![]() Through LF Energy, The Linux Foundation will host RIAPS and three other projects announced to date: OperatorFabric, a smart assistant systems for electricity, water, and other utility operators Let’s Coordinate, a solution to enhance system coordination, visibility, communication and workflow between distributed users and the PowSyBl Framework, reusable modular components in high-performance computing platforms used for grid modeling. “The institute has a long track record in building various open source software tools and this is an exciting cross-sector collaboration,” Karsai said. RIAPS enables smart grid control software to run reliably, just as smartphone apps run on platforms like Android and Apple iOS that have become industry standards. Karsai, a professor of computer engineering, computer science and electrical engineering, also is Principal Investigator on The Resilient Information Architecture Platform for Smart Grid, or RIAPS, which provides core services for building effective, secure and powerful distributed software applications. It also will showcase Vanderbilt’s leadership in cyber-physical systems and the Internet of Things on an international level, getting the School of Engineering and its researchers in on the ground floor of building a new global community of energy stakeholders. “This initiative will allow us to share our research results with the open source community and facilitate technology transition to industry,” said Gabor Karsai said, associate director of the Vanderbilt Institute for Software Integrated Systems. ![]() The initiative, announced earlier this month, is focused on open-source software, and on collaboration to accelerate the transition to connected power system devices to modernize the grid. ![]() LF Energy also has support from Europe’s largest transmission power systems provider, a network that represents 43 transmission system operators from 36 countries, and the Electric Power Research Institute, whose membership represents 90 percent of U.S. Vanderbilt University is the first academic partner to join a new effort by The Linux Foundation to advance open source innovation in the energy and electricity sectors, contributing both deep expertise and a platform for smart grid applications Read the Vanderbilt Engineering story here. Posted by hamiltcl on Friday, Jin Energy, News, Research. Vanderbilt engineers’ smart grid platform joins new Linux Foundation energy project
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