Archive for the ‘News’ Category

MAGIC continue to support CREW

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010

The test collaboration from MAGIC (series of postgraduate-level lecture courses in mathematics, employing the Access Grid videoconferencing technology) to integrate CREW has been agreed to extend until September 2011.

Links: MAGIC main site: http://maths.dept.shef.ac.uk/magic

CREW link to TP.CG’10

Friday, January 29th, 2010

New CREW users with the #CritterVRE project are to exploit the twitter integration with CREW. This will be at the Eurographics UK Chpater Conference in Sheffield Sep 6-8 2010.
http://www.eguk.org.uk/TPCG10/index.htm

Hope to see you there.

CREW meets VRE3

Sunday, May 10th, 2009

Two projects are continuing some of the ideas of CREW within the VRE Phase 3 Programme:

Both share a wiki at http://wiki.rcs.manchester.ac.uk/community/vre3 which has direct web lins for more information.

e-Social Science Conference 2008

Wednesday, June 25th, 2008

Last week the 4th International Conference on e-Social Science took place at the Manchester Conference Centre with about 160 participants attending (see conference website). CREW was included with a paper on ‘User-centered development of a Virtual Research Environment to support Collaborative Research Events’ (see paper & presentation), presented in a user requirements and usability session, together with another VRE2 project, VERA.

CREW at the Fostering e-Infrastructure workshop in Edinburgh

Monday, June 9th, 2008

Focussing on “user-designer relations, requirements work, support for communities, training and education requirements and models of access to resources”, the ‘Fostering e-Infrastructure: from user-designer relations to community engagement’ workshop, held Thursday 8 and Friday 9 May 2008 at the National e-Science Institute (NeSC) in Edinburgh, was a useful forum for exchange.

All talks have been well received (and can be found here), among them the presentation of the community engagement activities in the CREW VRE project, and led to a lively discussion covering topics like

  • Where is ICT needed and what can I really do with having a new ICT/e-science environment?
  • Does traditional user engagement (stuff around for a while in CSCW, HCI, PD, etc) work [best] in small groups, homogeneous groups, practically aligned interests, design of well described systems, serving well-definded purposes?
  • How to open up eventually a space between Grid and Web 2.0?
  • How do we operationalise the knowledge/ideas, we all gather(ed) in our work?
  • Are funding programmes suitable the way they are and are there more synergies to be taken into account in, between and around projects?

CREW well received at the Lab Group Open Day

Friday, February 22nd, 2008

In a news article entitled “At the cutting edge of educational technology” published on the JISC website on the 21st February, the CREW project was cited among others presented at the Lab Group event held in London this week:

The JISC funded Collaborative Research Events on the Web (CREW) project captures formal and informal information relating to research events, using a variety of approaches including social software, semantic technologies and recording tools. The hope is to enrich the events experience for the participating audience, but also extending opportunities for non-participants, thereby maximising investments within academic and research events.

Nikki Rogers, with colleagues from the ILRT, presented the CREW project among others we have running within the Institute at the moment. There was much interest and it will be interesting to see how the Lab Group providers themselves will present the video clips, photos and “interviews” recorded on the day via the ALT (Association for Learning Technology) website.

CREW attends Nov 07 VRE Programme Meeting in Reading

Thursday, December 6th, 2007

The CREW team attended the JISC VRE Programme Meeting in Reading last week which usefully brought together all the current VRE projects in order to look for potential areas of cross-project collaboration and interest.

I gave a presentation on the CREW Project following presentations by the other 3 projects.

The VERA Project described their continued work on supporting archaelogical research with fieldwork tools for the recording of research findings and a central database (IADB – Integrated Archaelogical database) to which records can be uploaded automatically, and from which they become accessible to researchers via a portal environment. Their technical goal is to migrate from their VRE1 bespoke PHP application to using Gridsphere as a JSR168-compatible portlet container – it will bridge to the VRE 1 portal. They have more portlets planned – for 3D visualisation etc. They focus on portlets consuming web apps as opposed to shoe-horning applications into portlets, whilst respecting the advantages of portal frameworks (such as providing personalisation opportunities). Towards this goal they demo’d their RECYCLE bridge which can consume most web apps (Matt Grove’s work), addresses portal security, may require some CSS tweaks but on the whole is a working solution. The demo showed examples of wikipedia bridged, also wordpress bridged Their use of bridging occurs on the VERA project regarding the IADB for example. This bridging work is of relevance to the CREW project (we need to integrate the Events Application in a portal environment but don’t want to compromise the extensive functionality available within the Events Application user interface). A cross-project collaboration effort on this is being led by Mark Baker. Claire Fisher is coordinating their user engagement and they plan to also use portal stats analysis, and consult and workshop with specialists to see how they work with the IADB.

MY EXPERIMENT is like “Facebook for scientists”, said presenter Dave de Roure. And like a frontend to workflow systems, simple or complex, large or small. They use Taverna which came out of the MyGrid project and operates via a pooled set of web services. Their users are quite wide ranging. There are reuse and tutorial aspects to the system in terms of the ability for scientists to upload their own workflows as self describing MyExperiment design objects and to cite other people’s workflows. Reuse encourages users to document what they’re doing to contribute to the system. They are using Openid. Privacy, licensing and tagging are supported in similar modes as with facebook. These aspects overlap with CREW project issues – as does for example the tension they note arising from the use of informal tagging versus using ontological classifications. I think Dave de Roure said that use of their system shows tagging quality is good for discovery, ontological quality being better once an end-user had delved down and reached more specific resources. They changed their software license from GNU to BSD license recently.

OXFORD VRE Project: Mark Pybus presented on what a VRE would be for Humanties. They are engaging with disparate randomly funded projects to get them to work together. Regarding archaelogists they are doing quite a lot of work on tools for working with images. They have adopted Uportal and are using Shibboleth for authentication. Authorization is still open question on their project. In their portal they have an image upload, then search facility, links to chat services e.g. jabber, and a link to the access grid. They have an image and annotation store. Christian Fernau (who we at ILRT collaborated on previously in the JISC funded SPIE project) was there with some helpful comments on the PERMIS decision engine supporting annotations and security aspects to CREW software. He suggests we look at SimplePermis as a much more light-weight and suitable component in the access policy controller we want to implement for the CREW project. Sounds more like what we need behind the Authorization API planned for CREW Events application Architecture. I agreed to lead collaborative, cross-project efforts on annotations and provenance tracking/security in social softwares in the VRE programme.

We have a new website!

Wednesday, November 7th, 2007

Our old website was a bit rubbish and didn’t accurately reflect all of our activities on CREW. Since March 2007 our activities have included:

  • “User Days” with Institute of Health Sciences (2 August 2007), Scientific User Groups (31 August 2007) and Intute (4 October 2007). The sessions included an introduction to project and the technologies involved followed by interactive sessions designed to understand the user’s needs and requirements. A report based on user needs will be published here soon.
  • Supporting the first user event – the “Making good applications to the NIHR Research for Patient Benefit scheme” workshop (17 September 2007) for the Institute of Health Sciences. The event can be seen in the first release of the CREW software (note that this is an early version and the session also suffered some technical audio and video issues!).
  • Mike Daw talked about “Enhancing the Value of Collaborative Research Events through Virtual Research Environments” in the VRE Workshop at the UK e-Science 2007 All Hands Meeting.
  • Weekly developer meetings via the Access Grid, IRC or Skype and monthly project meetings via the Access Grid.
  • Lots of coding in Java and ActionScript!

The functional requirements are the architecture are still being worked on by the development team – more details will be published when they have matured, although you can see our current thinking about this and other work in progress at our Wiki.

We are also looking at collaboration with other JISC projects where interests overlap:

  • e-Dance in the recording of events.
  • RACE for the storage of recordings and the meta data used to describe the recordings.
  • STSAR Project for the annotation of event by users.

The blog will be regularly updated as the project progresses.