The
information-technology platform is being radically transformed as we speak. A
new generation of applications is emerging that are destined to run in distributed
form on a platform that meshes high-performance compute clusters with
broad classes of mobiles, surrounded in turn by even larger swarms of sensors.
The broad majority of these newapplications
can be classified as distributed sense and control systems that go
substantially beyond the "compute" or "communicate"
functions traditionally associated with information-technology. They have the
potential to radically influence how we deal with a broad range of crucial
problems facing our society today: power delivery in emerging micro-grids,
emergency response to natural and man-made disasters, wireless healthcare with
individualized monitoring, national infrastructural monitoring and adaptation,
detection of anomalous events and behaviors in physical or cyberspace for
security, or real-time situational awareness on the battlefield, etc. In fact,
the opportunities are limited only by our imagination.
The grand
goal of the Multiscale Systems Center is to create a comprehensive and
systematic solution to the distributed multi-scale system design challenge.
While addressing the full portfolio of needs, we have specifically selected as
grand challenge the development of "energy-smart" distributed
systems: that is, distributed systems that are deeply aware of the balance
between energy availability and demand, and adjust their behavior in response
through dynamic and adaptive optimization through all scales of the design
hierarchy.
Prof.Alberto Sangiovanni-Vincentelli gives talk entitled '1000 Electronic Devices Per Person, Dream or Nightmare?' at the International Electronics Forum 2011 in Spain
While experts often extrapolate current growth figures and developments to paint futures abundant in technology Professor Alberto Sangiovanni-Vincentelli, of the University of California, Berkeley electronic engineering and computer science department, has cautioned that we must also look at the design challenges that will enable or prevent us getting there.
In a talk entitled "1000 electronic devices per person, dream or nightmare?" Sangiovanni-Vincentelli, known as ASV, looked forward to a future where the internet-of-things is wireless and ubiquitous but the possibilities of design and unintended interactions are much more complex than today.
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