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  • © 2009

Grid Economics and Business Models

6th International Workshop, GECON 2009, Delft, The Netherlands, August 24, 2009, Proceedings

Conference proceedings info: GECON 2009.

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Table of contents (14 papers)

  1. Front Matter

  2. Market Models and Mechanisms

    1. DEEP-SaM - Energy-Efficient Provisioning Policies for Computing Environments

      • Christian Bodenstein, Tim Püschel, Markus Hedwig, Dirk Neumann
      Pages 1-14
    2. Response Deadline Evaluation in Point-to-Point Negotiation on Grids

      • Sébastien Noël, Pierre Manneback, Gheorghe Cosmin Silaghi
      Pages 15-27
    3. A Framework for Analyzing the Economics of a Market for Grid Services

      • Robin Mason, Costas Courcoubetis, Natalia Miliou
      Pages 28-45
  3. Business Support Tools

    1. The GridEcon Platform: A Business Scenario Testbed for Commercial Cloud Services

      • Marcel Risch, Jörn Altmann, Li Guo, Alan Fleming, Costas Courcoubetis
      Pages 46-59
    2. VieSLAF Framework: Enabling Adaptive and Versatile SLA-Management

      • Ivona Brandic, Dejan Music, Philipp Leitner, Schahram Dustdar
      Pages 60-73
  4. Business-Related Resource Allocation

    1. Increasing Capacity Exploitation in Food Supply Chains Using Grid Concepts

      • Eugen Volk, Marcus Müller, Ansger Jacob, Peter Racz, Martin Waldburger
      Pages 88-101
    2. A QoS-Based Selection Mechanism Exploiting Business Relationships in Workflows

      • Dimosthenis Kyriazis, Konstantinos Tserpes, Ioannis Papagiannis, Kleopatra Konstanteli, Theodora Varvarigou
      Pages 102-115
  5. Work-in-Progress on Economic and Legal Models

    1. Determinants of Participation in Global Volunteer Grids: A Cross-Country Analysis

      • Junseok Hwang, Jörn Altmann, Ashraf Bany Mohammed
      Pages 116-127
  6. Work-in-Progress on Business Models

    1. Engineering of Services and Business Models for Grid Applications

      • Jürgen Falkner, Anette Weisbecker
      Pages 140-149
    2. Visualization in Health Grid Environments: A Novel Service and Business Approach

      • Frank Dickmann, Mathias Kaspar, Benjamin Löhnhardt, Nick Kepper, Fred Viezens, Frank Hertel et al.
      Pages 150-159
  7. Work-in-Progress on Economic-Aware Architectures

    1. Message Protocols for Provisioning and Usage of Computing Services

      • Nikolay Borissov, Simon Caton, Omer Rana, Aharon Levine
      Pages 160-170
    2. Business Collaborations in Grids: The BREIN Architectural Principals and VO Model

      • Steve Taylor, Mike Surridge, Giuseppe Laria, Pierluigi Ritrovato, Lutz Schubert
      Pages 171-181
  8. Back Matter

Other Volumes

  1. Grid Economics and Business Models

About this book

GECON - Grid Economics and Business Models Cloud computing is seen by many people as the natural evolution of Grid computing concepts. Both, for instance, rely on the use of service-based approaches for pro- sioning compute and data resources. The importance of understanding business m- els and the economics of distributed computing systems and services has generally remained unchanged in the move to Cloud computing. This understanding is nec- sary in order to build sustainable e-infrastructure and businesses around this paradigm of sharing Cloud services. Currently, only a handful of companies have created s- cessful businesses around Cloud services. Among these, Amazon and Salesforce (with their offerings of Elastic Compute Cloud and force. com among other offerings) are the most prominent. Both companies understand how to charge for their services and how to enable commercial transactions on them. However, whether a wide-spread adoption of Cloud services will occur has to seen. One key enabler remains the ability to support suitable business models and charging schemes that appeal to users o- sourcing (part of) their internal business functions. The topics that have been addressed by the authors of accepted papers reflect the above-described situation and the need for a better understanding of Grid economics. The topics range from market mechanisms for trading computing resources, capacity planning, tools for modeling economic aspects of service-oriented systems, archit- tures for handling service level agreements, to models for economically efficient resource allocation.

Editors and Affiliations

  • TEMEP, School of Industrial and Management Engineering, Seoul National University, Seoul, South Korea

    Jörn Altmann

  • Grid Computing and Distributed Systems (GRIDS) Laboratory, Department of Computer Science and Software Engineering, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia

    Rajkumar Buyya

  • School of Computer Science/Welsh eScience Centre, Cardiff University, Cardiff, United Kingdom

    Omer F. Rana

Bibliographic Information

Buy it now

Buying options

eBook USD 39.99
Price excludes VAT (USA)
  • Available as PDF
  • Read on any device
  • Instant download
  • Own it forever
Softcover Book USD 54.99
Price excludes VAT (USA)
  • Compact, lightweight edition
  • Dispatched in 3 to 5 business days
  • Free shipping worldwide - see info

Tax calculation will be finalised at checkout

Other ways to access