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CITRIS: Quo Vadis? Founding Corporate Members Meeting, June 11, 2002

This meeting discusses the current state and future plans for CITRIS, seeking advice on organization, resources, interaction, and engagement with corporate members and the UC CITRIS alliance.

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CITRIS: Quo Vadis? Founding Corporate Members Meeting, June 11, 2002

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  1. Founding Corporate MembersMeeting June 11, 2002Quo Vadis CITRIS? by Ruzena Bajcsy

  2. Goals for Today • Inform you on where we are and where we are going • Seek your advice on the intellectual agenda for CITRIS in the following areas: • Organization • Resources • Interaction between: • FCMs and the UC CITRIS alliance • UC CITRIS and the state of California • UC CITRIS and the universe

  3. CITRIS Operating Income StatementMay 31, 2002 • Operating Revenue 1,328,254 54% • Research Revenue 1,129,502 46% Total revenue 2,457,756 • Operating Expenses 731,339 40% • Research Expenses 1,088,595 60% Total expenses 1,819,934 Net surplus <deficit> 637,822

  4. Current and Near Term Space • Intel Lab in Power Bar Building on Shattuck • CommerceNet incubator at Bancroft and Shattuck • Hearst Mining (August 2002) • BID (Berkeley Institute of Design) • Cory Renovation • At 20K ASF, by summer 2003

  5. The New CITRIS Building • Construction will begin in summer 2003 • Architectural plans are well underway • It will house the Microfabrication Laboratory (Professor Howe will give more details) • Remaining space will be allocated to other CITRIS related projects

  6. Societal-Scale Applications Applications Pull New Distributed System Architectures New Sensors/actuators Wireless communication Security and Reliability Human/Computer interaction Technology Push Technological Breakthroughs CITRIS Scientific Strategy Societal-Scale Applications Societal-Scale Applications Sensing and actuation Huge Scale Can’t fail

  7. Technology Invention in a Social Context: Quality of Life Impact • Energy Efficiency • Transportation Planning • EducatioTechnology Invention in a Social Context: Quality of Life Impact • Energy Efficiency • Transportation Planning • Education

  8. Technology Invention in a Social Context: Quality of Life Impact • Monitoring Health Care • Land and Environment • Disaster Response

  9. Core Technologies Applications The CITRIS Model • Initially Leverage Existing • Expertise on campuses • Distributed Info Systems • Micro sensors/actuators • Human-Comp Interaction • Prototype Deployment Societal-Scale Information Systems (SIS) Foundations • Reliablity • Availability • Security, • Algorithms • Social, policy issues

  10. CITRIS Applications • Saving Energy – Arens • Transportation Systems – Demmel • SensorNets and their many applications – Culler • We are now exploring the current efforts in Security, Privacy and Critical Infrastructure Protection to Global Security in discussions with: • UCB Dean of Public Policy • Institute of International Studies • UC Davis Institute on Bioterrorism

  11. CITRIS Applications (2) • Smart Classrooms – Paul Wright • Dealing with Data Sets – Wilensky and Varian • In addition to the data sets work you will hear about - we are exploring with UC museums how to design easy access to their various collections • Large Networks – Howe and Yoo • In addition to large networks we are exploring applications for telemedicine (surgery)

  12. Massive Cluster Clusters Gigabit Ethernet “Server” Scalable, Reliable, Secure Services “Client” Information Appliances MEMS Sensors Societal-Scale Systems Secure, non-stop utility Diverse components Adapts to interfaces/users Always connected

  13. 20-ton chiller GW GW GW MYSQL Energy Monitoring Network Arch sensor net control net 802-11 telegraph PC PC modbus scada term UCB power monitor net Browser

  14. Where Can CITRIS Make a Difference? • In deployment of IT research results on LARGE SCALE (which cannot be implemented or deployed by one or two faculty members) • In deployment of IT in societal problems

  15. What Does This Require? • Setting up large test beds and/or • Providing the glue between existing test beds/data sets • Sustained support for Engineering staff!

  16. Examples • Summer 2002 we are installing 300 MOTEs in all 6 floors of Cory Hall, connected to adhoc wireless network, measuring light and temperature • Final results from each floor will be transmitted to a secure UCB website in physical plant • Network will serve as research infrastructure for other CITRIS sensor projects • The vision is to analyze this data and provide for feedback control • Goal is to spread network to all of Engineering and ultimately all of UCB

  17. We Seek Your Advice on the Following Issues • Improving cooperation within the Northern California UC alliance (sharing of resources, facilities, students, visitors…) • Increased communication between the CISIs and Sacramento • How to respond to world-wide requests from Universities and their local corporations regarding CITRIS collaboration

  18. What Does CITRIS Need? • More Industrial Partners • How do we increase the number of supporting corporations • Platinum Corporate Members? • Associate Corporate Members? • We are soliciting not just your advice, but also your approval on reasonable engagement models for new corporate members and outside Universities seeking to partner with CITRIS

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