Internet2 101 A Tutorial on the Origins and Current Activities of Internet2

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Transcript Internet2 101 A Tutorial on the Origins and Current Activities of Internet2

Internet2 101
A Tutorial on the Origins and Current
Activities of Internet2
Spring
2003
Internet2 Member Meeting, April 9, 2003
23 May
2016
Presenters
Laurie Burns, Director of Member Activities, Internet2
John Jamison, Consulting Engineer R&E Markets,
Juniper Networks
Russ Hobby, Chief Technical Architect, End-to-End
Performance Initiative, Internet2
Ken Klingenstein, Director of Middleware Initiatives,
Internet2 and University of Colorado
Ted Hanss, Director of Applications Development,
Internet2
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Yesterday’s Internet
Thousands of users
Remote login, file transfer
Interconnect mainframe computers
Applications capitalize on underlying
technology
Security by obscurity
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Today’s Internet
Millions of users
Web, email, low-quality audio & video
Interconnect personal computers and
servers
Applications adapt to underlying
technology
Proliferation of accounts and lack of
privacy
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Tomorrow’s Internet
Billions of users and devices
Convergence of today’s applications
with multimedia
Interconnect personal computers,
servers, and embedded computers
Enable unanticipated applications
Connect people, not just computers
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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
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Why University Leadership?
The Internet came from the academic
community
•
•
•
•
Stanford -- the Internet protocols
NSFNet -- the scaled-up Internet
CERN -- the WWW protocols
University of Illinois -- the Web browser
Universities’ research and education
mission require an advanced Internet
and have demonstrated they can
develop it
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Internet2
Internet2 universities are recreating the
partnerships that fostered the Internet in
its infancy
• Industry
• Government
• International
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Internet2 Beginnings and
Growth
Fall 1996
• Internet2 project is created as a collaboration
among 34 leading research universities
Fall 1997
• University Corporation for Advanced Internet
Development is incorporated
Spring 1998
• 123 regular University members, 30 Corporate
members, and 22 Affiliate members
Today
• 202 regular University members, 60 Corporate
members, and 38 Affiliate members
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Internet2 Mission
Develop and deploy advanced network
applications and technologies,
accelerating the creation of tomorrow’s
Internet.
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Internet2 Goals
Enable new generation of applications
Re-create leading edge R&E network
capability
Transfer technology and experience to
the global production Internet
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Internet2 Focus Areas
Advanced Applications
Middleware
Engineering
Advanced Network Infrastructure
Partnerships
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Internet2 Functional Organization
Applications Development (Ted Hanss)
Backbone Network Infrastructure (Steve
Corbato)
End-to-End Peformance Initiative (Cheryl
Munn-Fremon)
Engineering (Guy Almes)
International Relations (Heather Boyles)
Middleware (Ken Klingenstein)
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Internet2 Functional Organization
Administration (John Kennedy)
Communications (Greg Wood)
Corporate Relations (Jill Arnold)
External Relations (Gary Bachula)
Member Activities (Laurie Burns)
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Internet2 Governance
UCAID Board of Trustees
Four Advisory Councils:
• Applications Strategy Council
• Industry Strategy Council
• Networking Planning and Policy Advisory
Council
• Network Research Liaison Council
http://www.internet2.edu/about/board.html
http://www.internet2.edu/about/councils.html
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Internet2 Membership
Regular
• US institutions of higher education
Corporate
• For-profit US-based companies
Affiliate
• Non-profit and other research or education
organizations
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University Members by
Carnegie Classification
141 Doctoral Research/Extensive (out of
151)
44 Doctoral Research/Intensive (out of
110)
8 Masters I
5 Medical schools
2 Specialized institutions
2 System Offices
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Corporate Membership
Corporate Membership by Type
• 16 Partners
• 9 Sponsors
• 35 Members
Diversity of Corporate Membership
• telecommunications and networking companies
• educational content providers
• pharmaceuticals
• start-ups
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Internet2 Affiliate Members
Research and educational organizations
(e.g., UCAR, CERN)
Regional and state networking
organizations
Federal labs and agencies (e.g., NSF, NIH)
University system offices
Fine arts and humanities institutions and
organizations
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International Partnerships
Ensure global interoperability
• of the next generation of Internet technologies and
applications
Enable global collaboration
• in research and education providing/promoting the
development of an advanced networking environment
internationally
Mechanism: Memoranda of Understanding
• Provide/promote interconnectivity between communities
• Collaborate on technology development and deployment
• Facilitate collaboration between members on applications
Over 40 MOU agreements
• with advanced networking organizations around the world
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Last updated: 20 March 2003
Internet2 International Partners
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)
RCCN (Portugal)
RedIRIS (Spain)
RESTENA (Luxembourg)
RIPN (Russia)
SANET (Slovakia)
Stichting SURF (Netherlands)
SWITCH (Switzerland)
TERENA (Europe)
JISC, UKERNA (United Kingdom)
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)
CUDI (Mexico)
CNTI (Venezuela)
CR2NET (Costa Rica)
REUNA (Chile)
RETINA (Argentina)
RNP (Brazil)
SENACYT (Panama)
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Abilene Community
Primary participants
• Internet2 members
Sponsored participants
• Individual institutions, K-12 schools, museums,
libraries, research institutes
Sponsored educational group participants
• State-based education networks
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SEGPs
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Internet2 Membership:
Expectations
• Collaborate on advanced applications
• Commit to the sustained deployment of highperformance network infrastructure on an end-to-end
basis
• Contribute to the advancement of research and
educational uses of high-performance networking
• Deploy pre-commercial infrastructure and protocols
• Establishing expertise and human capital
• Engage in large-scale proofs of concept
• Self select
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Internet2 Membership:
Accomplishments
• Advanced applications development
• Development and deployment of middleware
capabilities, locally and nationally
• Creation and support of national high-performance
networks, including next generation optical networks
• Implementation of advanced network services
throughout national, regional and campus topologies
• Strong partnerships with international networking
organizations
• New work in end-to-end performance
• A newly organized effort in network and host security
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Internet2 Membership:
Opportunities
• Join working groups, interest groups and advisory
groups
• Foster applications development and faculty
outreach
• Be an early adopter of new technologies and tools
• Host an Internet2 Day and participate in Virtual
Briefings
• Nominate self or others for Council service
• Support staff involvement as professional
development
• Give meeting presentations and demos
• Join the Member Meeting Program Committee
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Unanticipated Innovation
Lesson of the Web
• Network growth and value are non-linear
• New technologies enable qualitatively different
uses
• Users become innovators
And the lesson of Internet2
• Research and education community can and
should lead
• Stay involved, nimble, and engaged
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More Internet2 Information
On the Web
• www.internet2.edu
• www.internet2.edu/html/lists.html
• www.internet2.edu/html/working-groups.html
Email
• [email protected]
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www.internet2.edu