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[AI] Indian-American scientist creates top web technology

Renuka Warrier
Mon, 02 Mar 2009 07:00:16 -0800

The Hindu News Update Service
 
News Update Service
Monday, March 2, 2009 : 0940 Hrs       
Sci. & Tech.
Indian-American scientist creates top web technology 

Washington (IANS): HashCache, the technological brainchild of a team of 
Princeton computer science researchers led by an Indian American scientist, has
drawn recognition as a revolutionary way to expand internet access around the 
world. 

Created by a team of researchers headed by computer science professor Vivek 
Pai, the new efficient data storage system was featured as one of the top 10
emerging technologies of the year in Technology Review, a scientific magazine 
published by Massachusetts Institute of Technology. 

HashCache, features a new data-caching system that stores information more 
efficiently than current methods. By making internet access more affordable,
HashCache has the potential to expand web use in developing regions around the 
world. 

"The whole point of HashCache is that it can be deployed in a very low-cost 
box," Pai explained. 

The development team includes PhD student and IIT-Madras graduate Anirudh 
Badam, computer science department chair Larry Peterson, computer science 
researcher
Marc Fiuczynski and University of Pittsburgh professor Kyoung Soo Park. 

Because of its affordability, HashCache presents new opportunities for poorer 
regions to gain internet access. Instead of relying heavily on RAM, HashCache
stores information from frequently visited web sites on a local hard drive so 
the data can be accessed directly. 

This system significantly increases the efficiency of internet data transfer, 
which can reduce the cost of maintaining a one-terabyte hard drive tenfold,
Pai said. 

HashCache is "flexible," Badam noted. "We can implement it in cell phones, 
laptops or nearly any other hardware." 

Commercialisation is a consideration for the group, Pai noted, but the main 
goal is to release HashCache for practical and widespread use. 

Some plans even involve making the system free for nonprofit organizations and 
schools in developing countries that already have technology support. 

"I'm happy about the reception [of HashCache]," Pai said, adding that the 
acclaim the team has garnered provides evidence that the rift between high-end
science and low-cost engineering is not as wide as it seems. 

Testing of the new caching system is currently underway at two deployment sites 
at the Kokrobitey Institute in Ghana and Obafemi Awolowo University in Nigeria.


The Princeton University team will continue to explore ways to provide greater 
efficiency in web usage, including a planned project for systems that monitor
people's behaviour to reduce slow connection speeds 




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  • [AI] Indian-American scientist creates top web technology Renuka Warrier