Grid Computing Explained
An anonymous reader writes "What's different between Grid computing and P2P, CORBA, cluster computing, and DCE? This article provides a cursory analysis of the similarities and differences between Grid computing and such distributed computing systems as P2P, CORBA, cluster computing, and DCE."
CORBA doesn't even FIT into this article, and it is painfully clear when you read it. If this wasn't a free object model, I would say the autor is stretching to sell something, but since that can't be the case, then what is it?
"When life gives you lemons, don't make lemonade. Make life take the lemons back!" -- Cave Johnson
The author seems to have intuited their similarity by looking over their respective buzzword lists. All-in-all, the article seemed only vaguely in touch with reality. And it was targetted much more at management than technical folk, the kind of people who would ask "Should I be pushing my guys to use P2P or CORBA for the new CRM system?"
I'm fairly sure I'm stupider now than when I started reading.
Let's not stir that bag of worms...
The big problem that I see with "Grid Computing" is that 99% of articles about it point out that it is cool and leave it at that. A few articles will point out how GM does rendering for CAD/CAM stuff or how Folding@Home works.
My question is what business problems can be solved with grids? Most people do not work in scientific computing facilities and most engineering departments are overseas anyway.
Conformity is the jailer of freedom and enemy of growth. -JFK
Well, the article was about grids, not p2p systems.
Here's one toolkit for creating grid programs with java.
Personally, I just don't see grid computing work where you ship your stuff out to 3rd party computers. There is the network latency, and the security aspects. But it might work for a company to maintain their own grid. That I could see. Maybe.