"Standardized" and/or openly accepted infrastructures for creating and deploying distributed applications.
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Software platform for distributed computing using volunteered computer resources, allowing participants to participate in multiple projects. Software downloads, links to active projects, news, message boards, and other information.
Provides an infrastructure for true distributed computing projects. This includes applications as well as APIs for users to design and build their own projects.
Learn how various protocols fit into the big picture of the distributed computing arena.
A non-profit organization created to provide supercomputing resources to public interest research, by use of volunteer distributed computing.
Build a supercomputer using wasted CPU cycles of home and office computers. (A fledgling project looking for a sponsor and participants.)
Language- and platform-independent protocol for peer-to-peer networking, developed by Sun. Initial implementation in Java. [Open Source, BSD-like]
Distributed object computing industry standards group founded in 1989. Defined standards include CORBA and IIOP.
An industry-standard, vendor-neutral set of distributed computing technologies. Provides scalable organization of users and shared data, along with basic services such as security and naming.
In Part 1, Drew McCormack showed how to install and start using Xgrid. Now in Part 2, he covers integration with Cocoa.
(May 18, 2004)
In this first of two articles exploring Xgrid, Drew McCormack provides a little background information, then moves to installation, and finishes off with a command-line script for distributing compilation using Xgrid.
(May 11, 2004)
Language- and platform-independent protocol for peer-to-peer networking, developed by Sun. Initial implementation in Java. [Open Source, BSD-like]
Learn how various protocols fit into the big picture of the distributed computing arena.
A non-profit organization created to provide supercomputing resources to public interest research, by use of volunteer distributed computing.
An industry-standard, vendor-neutral set of distributed computing technologies. Provides scalable organization of users and shared data, along with basic services such as security and naming.
Build a supercomputer using wasted CPU cycles of home and office computers. (A fledgling project looking for a sponsor and participants.)
Software platform for distributed computing using volunteered computer resources, allowing participants to participate in multiple projects. Software downloads, links to active projects, news, message boards, and other information.
Provides an infrastructure for true distributed computing projects. This includes applications as well as APIs for users to design and build their own projects.
Distributed object computing industry standards group founded in 1989. Defined standards include CORBA and IIOP.
In Part 1, Drew McCormack showed how to install and start using Xgrid. Now in Part 2, he covers integration with Cocoa.
(May 18, 2004)
In this first of two articles exploring Xgrid, Drew McCormack provides a little background information, then moves to installation, and finishes off with a command-line script for distributing compilation using Xgrid.
(May 11, 2004)

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- Recently edited by merlin1
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