Abstract
Grid computing has great potential but to enter the mainstream it must be
simplified. Tools and libraries must make it easier to solve problems by being
simpler and at the same time more sophisticated. In this paper we describe how
Grid computing can be achieved through spreadsheets. No parallel programming or
complex tools need to be used. So long as dependencies allow it, formulae in a
spreadsheet can be evaluated concurrently on the Grid. Thus Grid computing
becomes accessible to all those who can use a spreadsheet. The story is
completed with a sophisticated backend system, NetSolve, which can solve complex
linear algebra systems with minimal intervention from the user. In this paper we
present the architecture of the system for performing such simple yet
sophisticated grid computing and a case study which performs a large singular
value decomposition.