Capacity planning with phased workloads
Proceedings of the 1st international workshop on Software and performance
A taxonomy and survey of grid resource management systems for distributed computing
Software—Practice & Experience
Hippodrome: Running Circles Around Storage Administration
FAST '02 Proceedings of the Conference on File and Storage Technologies
A Resource Management Architecture for Metacomputing Systems
IPPS/SPDP '98 Proceedings of the Workshop on Job Scheduling Strategies for Parallel Processing
Self-Organizing Control in Plantetary-Scale Computing
CCGRID '02 Proceedings of the 2nd IEEE/ACM International Symposium on Cluster Computing and the Grid
Intermediary infrastructures for the world wide web
Computer Networks: The International Journal of Computer and Telecommunications Networking
Balance of Power: Dynamic Thermal Management for Internet Data Centers
IEEE Internet Computing
ICAC '09 Proceedings of the 6th international conference on Autonomic computing
Performance model driven QoS guarantees and optimization in clouds
CLOUD '09 Proceedings of the 2009 ICSE Workshop on Software Engineering Challenges of Cloud Computing
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In the not-too-distant future, billions of people, places and things could all be connected to each other and to useful services through the Internet. In this world scalable, cost-effective information technology capabilities will need to be provisioned as service, delivered as a service, metered and managed as a service, and purchased as a service. We refer to this world as service centric computing. Consequently, processing and storage will be accessible via utilities where customers pay for what they need when they need it and where they need it. This tutorial introduces concepts of service centric computing and its relationship to the Grid. It explains a programmable data center paradigm as a flexible architecture that helps to achieve service centric computing. Case study results illustrate performance and thermal issues. Finally, key open research questions pertaining to service centric computing and Internet computing are summarized.