The Lattice Project

Revision as of 23:13, 29 January 2009; view current revision
←Older revision | Newer revision→

Introduction
The Lattice Project supplies computing power to scientists at the University of Maryland. The volunteered resources are integrated with on-campus Grid Resources, and so no single project or application dominates the landscape. Some projects include: Study of evolutionary relationships based on DNA sequence data; Analysis of bacterial, plasmid, and virus protein sequences; And study of biological diversity in nature reserves.

For more information about currently-running research, click here.

Contents

Videos

Science

[The Science section might (or might not) be divided into two parts: {1} general discussion of the field, and then {2} a discussion of the project's specific endeavor. For instance, in LHC@home, we might have {1} "Science of the Large Hardon Collider" and then {2} "Science of LHC@home"

The above is desirable, because in most cases, the field of research is really fascinating, and presenting this in broad terms-- outlining the big questions-- can make it easier to understand the particulars of the project and why it is important.]

Results

[Where known, we should attempt to keep track of each project's publications. A good list to draw from is here. ]

Links of Interest

[Why recreate the wheel; there are lots of great sources out there.; a good list of sources can be really useful to the reader.]

The Lattice Project In the Classroom

[For each project, please add a "[Projectname] in the Classroom" section-- with a link to Volunteer Computing In the Classroom and an article named "[Projectname] in the Classroom". (Then please add "[Projectname] in the Classroom" to the list on the main Education page.)]