-The goal of SimGrid is to run an application on a simulated platform.
-For that, you have to describe **each element of your platform**, such
-as computing hosts, clusters, each disks, links, etc. You must also
-define the **routing on your platform**, ie which path is taken
-between two hosts. Finally, you may also describe an **experimental
-scenario**, with qualitative changes (e.g., bandwidth changes
-representing an external load) and qualitative changes (representing
-how some elements fail and restart over time).
-
-You should really separate your application from the platform
-description, as it will ease your experimental campain afterward.
-Mixing them is seen as a really bad experimental practice. The easiest
-to enforce this split is to put the platform description in a XML
-file. Many example platforms are provided in the archive, and this
-page gives all needed details to write such files, as well as some
-hints and tricks about describing your platform.
-
-On the other side, XML is sometimes not expressive enough, in
-particular for large platforms exhibiting repetitive patterns that are
-not simply expressed in XML. In practice, many users end up
-generating their XML platform files from some sort of scripts. It is
-probably preferable to rewrite your XML :ref:`platform using the lua
-scripting language <platform_lua>` instead. In the future, it should
-be possible to describe the platform in python or directly in C++, but
-this is not possible yet.
-
-As usual, SimGrid is a versatile framework, and you should find the
-way of describing your platform that best fits your experimental
-practice.
+In SimGrid, platforms are usually described in XML. This formalism has
+some drawbacks, but using a specific format ensures that the platform
+is not mixed with the tested application. This separation of concern
+:ref:`is a must <howto_science>` for your Modeling and Simulation (M&S)
+work. When XML is too limiting, you may describe your platforms using
+the :ref:`lua bindings <platform_lua>` (it is not yet possible to do so in
+python or directly in C++).