Mr. Dave Lambert, Highlights of the US Internet 2

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Transcript Mr. Dave Lambert, Highlights of the US Internet 2

E-AGE 1st International Conference
Arab States Research and Education Network
Internet2: A Next Generation Innovation and
Service Platform for Research, Education and
Economic Development in the United States
H. David Lambert
President and CEO
Internet2
December 12, 2011
Our community: Then and now
• 1996 – 34 universities
form the University
Corporation for
Advanced Internet
Development (UCAID)
and the Internet2
Project
• 2010 – Over 350 higher
education, industry,
affiliate and research
and education network
members
2 – 4/8/2016, © 2010 Internet2
An Ecosystem Built on Partnerships
3 – 4/8/2016, © 2011 Internet2
Three themes
• Re-establishing Research and
Education Networks as Drivers of
Innovation.
• Globalization of Science, Research and
Education and What That Implies for
National R&E Networks.
• Adding Value to our Networks Through
the Deployment of ‘Net+’ Services
Creating opportunity for new innovation
begins with understanding what has
enabled innovation in the past.
• The research and education community has played
the seminal role in the creation of the modern Internet
and the applications that have made it the
transformative technology of the 20th and 21st century
• The story is on-going - not simply historical. What we
do today sets the groundwork for next stages of
Internet development
R&E and The Commercial Internet
• First early commercial Internet companies were spun out of
R&E networks in the united States
• WWW and web browsers and early commercial sites created
avalanche of demand for commercial Internet presence
•
The first web browsers were created by CERN and NCSA at the University
of Illinois
• Reality: Internet became the de facto standard because that’s
where the action was – created by the Research & Education
community
• Now the Internet services market is $40B annually and Internet
software and services Market is $100B annually
• R&E Networks have incubated the primary technologies and
technology enterprises that drive the global internet.
The R&E Community is critical to
advancement of networking and advanced
applications in the US and the World
• We moved and continue to move the world from
proprietary to open networking
• We led and continue to lead thinking from bandwidth
scarcity to bandwidth availability – new applications
do not happen without capacity for innovation
• The leading and game changing applications
continue to start on campuses and research labs
• Leading new companies and entire industries have
their roots on our campuses; our investments seeded
the creation of the internet economy.
Going forward: We can’t predict the
future, but we can set conditions for
innovation
• Demand follows application availability (which needs
large scale operating environments to enable adoption)
• Commercial approaches tend to limit bandwidth use, innovation
platforms need to encourage utilization
• Real applications tend to evolve from ubiquitous
deployment in real communities, which universities
have traditionally enabled.
• small demo pilots don’t provide adequate scale and real-world
conditions for applications to take off
• We need to create a platform for future innovation that
outstrips current capabilities and enables new thinking.
To re-establish Internet leadership, we
need to once again create a new
playing field that is “way out in front”.
• Strategy 1: Invest in dramatically increasing capacity
• Raw capacity on optical networks is a key enabler
• Must deliver high speed flows at fraction of current cost
• Once again create massive capacity for innovation that
breaks from commoditized business models
• Strategy 2: Open the network software stack itself to
innovation
• Adopt “Software Defined Networking” and push aggressively
with broad deployments
• Create open national operating environments that welcome
disruptive technology at scale
Internet2 Network 100G Infrastructure
By the numbers…
50+ colocation facilities
250+ amplification racks
17,500 miles community dark fiber
8.8 Tbps of optical capacity
40+ planned SDN nodes-5 complete
100+ Gbps of IP capacity
10 Juniper T1600 routers (R&E)
7 Juniper MX960’s (peering)
.7->1 Petabytes a day of traffic
300+ Ciena 6500 optical elements
8 International peering points
100 Global network collaborators
Partners: ESnet, NOAA, NSF/GENI
35+ state and regional networks
10 – 4/8/2016, © 2011 Internet2
Network Development and Deployment
Initiative
•
GENI - Global Environment for Network
Innovations
•
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NFS funded
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Virtual lab for network research at scale
Phoebus – High-Performance Data Transfer
-
•
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Supports Dynamic Circuit Networks like ION
perfSONAR –Performance Measurement
-
Open performance monitoring framework
-
Department of Energy, Internet2, GEANT, RNP
NDDI – Network Development and Deployment
Initiative
11 –
4/8/20
16, ©
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Stanford University, Indiana University, Internet2
-
Software Defined Networking (SDN)
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OpenFlow protocol
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Open Science, Scholarship and Services Exchange
INTERNATIONAL PARTNERSHIPS
AMERICAS
CANARIE
(Canada)CEDIA
(Ecuador)
CNTI (Venezuela)
CR2Net (Costa Rica)
CUDI (Mexico)
INNOVA|RED (Argentina)
REUNA (Chile)
RNP [FAPESP] (Brazil)
SENACYT (Panama)
MULTI-NATIONAL
AAU (Africa)
APAN (Asia - Pacific)
CKLN (Caribbean)
CLARA (Latin America and Caribbean)
DANTE (Europe)
NORDUnet (Nordic Countries)
TERENA (Europe)
UbuntuNet Alliance (Africa)
University of the West Indies
(Caribbean)
© 2011 Internet2
EUROPE
ARNES (Slovenia)
BELNET (Belgium)
CARNET (Croatia)
CESnet (Czech Republic)
DFN (Germany)
FCCN (Portugal)
GARR (Italy)
RENATER (France)
GRNET (Greece)
HEAnet (Ireland)
HUNGARNET (Hungary)
JISC, JANET (United Kingdom)
PSNC, PIONIER (Poland)
RedIRIS (Spain)
RESTENA (Luxemburg)
RIPN (Russia)
SANET (Slovakia)
SURF (Netherlands)
SWITCH (Switzerland)
MIDDLE EAST
ANKABUT (UAE)
Israel-IUCC (Israel)
MCIT [EUN, ENSTINET] (Egypt)
Qatar Foundation (Qatar)
KACST (Saudi Arabia)
AFRICA
TENET (South Africa)
TERNET (Tanzania)
NUC (Nigeria)
ASIA and PACIFIC RIM
AARNet (Australia)ANF
(Korea)CDAC, ERNET (India)
CERNET, CSTNET,
PERN (Pakistan)
NSFCNET (China)JAIRC
REANNZ (New Zealand)
(Japan)
SingAREN (Singapore)
JUCC (HongKong)MYREN,
TWAREN (Taiwan)
MDeC (Malaysia)
VinaREN (Vietnam)
NECTEC, UniNet (Thailand)
NREN (Nepal)
Internet2 Net+ Services: Building Value
on the Network
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Identity Federation
Security Services
Cloud Services
Collaboration Services
Virtual Organization Support
US-UCAN