Install and run examples Open Grid Services Infrastructure compliant You are a scientist, a businessperson, or an engineer. You are always looking for faster ways to do your computer processing, better ways to store and retrieve your data, more efficient ways to interact with your customers or suppliers or clients, all while spending less money. You may be asking yourself these questions, among others: How can I analyze the value of an investment portfolio in minutes, rather than hours? How can I significantly accelerate the drug discovery process?

How can I cut the design time of products in half, while reducing the instances of defects? How can I efficiently expand and contract to meet cyclical demand? How can I unite research teams around the world to take advantage of the most up-to date knowledge? How can I provide and use share data in a reliable and secure way? How can I leverage my activities consistently by collaborating with other organizations? Ever since the first connection was made between two computers, developers have been using that connection to exploit resources. This work started out simply and grew into more complex applications, such as file sharing, print sharing, and e-mail, then grew to distributed computation across a group of networked machines. Generally, these tasks were born from the needs of a single user or developer, and evolved over time through a standardization process or by momentum into a de-facto standard to the point where different computers, from different vendors, running applications written in different languages, and running on different operating systems, could all interoperate successfully.

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