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Beginning Decade #2… StateNets 2004 Doug Heacock, Executive Director Kansas Research and Education Network.

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Presentation on theme: "Beginning Decade #2… StateNets 2004 Doug Heacock, Executive Director Kansas Research and Education Network."— Presentation transcript:

1 Beginning Decade #2… StateNets 2004 Doug Heacock, Executive Director Kansas Research and Education Network

2 Overview The first decade The KanREN backbone network The KanREN consortium, governance Fiscal growth and funding model The next decade: collaboration & Kan-ed

3 The first decade Beginnings in NSF Connections program, 1993 Small staff—2 to 3 FTE until 1999 Relatively simple institutional needs to meet –Internet access (4.5 – 21 Mbps) –Low-bandwidth connectivity between member institutions (56k-T1 backbone) Internet 2 via GPN

4 The first decade Staff expansion in 2000-2003 –4 to 7 FTE –Approaching “critical mass” Institutional needs growing more complex –QoS, IP multicast, growing security issues Outgrowing our “host family” –KanREN leaves the umbrella of KUCR, incorporates independently

5 The first decade New opportunities and initiatives –Video initiative: tuning the network for video applications, putting up an MCU –EETT/TRC project: connecting 24 elementary schools across the state to provide videoconferencing services for collaboration –SEGP

6 The KanREN network

7 The KanREN Consortium Membership consortium serving: –Higher education –K-12 –Libraries –Other non-profits Incorporated as a not-for-profit in 2002 Filed for 501(c)(3) status Independent of the state

8 Governance Board of Directors –Representation from each major constituency group (K12, community colleges, private colleges, regents universities, libraries, other organizations) Each member institution has a vote on matters of consortium policy, budget, rates

9 Fiscal growth 1993/94—NSF funding totals ~$790k 1995-present—self-funded –Annual budget increases from ~$400k to ~$2M –Increases reflect growth of staff and increased bandwidth demands

10 Funding model Self-funded since NSF grant days –Membership fees –Fees for service (connectivity, circuits, etc.) –No state funding –No grants or gifts

11 Kan-ed –Concept born in 1998 (KSDE) –Kan-ed Act passed in 2001—to be administered by the Board of Regents –Funding bill passed in 2002 A bumpy road at times –It took a long time for KanREN’s role to become clear –The politics were weird at times –But we were Kan-ed “evangelists” throughout the process The next decade

12 Kan-ed commissioned an Engineering Trade Study to sort things out –Network design –Collaborations with vendors, providers Clear roles for KanREN have emerged –Assistance with network engineering –Operation of the Kan-ed NOC; network management KanREN/Kan-ed

13 The Kan-ed network A “network of networks” NAPs (Network Access/Aggregation Points) located strategically across the state—up to 20 of them NAPs bring connectivity to convenient/economical places for providers to connect Providers/“peering partners” connect their Kan-ed member customers to the network

14 The Kan-ed network Engineering trade study/RFP process Juniper M7i/M10i selected for NAPs OC-3 circuits from multiple telecoms interconnect NAPs –Very aggressive circuit pricing –Some redundancy –Some details to be worked out

15 NAP distribution N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N NNNSBC NAPCOX NAPIndep. NAP

16 KanREN/Kan-ed Kan-ed has opened a funding stream from the state that simply didn’t exist before Kan-ed has engineered a collaborative environment that is unprecedented in Kansas –Equipment vendors –Big telecoms, independents –A zillion “K-acronym” organizations

17 Thanks! Doug Heacock, Executive Director, KanREN heacock@kanren.net


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