new reports on UK e-infrastructure
available
The following reports should be of interest to the CNI-announce
readership. My thanks to Neil Beagrie for this announcement.
Clifford Lynch
Director, CNI
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Press release
please feel free to circulate to other lists and interested
individuals
Developing the UK's e-infrastructure: major reports published
today
Growth of the UK economy depends upon the innovations of its
researchers, says OSI Working Group
8th February, 2007.
Maintaining the UK's world leadership in research and innovation
requires a national e-infrastructure capable of meeting the needs of
researchers in the digital age. Furthermore, there is a danger
that without such an e-infrastructure, the development of the UK's
science and research base and the growth of its knowledge-based
economy will be seriously impaired.
These are some of the findings of a major report published today which
sets out the requirements for a national e-infrastructure to help
ensure the UK maintains and indeed enhances its global standing in
science and innovation in an increasingly competitive
world. Produced by the UK Office of Science and Innovation
(OSI) e-Infrastructure Working Group, the report - Developing the UK's e-infrastructure for science and
innovation - calls for greater
coordination between the key agencies in the field, greater investment
in e-infrastructure and a 'step-change' in 'national provision
and concerted action towards e-infrastructure development.' Without
such a 'step-change', the report warns, the UK risks being
overtaken by rapidly industrialising countries such as China, India
and South Korea.
Made up of senior representatives from JISC (Joint Information Systems
Committee), the Research Councils, RIN (Research Information Network)
and the British Library, the Working Group was formed in response to
the Science and Innovation Investment Framework 2004-2014,
published by the Treasury, the DTI and the DfES in 2004, to explore
the current provision of the UK's e-infrastructure and help define
its future development. While the current e-infrastructure has, the
report finds, helped secure the current standing of UK research,
supporting vital developments in many fields, such a position is not
sustainable, it continues, without high-level coordination, political
will and significant further investment. The working group
established six sub-groups which have each produced detailed reports,
also published today, in the following areas:
Data and information creation
Preservation and curation
Search and navigation
Virtual research
communities
Networks, compute and data
storage
AAA (authentication, authorisation and
accounting), middleware and DRM (digital rights
management)
The overarching summary report presents these six areas as distinct but
interconnected stages of a lifecycle, a lifecycle that is crucial, the
report argues, to the future of research in the UK and to the research
community's activities to engage with industry and apply its
world-leading innovations to commercial use.
To access the reports, please go to: www.nesc.ac.uk/documents/OSI/index.html
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