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Internet2

Internet2. Douglas Van Houweling President & CEO, University Corporation for Advanced Internet Development (UCAID) Advanced Internet Venture Fund 19 January 2000. Yesterday’s Internet. Thousands of users Remote login, file transfer Interconnect mainframe computers

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Internet2

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  1. Internet2 Douglas Van HouwelingPresident & CEO, University Corporation for Advanced Internet Development (UCAID) Advanced Internet Venture Fund 19 January 2000

  2. Yesterday’s Internet • Thousands of users • Remote login, file transfer • Interconnect mainframe computers • Applications capitalize on underlying technology

  3. Today’s Internet • Millions of users • Web, email, low-quality audio & video • Interconnect personal computers and servers • Applications adapt to underlying technology

  4. Tomorrow’s Internet • Billions of users and devices • Convergence of today’s applications with multimedia (telephony, video-conference, HDTV) • Interconnect personal computers, servers, and imbedded computers • New technologies enable unanticipated applications (and create new challenges)

  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 • Internet2 is focused on theInternet’s potential for our future

  6. Innovating to Close the Gap More hype technological potential Performance reality gap actualperformance Less Time

  7. What Is Internet2? A project of the university community working with our corporate colleagues and government to close the gap between the potential and reality of the Internet

  8. Why University Leadership? • The Internet came from the higher research university community • Stanford -- the Internet protocols • NSFNet -- the scaled-up Internet • CERN -- The WWW protocols • University of Illinois -- The Web browser • Research universities require an advanced Internet and have demonstrated they can develop it

  9. Internet Development Spiral Commercialization Privatization ANS/Core PSI MichNet Today’s Internet AOL UUNet SURANet InternetMCI NYSERNet Intelligent Networks GigaBit Testbeds ARPANet NSFNet NGI MBone Internet2 Research and Partnerships Development

  10. The Use of Information Technology • Computing Technology Now Used Heavily for Information Access, Sharing • Group Work Can Be Flexibly Interwoven with Individual Work • Network Infrastructure Can Overcome: • Organizational boundaries • Distance • Time

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

  12. Organization: Membership Regular members: 170 U.S. research universities Corporate members: 60 companies Affiliate members: 28 non-profits supporting Internet2

  13. Requirements for Regular Membership Campus Infrastructure -- more than 100 million bit/second network Connectivity to national Internet2 backbone -- 155 million bit/second or greater Share Internet2 backbone expense Support for application development and common software $1-2 million/year typical expenditure

  14. Organization: Board of Trustees • David Ward, (Chair, Board of Trustees) University of Wisconsin • Henry S. Bienen, Northwestern University • William G. Bowen, The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation • Molly Corbett Broad, University of North Carolina • Larry R. Faulkner,University of Texas at Austin • Steven B. Sample, University of Southern California • Graham B. Spanier, Pennsylvania State University • Eric Bloch, (Chair, Industry Strategy Council) • Thomas A. DeFanti, University of Illinois at Chicago(Chair, Applications Strategy Council) • James Bruce, MIT (Chair, Networking Policy and Planning Advisory Council) • David Meyer, Cisco & Univ. of Oregon(Chair, Networking Research Liaison Council ) • Douglas E. Van Houweling

  15. Organization: Funding & support • University & large corporate member dues $25,000/year =~$5,000,000 • Affiliate & small corporate member dues $10,000/year = ~$300,000 • Participant cost sharing for projects (Abilene) = ~$8,000,000 • Corporate in kind contributions = ~$150,000,000

  16. Enabling advanced applications...

  17. Promoting Advanced Applications Development • Collaboration • Interactive video • Remote instrument access • Data mining and visualization • Access to rich media • Internet2 Digital Video Initiative • Internet2 Research TV Working Group • Digital libraries • Supporting the large scale computing community

  18. Collaborations • Link instruments, data sources, researchers and students

  19. Telecubicle -- The distributed virtual office Work led by Advanced Network & Services Brown University Naval Postgraduate School University of North Carolina Chapel Hill University of Pennsylvania Using Inperceptible Light and VR CAVE technologies Teleimmersion

  20. The first generation telecubicle

  21. Enabling Middleware Infrastructure • Internet2 Middleware Initiative (Glueworks) • Early Harvest workshop • Collaborating with other higher ed and government initiatives • NSF Advanced Network Services program • Early Adopters program

  22. Re-creating leading edge networking capabilities...

  23. Applications and Engineering Applications Motivate Enables Engineering

  24. Initiatives • Abilene • Multicast • Quality of Service: QBone • www.internet2.edu/qbone • Distributed Storage: I2-DSI • dsi.internet2.edu • Digital Video: I2-DV • i2dv.nwu.icair.edu • I2MI: Glue Factory • www.internet2.edu/middleware

  25. Internet2 Working Groups • IPv6 • Measurement • Multicast • Network Management • Network Storage • Quality of Service • Routing • Security • Topology

  26. Internet2 and the Next Generation Internet Initiative Internet2 NGI Federal agency-led University-led Developing education and research driven applications Agency mission-driven and general purpose applications Building out campus networks, gigapops and inter-gigapop infrastructure Funding research testbeds and agency research networks Interconnecting and interoperating to provide advanced networking capabilities needed to support advanced research and education applications

  27. Internet2 Backbone Networks vBNS Abilene Federal Backbone Networks DREN ESnet NREN … National Networks

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

  29. Transferring technology and experience...

  30. 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 Internet2 Corporate Partners

  31. Internet2 Corporate Sponsors • Bell South • Compaq • Ericsson (formerly Torrent Networking Technologies) • Litton Network Access Systems • Novell • SBC Technology Resources • StorageTek

  32. Alcatel Telecom Apple Computer AppliedTheory Communications Bell Atlantic British Telecom Deutsche Telekom Fujitsu Laboratories of America GTE Internetworking Hitachi IXC Communications KDD Motorola Nexabit Networks Nokia Research Center NTT Multimedia Pacific Bell Project OXYGEN RR Donnelley Siemens Sprint Sun Microsystems Sylvan Learning Tachyon Telcordia Technologies (formerly Bellcore) Telebeam Teleglobe TransMedia Communications VTEL Williams Communications Grp. Worldport Communications Inc. Internet2 Corporate Members

  33. International Activities • Ensure global interoperability of advanced networking technologies and applications • Enable collaborations between US researchers at Internet2 institutions and their non-US counterparts

  34. Drivers for advanced global research networks • Global access to shared resources • Instruments and facilities • Genome, video, economic, and demographic databases • Data collection and dissemination • Earth observation • High Energy Physics • Collaboration support • Video, audio, tele-immersion

  35. Internet2 International Collaborations • Building peer to peer relationships • Looking for similar goals/objectives and similar constituencies • Mechanism: Memoranda of Understanding • Implementation: Peering and Connection Agreements • Collaboration: Projects and Applications

  36. Signed: 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) AAIREP (Australia) HEAnet (Ireland) Under discussion RNP2 (Brazil) CESnet (Czech Republic) DANTE (European network) EnRED (Latin American association) REDIris (Spain) SWITCH (Switzerland) MOU Signatories

  37. Peering: CA*NetII/3 (CANARIE) SURFnet (Stichting SURF) NORDUnet (NORDUnet) RENATER2 (RENATER) IUCC-Internet-2 (Israel-IUCC) SingAREN (SingAREN) TransPAC (APAN, JAIRC, SingAREN) Connections CA*NetII/3 (STAR TAP, Chicago) IUCC (STAR TAP) MIRnet (Russia, STARTAP) NORDUnet (Abilene pop, NYC) SURFnet (Abilene pop, NYC) TransPAC (STARTAP, Chicago) RENATER (STARTAP) SingAREN (STARTAP) TAnet (Taiwan,STARTAP) Peering & Connections

  38. Network Convergence • Common bearer service (IP) • End to end capability • Applications driven • Media types integrated for natural interpersonal interaction

  39. Ubiquitous Connectivity • Steadily lower prices • Task-specific and everyday devices • Machine-to-machine network traffic • Nomadic connections

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

  41. Higher Education Leadership • Virtual organizations • Distributed management • Global reach • Intangible value for the knowledge economy • Collaboration with industry & government to push the frontier together

  42. www.internet2.edu TM

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