Princeton University)
    28/03/2018, 16:00
  95. Witold Pokorski (CERN)
    28/03/2018, 16:00
  96. Kevin Pedro (Fermi National Accelerator Lab. (US))
    28/03/2018, 16:20
  97. Patrick Fuhrmann (Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron (DE)), Mr Tigran Mkrtchyan (DESY)
    28/03/2018, 16:20
  98. Radu Popescu (CERN)
    28/03/2018, 16:30
  99. Oliver Keeble (CERN)
    28/03/2018, 16:40
  100. Victor Daniel Elvira (Fermi National Accelerator Lab. (US))
    28/03/2018, 16:40
  101. Ian Bird (CERN)
    28/03/2018, 16:45
  102. Brian Paul Bockelman (University of Nebraska Lincoln (US))
    28/03/2018, 16:50
  103. Marc Verderi (Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (FR))
    28/03/2018, 16:50
  104. Elizabeth Sexton-Kennedy (Fermi National Accelerator Lab. (US))
    28/03/2018, 17:00
  105. Ben Nachman (University of California Berkeley (US)), Luke De Oliveira, Michela Paganini (Yale University (US))
    28/03/2018, 17:10
  106. Andrew Bohdan Hanushevsky (SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory (US))
    28/03/2018, 17:10
  107. Wei Yang (SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory (US))
    28/03/2018, 17:30
  108. 28/03/2018, 17:30
  109. Andrea Dotti (SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory (US))
    28/03/2018, 17:30
  110. Silvio Pardi (INFN)
    28/03/2018, 17:50
  111. Erica Snider (Fermilab)
    28/03/2018, 17:50
  112. Anna Scaife (Manchester University)
    29/03/2018, 09:00
  113. Simone Campana (CERN)
    29/03/2018, 09:30
  114. Marco Clemencic (CERN)
    29/03/2018, 09:40
  115. Jim Pivarski (Princeton University)
    29/03/2018, 09:50
  116. Victor Daniel Elvira (Fermi National Accelerator Lab. (US))
    29/03/2018, 10:00
  117. Eduardo Rodrigues (University of Cincinnati (US))
    29/03/2018, 10:10
  118. Martin Ritter (LMU / Cluster Universe)
    29/03/2018, 10:20
  119. Riccardo Maria Bianchi (University of Pittsburgh (US))
    29/03/2018, 11:00
  120. Torre Wenaus (Brookhaven National Laboratory (US))
    29/03/2018, 11:10
  121. David Crooks (University of Glasgow (GB))
    29/03/2018, 11:20
  122. Markus Schulz (CERN)
    29/03/2018, 11:30
  123. Dr Bruce Becker (EGI Foundation), Bruce Becker (DAPNIA)
    29/03/2018, 11:40
  124. Sudhir Malik (University of Puerto Rico (PR))
    29/03/2018, 11:50
  125. Graeme Stewart (CERN), Ian Bird (CERN)
    29/03/2018, 12:00
  126. 29/03/2018, 13:00
  127. Marco Clemencic (CERN)
  128. Antonio Augusto Alves Junior (University of Cincinnati (US))
  129. Andrea Sciaba or Daniele tbc

    Short introduction of how we call things ( workloads, workflows etc.)
    Table of workloads (steps and chains) and the transformations that they do

    Go to contribution page
  130. Gavin McCance (CERN), Jaroslava Schovancova (CERN)
  131. Marc Verderi (Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (FR))