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Internet2 Directions

Internet2 Directions. Chinese-American Networking Symposium Douglas Van Houweling President and CEO, Internet2/University Corporation for Advanced Internet Development (UCAID). Introduction. Delighted to join our partners CERNET CSTNET NSFCNET

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Internet2 Directions

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  1. Internet2 Directions Chinese-American Networking Symposium Douglas Van Houweling President and CEO, Internet2/University Corporation for Advanced Internet Development (UCAID)

  2. Introduction • Delighted to join our partners • CERNET • CSTNET • NSFCNET • Privileged to join distinguished colleagues from the Chinese and US networking community • My third Chinese – American Networking Symposium • 11 January 1999 -- Maryland • 26 May 2000 -- Beijing • 12 March 2001 – Maryland

  3. 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)

  4. Today’s Internet Doesn’t • Provide reliable end-to-end performance • Encourage cooperation on new capabilities • Allow testing of new technologies • Support development of revolutionary applications

  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. 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

  7. 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

  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. Organization: Membership Regular members: >180 U.S. research universities Corporate members: >70 companies Affiliate members: >30 non-profits supporting Internet2

  11. Internet2 Universities185 Universities as of March 2001

  12. Internet2 Focus Areas • Advanced Network Infrastructure • Middleware • Engineering • Advanced Applications • Partnerships

  13. Internet2 Network Infrastructure • Backbones operate at 2.4 Gbps (OC48) capacity today • GigaPoPs provide regional high-performance aggregation points • Local campus networks provide 100 Mbps to the desktop

  14. Internet2Backbone Networks Internet2 Network Architecture GigaPoP One GigaPoP Two GigaPoP Four GigaPoP Three

  15. University A Internet2 Interconnect Cloud GigaPoP One Regional Network Commercial Internet Connections University C University B Network Architecture

  16. Internet2 Backbone Networks Donna Cox,Robert Patterson, NCSA

  17. Abilene NetworkCore Map

  18. Abilene Network Logical Map

  19. Internet2 GigaPoPs27 as of March 2001

  20. Download of “The Matrix” DVD(Comparison of the Internet2 Land Speed Record)

  21. End to End Performance • When it’s built, can it deliver? • The negative feedback loop • Ensure that the infrastructure is delivering to its full potential • The community has spoken • Design Team has delivered • We’re ready to move

  22. Network of the Future • Abilene and the vBNS+ are delivered high performance backbone service • The connectors are maturing and sharing knowledge • We need to respond to the wavelength opportunity • Our partners in Canada and Europe are committed • The flexibility will be crucial to our future

  23. Internet2 Focus Areas • Advanced Network Infrastructure • Middleware • Engineering • Advanced Applications • Partnerships

  24. Middleware • A layer of software between the network and the applications • Authentication • Identification • Authorization • Directories • Security

  25. Internet2 Middleware Initiative • Internet2 community has unique needs and capabilities • Middleware Architecture Committee for Education • Early Harvest and Early Adopters • Internet2 PKI Labs • Shibboleth (authentication) • Computational middleware (Beta Grid) • Medical middleware • Directories

  26. Middleware Progress • The Internet2 community has responded • Our architects have come together • Our institutions have begun to invest • Our corporate partners have engaged • Distributed authentication • Distributed directory • 3rd Quarter 2001 the world begins to change

  27. Internet2 Focus Areas • Advanced Network Infrastructure • Middleware • Engineering • Advanced Applications • Partnerships

  28. Engineering • Quality of Service: QBone • http://www.internet2.edu/qbone/ • Scalable IP Multicast • http://www.internet2.edu/multicast/ • IPv6 • Network Security • Network Management • Measurement

  29. Internet2 Focus Areas • Advanced Network Infrastructure • Middleware • New Network Capabilities • Advanced Applications • Partnerships

  30. Advanced Applications • Distributed computation • Virtual laboratories • Digital libraries • Distributed learning • Digital video • Tele-immersion • All of the above in combination

  31. Real-time access to remote instruments University of North Carolina, Chapel HillDistributed nanoManipulator Virtual Laboratories

  32. Mauna Kea Observatories AURA University of Hawaii Virtual Laboratories

  33. Space Physics & Aeronomy Research Collaboratory (SPARC) University of Michigan NSF Virtual Laboratories

  34. Tele-cubicles and the CAVE Source: University of Illinois-Chicago

  35. Internet2 Focus Areas • Advanced Network Infrastructure • Middleware • Engineering • Advanced Applications • Partnerships

  36. Internet2 Partnerships • Internet2 universities are recreating the partnerships that fostered the Internet in its infancy • Industry • Government • International

  37. 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

  38. National Networks • Internet2 Backbone Networks • vBNS • Abilene • Federal Backbone Networks • DREN • ESnet • NREN • SuperNet • …

  39. Technology Transfer Conduits • Collaborating on advanced applications • Deploying pre-commercial infrastructure and protocols • Establishing expertise and human capital • Large-scale proof of concept

  40. Internet2 Partnerships • Internet2 universities are recreating the partnerships that fostered the Internet in its infancy • Industry • Government • International

  41. 3Com Advanced Network & Services Alcatel AT&T Cisco Systems IBM ITC^Deltacom Lucent Technologies Marconi Communications Microsoft Nortel Networks Qwest Communications SBC Communications Spirent Communications WCI Cable WorldCom Internet2 Corporate Partners

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

  43. 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

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

  45. 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

  46. AAIREP (Australia) APAN (Asia-Pacific) APAN-KR (Korea) ARNES (Slovenia) BELNET (Belgium) CANARIE (Canada) CARNET (Croatia) CERNet, CSTnet, NSFCnet (China) CESnet (Czech Republic) CUDI (Mexico) DANTE (Europe) DFN-Verein (Germany) GIP RENATER (France) GRNET (Greece) HEAnet (Ireland) HUNGARNET (Hungary) INFN-GARR (Italy) Israel-IUCC (Israel) JAIRC (Japan) JISC/UKERNA (UK) NORDUnet (Nordic countries) POL-34 (Poland) RCCN (Portugal) RedIRIS (Spain) RESTENA (Luxembourg) RETINA (Argentina) REUNA (Chile) RPN2 (Brazil) SENACYT (Panama) SingAREN (Singapore) Stichting SURF (Netherlands) SWITCH (Switzerland) TAnet2 (Taiwan) TERENA (Europe) Internet2 International Partners

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

  48. Our Message • We stand with colleagues across the world in a vision of an open, innovative, high performance Internet

  49. More Internet2 Information • On the Web • www.internet2.edu • www.internet2.edu/html/lists.html • Email • info@internet2.edu

  50. www.internet2.edu

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