Internet2 K20 Initiative & Abilene SEGP Update Heather Bruning, Abilene Program Manager 6 th Annual Summer Institute, Murfreesboro, Tennessee July 17, 2003
7/17/ Internet2 Mission Develop and deploy advanced network applications and technologies, accelerating the creation of tomorrow’s Internet.
7/17/ Internet2 Goals Enable new generation of applications Re-create leading edge R&E network capability Transfer technology and experience to the global production Internet
7/17/ Internet2 Membership Regular US institutions of higher education Corporate For-profit US-based companies Affiliate Non-profit and other research or education organizations
7/17/ Internet2 Universities 202 University Members, July 2003
7/17/ Internet2 Affiliate Members Altarum American Distance Education Consortium Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy (AURA) CENIC CERN Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia Cleveland Institute of Music Cleveland Museum of Art Department of Commerce, Boulder Desert Research Institute EDUCAUSE Food and Drug Administration Howard Hughes Medical Institute Indiana Higher Education Telecommunications System (IHETS) Jet Propulsion Laboratories LaNet Manhattan School of Music MCNC Merit Network, Inc. MOREnet NASA Goddard Space Flight Center NASA Marshall Space Flight Center National Institutes of Health National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration – Silver Spring National Science Foundation New World Symphony NYSERNet, Inc. Oak Ridge National Labs OARnet OneNet PeachNet Southeastern Universities Research Association (SURA) Southwest Research Institute State University of New York System State University System of Florida Survivors of the Shoah-Visual History Foundation University Corporation for Atmospheric Research University of Missouri System University of North Carolina, General Administration
7/17/ Corporate Membership Corporate Membership by Type 16 Partners 10 Sponsors 35 Members Diversity of Corporate Membership Telecommunications and networking companies Educational content providers Pharmaceuticals Start-ups
7/17/ International Partners Asia-Pacific AAIREP (Australia) APAN (Asia-Pacific) APAN-KR (Korea) APRU (Asia-Pacific) CERNET, CSTNET, NSFCNET (China) JAIRC (Japan) JUCC (Hong Kong) NECTEC / UNINET (Thailand) SingAREN (Singapore) TAnet2 (Taiwan) Americas CANARIE (Canada) CEDIA (Ecuador) CNTI (Venezuela) CR2NET (Costa Rica) CUDI (Mexico) REUNA (Chile) RETINA (Argentina) RNP [FAPESP] (Brazil) SENACYT (Panama) Europe-Middle East ARNES (Slovenia) BELNET (Belgium) CARNET (Croatia) CESnet (Czech Republic) DANTE (Europe) DFN-Verein (Germany) GIP RENATER (France) GRNET (Greece) HEAnet (Ireland) HUNGARNET (Hungary) INFN-GARR (Italy) Israel-IUCC (Israel) NORDUnet (Nordic Countries) POL-34 (Poland) FCCN (Portugal) RedIRIS (Spain) RESTENA (Luxembourg) RIPN (Russia) SANET (Slovakia) Stichting SURF (Netherlands) SWITCH (Switzerland) TERENA (Europe) JISC, UKERNA (United Kingdom) Last updated: 1 July 2003
7/17/ Abilene Focus Goals Enabling innovative applications and advanced services not possible over the commercial Internet Backbone & regional infrastructure provides a vital substrate for the continuing culture of Internet advancement in the university/corporate research sector Advanced service efforts Multicast IPv6 Measurement Security
7/17/ Partnership approach The Abilene Network is an Internet2 project done in partnership with Cisco Systems (routers, switches, and access) Juniper Networks (routers) Nortel Networks (SONET kit) Qwest Communications (SONET & DWDM circuits, co-location) Indiana University (network operations center) Internet2 Test & Evaluation Centers (ITECs) – North Carolina and Ohio
7/17/ Abilene – July 2003 IP-over-DWDM (OC-192c) and IP-over-SONET backbone (OC-48c) 48 direct connections (OC-3c 10-Gbps) 2 10-Gbps (10 Gig Eth) connections –OC-192 SONET also supported 6 OC-48c & 1 Gig Eth connections 23 connections at OC-12c or higher 221 participants – research univs. & labs All 50 states, District of Columbia, & Puerto Rico Expanded access 88 sponsored participants and 28 state education networks
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7/17/ Next Generation Abilene status 11 next generation router nodes in place Deploying two racks in each location: Juniper T640 router & four measurement servers Cisco routers phased out, except in Atlanta Very pleased to date with new router performance and interoperability with 1 st generation backbone Transcontinental 10-Gbps ’s in place Seven ’s connected to network –DC-NYC-Chicago-Indy-KC-Sunnyvale CA-Los Angeles –KC-Houston now in place ITEC network performance validation test 8 Gbps of 2-way traffic (50% v4/v6 and 100% v6) transmitted transcontinentally without loss or reordering
7/17/ Internet2 Applications 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.
7/17/ Virtual Laboratories Real-time access to remote instruments University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Distributed nanoManipulator
7/17/ Digital Video Applications Broadcast TV quality videoconferencing Both live distribution and on-demand access to a variety of content HDTV-based digital cinema, network-based studio production, …
7/17/ Internet2 K20 Initiative - Overview Goals Structure Communications Strategy Communities/Partnerships Projects/Activities
7/17/ Past Lessons Learned The more innovators brought on board early the greater the progress. The more broadly shared the tech platforms and tools the greater the leverage. A disproportionate share of important innovations come from the.edu realms. There are many important opportunities for the use of technology in teaching, learning and access. We need to do a better job of evaluation and timely communication. Internet culture (“loose consensus and working code”) plus partnerships works for this -- much better than traditional education process/planning models.
7/17/ K20 Initiative Goals: Beyond Connectivity To bring innovators in K-12, community colleges, universities, libraries and museums into appropriate regional, national and international advanced networking efforts, via the "Sponsored Education Group Participant" (SEGP) process. To encourage and help sustain partnerships among these education institutions, the private sector and government. To enhance teaching and learning by facilitating projects that explore the ways in which advanced network applications, services, tools and digital content can extend access to education and educational resources. To develop mechanisms for timely communication across all educational sectors and regions in order to enable quick, pervasive technology diffusion.
7/17/ K20 Initiative: 2003 foci Continue to work with communities of interest libraries via ALA and IMLS Quilt Deaf Education Community and Federal funding agencies IMLS NEH NSF-Education NEA
7/17/ K20 Initiative: 2003 foci….cont. Continue developing better ways to engage the volunteers who must drive any application projects forward myK20 Database Project web application allows any of the 10,000 SEGP institutions to contribute project information Most importantly - find those with common interests who would like to engage other institutions in some or all aspects of a given project Project peer review forums, links to resources created, best practices, and lessons learned information embedded with project description.
7/17/ Internet2 K20 Approach Projects will be carried out by multi-state, often multi-sector, project teams Project leadership will come from the team, with support from Internet2 K20 project staff Initial projects will seek to leverage current Internet2 projects and innovative efforts among Internet2 members, institutions, sponsored participants and SEGPs
7/17/ K20 Advisory Committee Representatives from each state Designated by Internet2 sponsors Represent the broad programmatic interests of the SEGP sponsor(s), connector, as well as the spectrum of participants/audiences (e.g., K12, colleges and universities, public libraries, museums, science centers, zoos, etc.) Provide input, ideas, feedback to help shape, guide, and inspire the national Initiative
7/17/ K20 Advisory Committee Roles Identify and engage innovators within their state -- among the K12, higher education, library and museum communities -- in Internet2 K20 projects Bring forward projects for multi-state participation Encourage SEGP participation in existing Internet2 working groups where appropriate Serve as an information conduit between local/regional/state efforts and the national initiative Provide feedback to the project directors as the Initiative evolves
7/17/ K20 Executive Committee Group of 13 individuals from various states around the SEGP community More nimble than the larger advisory committee Help shape overall initiative goals and strategy Identify possible working group areas to engage other Advisory Committee members and their constituencies.
7/17/ K20 Communication Strategy Demo Materials Demo Materials materials need not be themselves Internet2 applications but need to capture applications and projects in a compelling way Featured SEGP Featured SEGP opportunity to overview the work and accomplishments underway in SEGP states Internet2 K20 Newsletter Internet2 K20 Newsletter focuses on the work being done by K20 institutions and is shared broadly with the K20 community via listserv and the web site
7/17/ K20 Communication Strategy (continued) Resources Resources guides K20 constituents to important SEGP and Internet2 related information Opportunities Opportunities a list of opportunities to help various communities get involved in the Internet2 K20 Initiative Tearsheet glossy Tearsheet glossy single-page glossy overview of the Initiative. Available in print and pdf on the web site
7/17/ A Few Relevant Communities Sponsored Education Group Participants (“state networks”) Museums, libraries, archives, cultural institutions “Beltway” societies and associations Key sponsored research agencies, e.g., NSF, NIH, NEA Education and learning research organizations, including think tanks, research groups, national academies Internet2 & Internet2 members International partners (e.g., CANARIE)
7/17/ K20 Initiative Partnerships American Library Association's Office for Information Technology Policy working with the K20 Initiative to shape a strategy for using advanced networks and applications in public and academic libraries. The Quilt UCAID project whose participants are non-profit advanced regional network organizations dedicated to furthering research and education in the United States.
7/17/ Internet2 K20 Projects a few examples… Additional project information
7/17/ A Sampling of Areas of Interest Digital Content: actively seeking out local resources Music (e.g., ethnomusicology and music education) Documentary films, animation arts, local history Presidential libraries Historical information, primary source documents Learning courseware & curriculum repositories Video: H.323 and future interactive video and multimedia technologies, digital video, low- to high-end video multicast Remote instrumentation & other scientific apparatus which could be shared across educational communities Middleware deployment and partnerships Engaging public libraries – uses of advanced networks Internet2 server technologies, caching, co-location
7/17/ Get Involved! Contact Louis Fox or James Werle with ideas or questionsLouis Fox James Werle Read about what is going on Read Get to know your friendly SEGP representativeSEGP representative Make frequent visits the Opportunities section of the Internet2 K20 websiteOpportunities
7/17/ Abilene Access Primary Participants – research universities, corporations, etc. Affiliate & Corporate members Sponsored Participants – individual locations And now….. SEGPs: Sponsored Education Group Participants
7/17/ Sponsored Education Group Participant (SEGP) Fundamentals SEGP status targeted at both developed and emerging state-based education networks One or more Internet2 University Members in the same state act as sponsor(s) Connectors take overall fiscal and operational responsibility for the SEGP Periodic SEGP progress updates to Abilene required (e.g., how are SEGPs implementing advanced applications?)
7/17/ Approved SEGPs Alabama New Mexico California New York Florida North Carolina Georgia North Dakota Hawaii Ohio Illinois Oklahoma Indiana Oregon Iowa Pennsylvania Louisiana Rhode Island Maryland Texas Massachusetts Virginia Michigan Washington Minnesota Wisconsin Missouri Utah
7/17/ Sponsored Education Group Participants as of July 17, 2003
7/17/ SEGP Inquiries Colorado Connecticut Delaware Kansas Kentucky Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey South Carolina Tennessee
7/17/ SEGP Connectivity Survey Fall 2002 Survey Goals Provide a high level view of the connectivity and enabled technologies within the SEGPs Also, totals for the entire SEGP program (as of August 2002) Provide contact information for pursuing additional information The goal is NOT to provide a detailed site survey as this is too resource intensive and hard to maintain
7/17/ SEGP Connectivity Survey Summary of Results (Fall 2002) 62% of the state education networks can access the Internet2 backbone network at >155 Mbps As of late 2002, there are 25 state k12/k20 networks participating connecting about 9800 K20 institutions – 7173 k12 schools (73% of total) 1482 public libraries (15% of total) 551 community colleges (6% of total) 526 four-year colleges and universities (5% of total) 102 museums, zoos, aquariums, and science centers (1% of total) For more information:
7/17/ SEGP Process Sponsor(s) complete SEGP Application SEGP Connector completes Abilene Connection Agreement Addendum Connector submits SEGP routing information to UCAID at UCAID reviews and approves routes and submits them to the Abilene NOC Abilene NOC begins passing additional SEGP traffic on the network Appoint Internet2 K20 Initiative Representatives
7/17/ SEGP Connector Requirements A Connector supporting the Sponsored Education Group Participant(s) must: Maintain a 7x24 Network Operations Center (NOC) Register its routing information and that of the Participant(s) in the Internet2 Routing Registry (I2db) or equivalent Provide UCAID a quarterly report on the relative utilization of the Abilene connection by the SEGP Assure compliance with the Abilene CoU by the Participant(s) Inform the Participant(s) that Abilene does not provide transit to the commodity Internet These steps will be implemented through an amended Abilene Connection agreement
7/17/ SEGP Related Costs Annual participation fee $30,000 + $2,000 x (size of State’s U.S. House delegation) Delegation size provides a readily auditable population metric This annual fee will be charged on a per-connecting organization, per-state basis will be paid directly by the Abilene Connector on behalf of the Sponsored Participant is not eligible for E-rate discount
7/17/ Contact Information On the Web k20.internet2.edu/ abilene.internet2.edu/ Louis Fox: Heather Bruning: Abilene (general inquiries): Phone Louis Fox: (206) Heather Bruning: (734)
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