NCSA is one of the five original centers in the
National Science Foundation's
Supercomputer Centers Program. The idea for NCSA and the four other supercomputer centers arose from the frustration of its founder,
Larry Smarr, who wrote an influential paper, "The Supercomputer Famine in American Universities", in 1982, after having to travel to Europe in summertime to access supercomputers and conduct his research. Smarr wrote a proposal to address the future needs of scientific research. Seven other University of Illinois professors joined as co-principal investigators, and many others provided descriptions of what could be accomplished if the proposal were accepted. Known as the Black Proposal (after the color of its cover), it was submitted to the NSF in 1983. It met the NSF's mandate and its contents immediately generated excitement. However, the NSF had no organization in place to support it, and the proposal itself did not contain a clearly defined home for its implementation. The NSF established an Office of Scientific Computing in 1984 and, with strong congressional support, it announced a national competition that would fund a set of supercomputer centers like the one described in the Black Proposal. The result was that four supercomputer centers would be chartered (Cornell, Illinois, Princeton, and San Diego), with a fifth (Pittsburgh) added later. The Black Proposal was approved in 1985 and marked the foundation of NCSA, with $42,751,000 in funding from 1 January 1985 through 31 December 1989. This was also noteworthy in that the NSF's action of approving an unsolicited proposal was unprecedented. NCSA opened its doors in January 1986. In 2007, NCSA was awarded a grant from the
National Science Foundation to build "
Blue Waters", a supercomputer capable of performing quadrillions of calculations per second, a level of performance known as petascale.
Black Proposal The 'Black Proposal' was a short, ten-page proposal for the creation of a supercomputing center that eventually led to funding from the
National Science Foundation (NSF) to create supercomputing centers, including the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) at the University of Illinois. In this sense, the significant role played by the U.S. Government in funding the center, and the first widely popular web browser (NCSA's Mosaic), cannot be denied. The Black Proposal described the limitations on any scientific research that required computer capabilities, and it described a future world of productive scientific collaboration, centered on universal computer access, in which technical limitations on scientific research would not exist. Significantly, it expressed a clear vision of how to get from the present to the future. The proposal was titled "A Center for Scientific and Engineering Supercomputing", and was ten pages long. The proposal's vision of the computing future were then unusual or non-existent, but elements of it are now commonplace, such as
visualization,
workstations, high-speed
I/O,
data storage,
software engineering, and close
collaboration with the multi-disciplinary user community. Modern readers of the Black Proposal may gain insight into a world that no longer exists. Today's computers are easy to use, and the
web is omnipresent. Employees in
high-tech endeavors are given supercomputer accounts simply because they are employees. Computers are universally available and can be used by almost anyone of any age, applicable to almost anything. At the time the proposal was written, computers were available to almost no one. For scientists who needed computers in their research, access was difficult if available at all. The effect on research was crippling. Reading publications from that time gives no hint that scientists were required to learn the arcane technical details of whatever computer facilities were available to them, a time-consuming limitation on their research, and an exceedingly tedious distraction from their professional interests. The implementation of the Black Proposal had a primary role in shaping the computer technology of today, and its impact on research (both scientific and otherwise) has been profound. The proposal's description of the leading edge of scientific research may be sobering, and the limitations on computer usage at major universities may be surprising. A comprehensive list of the world's supercomputers shows the best resources that were then available. The thrust of the proposal may seem obvious now, but was then novel. The National Science Foundation announced funding for the supercomputer centers in 1985; The first supercomputer at NCSA came online in January 1986. NCSA quickly came to the attention of the worldwide scientific community with the release of
NCSA Telnet in 1986. A number of other tools followed, and like NCSA Telnet, all were made available to everyone at no cost. In 1993, NCSA released the
Mosaic web browser, the first popular graphical
Web browser, which played an important part in expanding the growth of the
World Wide Web. NCSA Mosaic was written by
Marc Andreessen and
Eric Bina, who went on to develop the
Netscape Web browser. Mosaic was later licensed to
Spyglass, Inc. which provided the foundation for
Internet Explorer. The
server-complement was called
NCSA HTTPd, which later became known as
Apache HTTP Server. Other notable contributions by NCSA were the black hole simulations supporting the development of
LIGO in 1992, the tracking of
Comet Hale–Bopp in 1997, the creation of a
PlayStation 2 Cluster in 2003, and the monitoring of the
COVID-19 pandemic and creation of a
COVID-19 vaccine. == Facilities ==