Grid Economics and Business Models, 2007
4th International Workshop, GECON 2007, Rennes, France, August 28, 2007, Proceedings

Information Systems and Applications, incl. Internet/Web, and HCI Series

Coordinator: Veit Daniel J.

Language: English

52.74 €

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201 p. · 15.5x23.5 cm · Soft-cover
analysis. Their results show that interoperability is the most indispensable element to a successful utilization of Grid infrastructures in enterprises. In the third contribution, Altmann and colleagues formulate a taxonomical - proach to Grid business models. They survey the development and origin of Grid technologies and focus on the importance of business-directed values when trying to commercialize today?s Grids. Therein, they identify the reduction of costs, the - provement of efficiency, the creation of novel products and services as well as the quality and collaboration between companies as key factors for the differentiation of Grid business models. The paper concludes by applying the proposed taxonomy to a utility computing scenario and a software-as-a-service scenario in practice. Stanoevska-Slabeva and Zsigri propose a generic value chain for the Grid industry. In their contribution, they suggest a case study on aggregating results from different Grid middleware modules into a generic Grid value chain. In their contribution, McKee and coauthors propose a set of strategies for acting in future service-oriented markets. The costs of negotiations are put in relation to the value of the offer under negotiation. Hence, the contribution adds to the state of the art by extending the vision of service level agreements (SLAs) within service fra- works. Sandholm and Lai propose a novel, prediction-based enforcement of performance contracts. Their approach aims at controllable quality of service (QoS) within Grid computing platforms. The proposed mechanism is based on a hybrid resource allo- tion system using both proportional shares and reservations.
Adopting the Grid for Business Purposes: The Main Objectives and the Associated Economic Issues.- Decision Factors of Enterprises for Adopting Grid Computing.- Taxonomy of Grid Business Models.- Development of a Generic Value Chain for the Grid Industry.- Strategies for the Service Market Place.- Prediction-Based Enforcement of Performance Contracts.- DFCA: A Flexible Refundable Auction for Limited Capacity Suppliers.- A Comparative Analysis of Single-Unit Vickrey Auctions and Commodity Markets for Realizing Grid Economies with Dynamic Pricing.- A Continuation-Based Framework for Economy-Driven Grid Service Provision.- On Business Grid Demands and Approaches.- Enabling the Simulation of Service-Oriented Computing and Provisioning Policies for Autonomic Utility Grids.- Managing a Peer-to-Peer Backup System: Does Imposed Fairness Socially Outperform a Revenue-Driven Monopoly?.- E-Business in ArguGRID.- AssessGrid, Economic Issues Underlying Risk Awareness in Grids.- CATNETS – Open Market Approaches for Self-organizing Grid Resource Allocation.- The edutain@grid Project.- GridEcon – The Economic-Enhanced Next-Generation Internet.- SORMA – Building an Open Grid Market for Grid Resource Allocation.

Presents the refereed proceedings of the 4th International Workshop on Grid Economics and Business Models

Includes twelve carefully reviewed full papers

Covers grid business modeling, market mechanisms for the grid, and economic grid service provisioning

Features six additional project reports that give an overview of current and ongoing research in grid economics