US I GNITE A MERICA ’ S N ETWORK FOR N EXT - GEN A PPLICATIONS OSTP/NSF Update March 2011.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
IPA in Croatia Ministry of Science, Education and Sports Nataša Maršić, PhD.
Advertisements

CEFPI Southeast Region Strategic Planning September 2011 Focus Groups Update – Sept
WP4 – 4.1 and 4.2 Preparatory activities for the creation of the WATERMODE permanent network 1 Technical Committee Meeting Venice, June 24-25, 2010 VENETO.
1 Measuring ICT4D: ITUs Focus on Household and Individual Market, Economics & Finance Unit Telecommunication Development Bureau.
International Telecommunication Union ITU-D Overview.
G20 Training Strategy Bridging Education, Training, and Decent Work
Innovate Now: Overview and Next Steps February 2007.
The Readiness Centers Initiative Early Education and Care Board Meeting Tuesday, May 11, 2010.
Future Internet Research and Experiments EU vs USA 7 June, 2012 Róbert Szabó Dept. of Telecommunications and Media Informatics Budapest University of Technology.
What Did We Learn About Our Future? Getting Ready for Strategic Planning Spring 2012.
UWSEM Investment Guidelines and Strategy Frameworks for
Sponsored by the National Science Foundation1July 2011www.geni.net GEC11 Glenn Ricart ignite U.S. Americas Network for Next-gen Applications.
1. 2 August Recommendation 9.1 of the Strategic Information Technology Advisory Committee (SITAC) report initiated the effort to create an Administrative.
The project is funded by the European Union Institutional capacity development of the three innovation centres and research sector in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Smart Grid Test Beds in the APEC Smart Grid Initiative (ASGI) and Energy Smart Communities Initiative (ESCI) Presentation by Jeff Skeer, U.S. Department.
Microsoft Business Technology Center Microsoft Business-Technology Center Establishment of MSBTC and the Possibility.
Michael Hrybyk President/CEO An Overview.
1 Broadband Deployment & Adoption Efforts in California.
Enhancing Access To, and use and Quality of, Information and Communication Technologies.
Entrepreneurship youth
Appalachia’s Bright Future Harlan Center April 20, 2013.
Made Possible by the Broadband Technology Opportunities Program Funded by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 Broadband Technology Opportunities.
` OEDIT Presentations December 8, Collaborative innovation is key for job creation and economic growth “Given the complexity of the problems and.
Division of Research & Economic Development Report to the URI Faculty Senate April 19, 2012 Peter Alfonso, Ph.D. Vice President for Research & Economic.
Chicago’s Broadband Strategy TOWARDS AFFORDABLE, UNIVERSAL TECHNOLOGY ACCESS City of Chicago Richard M. Daley, Mayor Department of Innovation and Technology.
USDA-RD PRESENTATION TO NACO WESTERN INTERSTATE REGION ANCHORAGE, AK MAY 22, 2014 White House Rural Council “Made in Rural America”
Dream a Little big Dream With us! October 2012 AASHE Conference Los Angeles, California.
Sue Spradley Executive Director PCAST | 7 Sep 2012.
E2 Tech Forum November 15, 2011 Andrew Wilson, Executive Director.
Creating a New Vision for Kentucky’s Youth Kentucky Youth Policy Assessment How can we Improve Services for Kentucky’s Youth? September 2005.
1 Improving Federal Rights-of-Way Management to Spur Broadband Deployment Meredith Attwell Senior Advisor to the Assistant Secretary National Telecommunications.
All Youth Ready at 21. Connecticut Youth Futures Policy Team  Participates in: Youth Policy Institute of the National Conference of State Legislatures,
Technical Assistance Workshop – Fiscal Year 2004 TechnologyOpportunities Program Program.
Board of Trustees Orientation September 23, 2014 Dr. George Railey Vice Chancellor of Educational Services and Institutional Effectiveness 1.
Clean, Green, and on the Same Team! How Economic and Workforce Development are Partnering to Serve an Emerging Regional Industry.
WII Overview: The Western Innovation Initiative (WII) is organizing, coordinating, and managing resources from various locations for use across the group.
Dynamic Entrepreneurship: The Role of Universities in Regions European Union Regional Policy Conference: Regions for Economic Change March 7-8, 2007 Karen.
Manufacturing and Services’ Sustainable Manufacturing Initiative (SMI) and Public- Private Dialogue.
“This initiative will help bring our best ideas to market right here in New York State.” – Governor Andrew Cuomo.
WIPO Pilot Project - Assisting Member States to Create an Adequate Innovation Infrastructure to Support University – Industry Collaboration.
Healthcare Consortium How Do We Expand on this Opportunity?
The Future of the Internet and Internet2 IEC Executive 2001 Douglas E. Van Houweling President and CEO, UCAID IEC Executive
Seedco & Inclusion: Our Partnership for Delivery Expertise Welfare to Work Convention Manchester June 30 – July 1, 2011.
1 The Federal Shared Youth Vision Partnership A Federal Partnership between the United States Departments of Education, Health.
Mapping New Strategies: National Science Foundation J. HicksNew York Academy of Sciences4 April 2006 Examples from our daily life at NSF Vision Opportunities.
Key Principles for Preparing the DCSD Community Plan 1.Integration – Social, Economic, Environmental Well-being focused on outcomes and people centred.
Illinois Century Network Illinois Broadband Opportunity Partnership – East Central Project.
GOAL: Connect the value of a growing IT talent pipeline to the development of smarter communities. Lonnie Emard Executive Director, CESM.
1 Microsoft’s Citizenship Initiative Microsoft Innovation Centers Janko Cajhen Microsoft USAID Regional Conference Zagreb, May 2006.
National Cybersecurity Center of Excellence Increasing the deployment and use of standards-based security technologies Mid-Atlantic Federal Lab Consortium.
Yorkshire & Humber Digital Health & Wellbeing Ecosystem - member of the ECHAlliance International Network of Permanent Connected Health Ecosystems #YHDigitalHealthEco.
Government and Industry IT: one vision, one community Vice Chairs April Meeting Agenda Welcome and Introductions GAPs welcome meeting with ACT Board (John.
Law Seminars International Spectrum Management Conference NTIA: SPECTRUM POLICY FOR THE 21 st CENTURY The Federal Government Spectrum Management Perspective.
G É ANT2 Development Support Activity and the Republic of Moldova 1st RENAM User Conference Chisinau, Republic of Moldova 14-May-2007 Valentino Cavalli.
U N I T E D S T A T E S D E P A R T M E N T O F C O M M E R C E N A T I O N A L O C E A N I C A N D A T M O S P H E R I C A D M I N I S T R A T I O N.
Agricultural Research Service Office of Technology Transfer Agricultural Research Partnerships (ARP) Network.
A P LAN TO C ONNECT W EST V IRGINIA ’ S C OMMUNITIES.
National Cybersecurity Center of Excellence Increasing the deployment and use of standards-based security technologies Bill Fisher Security Engineer National.
Meet and Greet with Mr. Nara Lokesh May 8, AP NRI Entrepreneurship Foundation Moderator: Mr. Jaya Prasad (JP) Vejendla Kick Off - Mr. Jayaram Komati.
Enabling Building Efficiency: The NYC Urban Technology Innovation Center TIMOTHY CROSS, COLUMBIA ENGINEERING IEEE INNOVATION DAY POLYTECHNIC INSTITUTE.
FirstNet and Public Safety Wireless Broadband eNATOA WEBINAR August 4, 2014 Sean Stokes The Baller Herbst Law Group, P.C P Street, N.W. Washington,
Broadband Challenges 2017 Christopher Tamarin
Collaborative Innovation Communities: Bringing the Best Together
South Big Data Innovation Hub
Opening - Launch of Phase 2
Georgian Research & Development Foundation (GRDF)
PROJECT THOR Impact on the Region
Launch of Phase 2 September 6, 2017 DoD AMMO Update Jim McCabe
National Quantum Initiative
8.
Presentation transcript:

US I GNITE A MERICA ’ S N ETWORK FOR N EXT - GEN A PPLICATIONS OSTP/NSF Update March 2011

US I GNITE O VERVIEW We need to create a research and commercial environment in the U.S. where new applications for advanced networks can flourish. Achieving this will require the combined resources of industry, government, and academia. We propose forming a public private partnership whose mission is to make the U.S. the world leader in applications and services for advanced broadband networks. The principal goals include: Assist the commercial market to reach sufficient scale to support commercial applications that take advantage of next- gen broadband networks. Advance application and service R&D, focusing on national priority areas such as job creation, health care, energy, public safety and education. Disseminate valuable lessons learned to communities, industry, universities, and agencies. 2

W IRELESS I NNOVATION AND I NFRASTRUCTURE I NITIATIVE (WI3) Called for by the President in the State of the Union and announced in Marquette, MI Promise to the Nation High speed wireless coverage to 98% of Americans in 5 years Catalyze Innovation through a Wireless Innovation (WIN) Fund Funded by spectrum auction revenues $3B total with $1B going to NSF for research and testing The WIN Fund will support basic research, experimentation and testbeds Also support applied development in public safety, education, energy, health, transportation, and economic development. Source : 3

U PDATE ON CURRENT EFFORTS NSF/BBN have been working with cities to deploy necessary infrastructure to GENI-enable these existing fiber networks. This includes sending technical teams to each city to assess existing networking assets: Chattanooga, TN Cleveland, OH Lafayette, LA Philadelphia, PA Salt Lake City region, UT Washington, DC NSF will be hosting application workshops in May and June These are preparation for an FY11 RFP process to support applications that will be developed and deployed over the network to the GENI-enabled cities One-on-one conversations with 40+ companies, agencies, and non- profits about the partnership and next steps 4

P OTENTIAL P ARTNER O RGANIZATIONS : C URRENT AND U PCOMING D ISCUSSIONS 5 Companies AT&T BBN Ciena Cisco Comcast Global Crossing Google HP IBM Intel Juniper Level 3 Microsoft Qwest Salesforce Verizon Agencies Department of Education Department of Energy NIH NIST NSF NTIA USDA Foundations Ford Foundation Gates Foundation Knight Foundation Sloan Foundation Non-profits Case Western Computing Research Association GigNation Internet2 National LambdaRail

P OSSIBLE AREAS OF SUPPORT 6 In-kind Equipment, installation, and upgrades to support a national network Equipment vendors Systems integrators Backhaul and long-haul capacity for cities Carriers Private network operators – academic or corporate regional/state networks, internet exchanges Technical assistance Broadband visionaries Applications R&D and deployment Network design Networking R&D Project management Financial Support Application R&D to developers Federal agencies Foundations Tech companies Applications prizes Federal agencies Foundations Tech companies Application platform development to provide seamless access across the participating cities Foundations Software companies Entrepreneurs, start-ups, venture capitalists, small businesses Non-profit organization to coordinate deployment and best practices Foundations Individuals Tech companies

M APPING CAPABILITIES TO PARTNERSHIP NEEDS Network design and R&D App R&D and deployment Best practice support Organizational development BBN ●●● Case Western ●●● Ciena ● Cisco ●●● Education ● Energy ● Global Crossing ●● Google ●●●● HP ●● IBM ●● Intel ●●●● Internet2 ●● Juniper ●● Knight Foundation ●● Level 3 ●● NIH ● NSF ●●●● Sloan ●● Verizon ●●●● 7

S ECTOR FOCUS OF POTENTIAL PARTNERS Technology Priority Industry Partners (illustrative examples) Key Agencies Energy GoogleDOE, NIST Healthcare Case WesternHHS, NIH Education Cisco, Intel, Internet2Education, NSF Public safety HPDHS, DOJ High-speed computing IBM, Intel, HP, Level 3NSF, NIST Business apps and services Ciena, Cisco, Global Crossing, Juniper, Verizon DOC, DOT, NTIA 8

G OAL 1 : C ONNECTING THE US I GNITE NATIONAL NETWORK AND COMMUNITY 9 National network Peer communities that have already deployed 100Mbps symmetrical service to consumer and small business users Leverage existing high- speed networks connecting research institutions and enterprises Key partners : academic networks, long-haul carriers, regional networks Sharing best practices Lessons learned for infrastructure deployment, service creation and delivery, application development, and R&D Online materials donated by partners and maintained by the partnership National network of experts available to offer in-depth support to communities In-person forums

G OAL 2: C REATING HIGHLY INNOVATIVE GIGABIT APPLICATIONS 10 Research Connect communities to NSF GENI research network Connect research institutions on the GENI network to these communities Enable researchers to run novel apps over the network Upgrade capacity available to university students and researchers on GENI campuses and those universities within the communities Run contests targeting researchers for innovative networking and application design Key partners : NSF, GENI, universities Commercial test-bed Foster online collaboration and resource sharing among user and developer communities Business model testing Entrepreneurship training and funding to support application startups and spinoffs created through this program Key partners : vendors, communities, non-profits

G OAL 3: P ERMANENT US I GNITE PARTNERSHIP ORGANIZATION Support a coordinating body that will ensure the long-term viability of the partnership Chaired by a “broadband visionary” 1-2 FTE within an existing non-profit organization Coordinate program funding, monitoring, evaluation Operational funding for activities does not flow through this central organization Overhead covered by minimal membership fees paid by each partner organization Key partners : Non-profit organization with existing broadband programs and experience working with tech industry and academics 11

K ICKOFF EVENT – S EPTEMBER 2011 White House event announcing the project partners, existing network, and long-term vision Participants could include: High-level administration officials Chair of organizing non-profit Communities For-profit and non-profit partners Key supporting agencies Event would raise the profile of the gigabit applications generally and the partnership specifically while driving the interest of additional communities and private sector partners 12

P ARTNERSHIP ROLLOUT TIMELINE March and April – Follow up conference call with all partners – Revise priorities and next steps – Identify gaps in partners, approach, technical capabilities – Agree on goals for initiative May – DC workshop on applications – Agree on organizational structure June – Cleveland workshop on applications – NSF RFP process kicks off – White House meeting for partner companies, non-profits and agencies July – Agree on network deployment timeline September – White House event with all partners 13