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Internet2: Advanced Networking for Higher Education Gregory Wood Director of Communications University of Maine 20 January 2000.

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Presentation on theme: "Internet2: Advanced Networking for Higher Education Gregory Wood Director of Communications University of Maine 20 January 2000."— Presentation transcript:

1 Internet2: Advanced Networking for Higher Education Gregory Wood Director of Communications University of Maine 20 January 2000

2 Yesterday’s Internet  Thousands of users  Remote login, file transfer  Applications capitalize on underlying technology  Experimental uses

3 Today’s Internet  Hundreds of millions of users  Web, email, low-quality audio & video  Applications adapt to underlying technology  Important, not mission-critical uses

4 Tomorrow’s Internet  Billions of users and devices  Convergence of today’s applications and services with real time rich media environments  New technologies enable unanticipated applications (and create new challenges)  Mission-critical uses

5 Why Internet2?  The Internet was not designed for: Millions of users Congestion Multimedia Real time interaction  But, only the Internet can: Accommodate explosive growth Enable convergence of information work, mass media, and human collaboration

6 Research and Development Commercialization Partnerships Privatization Internet Development Spiral Today’s Internet Internet2 NGI

7 More Time Performance Less hype technological potential actual performance reality gap Innovating to Close the Gap

8 Internet2 Mission Develop and deploy advanced network applications and technologies, accelerating the creation of tomorrow’s Internet

9 Internet2 Goals  Enable new generation of applications  Re-create leading edge R&E network capability  Transfer technology and experience to the global production Internet

10 Internet2/NGI Relationship  Separate but interdependent  U.S. Next Generation Internet Led by Federal government Focused on Federal agency needs  Internet2 Led by higher education Focused on research and education needs

11 Advanced Applications

12 What are “Internet2 applications”?  They deliver qualitative and quantitative improvements in how we conduct research and engage in teaching and learning  They require advanced networks to work

13 Different Disciplines/Contexts  Sciences  Arts  Humanities  Health care  Business/Law  Administration  …  Instruction  Collaboration  Streaming video  Distributed computation  Data mining  Virtual reality  Digital libraries  …

14 Application Attributes  Interactive collaboration and instruction  Real-time access to remote resources

15 Attributes, cont.  Large-scale, multi- site computation and database processing  Shared virtual reality  Any combination of the above

16 Video Encyclopedia of the 20th Century Northwestern University

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18 Space Physics and Aeronomy Research Collaboratory University of Michigan

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22 Remote Scanning Electron Microscope University of Michigan

23 Philips XL30

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25 Distributed nanoManipulator UNC-Chapel Hill

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27 Advanced Regional Prediction System University of Oklahoma

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29 3D Brain Mapping: “Watching the Brain in Action” University of Pittsburgh Carnegie Mellon University Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center

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31 Tele-immersion  Telecubicle -- The distributed virtual office Advanced Network & Services Brown University Naval Postgraduate School University of North Carolina Chapel Hill University of Pennsylvania

32 First Generation Telecubicle

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35 Re-creating leading edge networking capabilities...

36 Applications Engineering MotivateEnables Applications and Engineering

37 Internet2 Initiatives  Quality of Service: QBone www.internet2.edu/qbone/  Multicast www.internet2.edu/multicast/  Internet2 Middleware Initiative www.internet2.edu/middleware  Distributed Storage: I2-DSI dsi.internet2.edu  Digital Video: I2-DV dv.internet2.edu

38  Campus networks  GigaPoPs  National backbones End-to-End Network Performance

39 Internet2 GigaPoPs

40 National Networks  Internet2 Backbone Networks vBNS(+) Abilene  Federal Backbone Networks DREN ESnet NREN …

41 Abilene Network Cleveland New York Atlanta Indianapolis Kansas City Houston Denver Los Angeles Sacramento Seattle Abilene Router Node Abilene Access Node Operational January 1999 Planned 1999

42 Technology Transfer  Collaboratively developing and deploying advanced applications  Developing pre-commercial infrastructure and protocols  Establishing expertise and human capital

43 Internet2 Universities 171 Members as of January 2000

44 Internet2 Corporate Partners  ITC^Deltacom  Lucent Technologies  MCI Worldcom  Microsoft  Newbridge Networks  Nortel Networks  Qwest Communications  StarBurst  WCI Cable  3Com  Advanced Network & Services  Alcatel  Ameritech  AT&T  Cabletron Systems  Cisco Systems  FORE Systems  IBM

45 Internet2 International Partners  CANARIE (Canada)  Stichting SURF (Netherlands)  NORDUnet (Nordic countries)  TERENA (pan-European association)  UKERNA (UK)  INFN-GARR (Italy)  DFN-Verein (Germany)  GIP RENATER (France)  JAIRC (Japan)  CANARIE (Canada)  Stichting SURF (Netherlands)  NORDUnet (Nordic countries)  TERENA (pan-European association)  UKERNA (UK)  INFN-GARR (Italy)  DFN-Verein (Germany)  GIP RENATER (France)  JAIRC (Japan)  SingAREN (Singapore)  CUDI (Mexico)  APAN (Asia-Pacific region)  Israel-IUCC (Israel)  DANTE (European network)  AAIREP (Australia)  HEAnet (Ireland)  CESnet (Czech Republic)  SWITCH (Switzerland)  SingAREN (Singapore)  CUDI (Mexico)  APAN (Asia-Pacific region)  Israel-IUCC (Israel)  DANTE (European network)  AAIREP (Australia)  HEAnet (Ireland)  CESnet (Czech Republic)  SWITCH (Switzerland)

46 Information  Collaboration  Today’s Internet focuses on access to and delivery of information and entertainment  Tomorrow’s Internet will support human collaboration in an information and media rich environment  The vision is vision!

47 Unanticipated Innovation  Lesson of the Web  Network growth and value are non- linear  New technologies enable qualitatively different uses  Users become innovators

48 www.internet2.edu TM


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