1 ieeaf update august 26, 2003 david lassner treasurer, ieeaf () chief information officer...

27
1 IEEAF Update August 26, 2003 David Lassner Treasurer, IEEAF (www.ieeaf.org) Chief Information Officer University of Hawaii [email protected]

Upload: allison-stone

Post on 11-Jan-2016

215 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: 1 IEEAF Update August 26, 2003 David Lassner Treasurer, IEEAF () Chief Information Officer University of Hawaii david@hawaii.edu

1

IEEAF Update

August 26, 2003

David LassnerTreasurer, IEEAF (www.ieeaf.org)

Chief Information OfficerUniversity of [email protected]

Page 2: 1 IEEAF Update August 26, 2003 David Lassner Treasurer, IEEAF () Chief Information Officer University of Hawaii david@hawaii.edu

2

New Public-Private Partnerships Needed• Global telecomm build-out of technical infrastructure provides new

possibilities for economic development• Current market conditions have resulted in great capacities which

are currently going unused -- cannot be sold.• As a matter of social responsibility, this unused capacity could be

made available for stimulating future applications and markets -- by donation for use by research and education institutions.

• Public-private partnerships involving government, universities and private sector are needed

• We need more synergy and leverage from our currently fragmented investments.

Page 3: 1 IEEAF Update August 26, 2003 David Lassner Treasurer, IEEAF () Chief Information Officer University of Hawaii david@hawaii.edu

3

New Public-Private Partnership: IEEAF

• The IEEAF represents one such partnership whose goal is to obtain donations of international bandwidth to enable a global collaboration in research and education

• Current donations have already linked US and Europe, and as of this meeting, are linking US and Asia-Pacific (HDTV Demo)

Page 4: 1 IEEAF Update August 26, 2003 David Lassner Treasurer, IEEAF () Chief Information Officer University of Hawaii david@hawaii.edu

4

IEEAF Vision: The Global Quilt

A Network of Networks fabric, “stitched together” through collaboration and community effort, until it covers the globe

The IEEAF has no boundaries of “home” territory…..

"Non Nobis Solo" (Not by ourselves alone)

Page 5: 1 IEEAF Update August 26, 2003 David Lassner Treasurer, IEEAF () Chief Information Officer University of Hawaii david@hawaii.edu

5

IEEAF - What is it?

• U.S. 501.c.3 Not-for-profit corporationhttp://www.ieeaf.org/

• Formed from original MOU between GEO and CENIC (Corporation for Educational Networking in California)

• Vision: Accelerate the global growth of Internet2 to achieve "universal educational access” to:• Enable and stimulate the rapid expansion of research and educational

collaboration in many forms between teaching and learning institutions around the world.

• Cultivate and promote practical solutions to delivering scalable, universally available and equitable access to suitable bandwidth and necessary network resources in support of these collaborations.

Page 6: 1 IEEAF Update August 26, 2003 David Lassner Treasurer, IEEAF () Chief Information Officer University of Hawaii david@hawaii.edu

6

IEEAF OrganizationHonest Broker Group (IEEAF)

• Accepting assets

• Matching Corp assets w/Educational needs

• Advocate for assets on behalf of Education

• Granting of assets as Free Use licenses

Page 7: 1 IEEAF Update August 26, 2003 David Lassner Treasurer, IEEAF () Chief Information Officer University of Hawaii david@hawaii.edu

7

IEEAF - How does it work?

• Partner with various organizations on strategies, specific initiatives

• Leverage global deregulation and new entrants into telco business

• Leverage private sector business relationships• Geographic Network Affiliates, Inc. (GEO)

• Build donations into business deals (contracts) as no-cost IRUs

Page 8: 1 IEEAF Update August 26, 2003 David Lassner Treasurer, IEEAF () Chief Information Officer University of Hawaii david@hawaii.edu

8

GEO builds carrier hotel buildings and supports the IEEA Foundation goals which include helping to solve the digital divide.

GEO - The Catalyst

GovernmentGovernment““The Need”The Need”

Submarine FiberSubmarine Fiber““The Wet”The Wet”

Terrestrial FiberTerrestrial Fiber““The Dry”The Dry”

Universities

+

Page 9: 1 IEEAF Update August 26, 2003 David Lassner Treasurer, IEEAF () Chief Information Officer University of Hawaii david@hawaii.edu

9

IEEAF - What does it do?

• Gets donated communications assets• Makes them available to existing

institutions and networking organizations to put to work

• Vehicle: Asset Steward Agreement

Page 10: 1 IEEAF Update August 26, 2003 David Lassner Treasurer, IEEAF () Chief Information Officer University of Hawaii david@hawaii.edu

10

Think Globally – Act Locally

Strategic Opportunistic

Page 11: 1 IEEAF Update August 26, 2003 David Lassner Treasurer, IEEAF () Chief Information Officer University of Hawaii david@hawaii.edu

11

Successes: The Netherlands Model

• New cable landing: Eemshaven• New carrier hotel: Groningen

• Zernicke Research Park adjacent to University of Groningen

• Groningen Internet Exchange (GNIX)• New fiber backhaul to major Internet exchanges

• Essent Kabelcom• Amsterdam to Groningen to Hamburg

• New R&D and Economic Development Opportunities

Page 12: 1 IEEAF Update August 26, 2003 David Lassner Treasurer, IEEAF () Chief Information Officer University of Hawaii david@hawaii.edu

12

Groningen Carrier Hotel: March 2002

• February 2001

• March 2002

Page 13: 1 IEEAF Update August 26, 2003 David Lassner Treasurer, IEEAF () Chief Information Officer University of Hawaii david@hawaii.edu

13

MunicipalityMunicipality

TycoTyco EssentEssent Amsterdam

Groningen Hamburg

North America Asia Pacific

Eemshaven

Groningen: Wet meets Dry = Opportunity

TycoTyco

EssentEssent

EssentEssent

TycoTyco

Page 14: 1 IEEAF Update August 26, 2003 David Lassner Treasurer, IEEAF () Chief Information Officer University of Hawaii david@hawaii.edu

14

Tyco Telecomm Donation Summary

• Co-location space in NYC for Expanded International Exchange Point

• Production R&E Bandwidth: 622 Mbps• NY-London-Groningen (Netherlands)

• Connects to IEEAF fiber to Amsterdam and Hamburg

• US-Tokyo, Seoul, Shanghai, Taipei, Hong Kong, and Singapore

• Research 10 Gbps optical wavelength (preemptable)• NY-London-Groningen (Netherlands)• US-Tokyo, Seoul, Shanghai, Taipei, Hong Kong, and

Singapore

• 200sq.ft. Co-location space in each of global facilities• Additional donations as global build-out continues

Page 15: 1 IEEAF Update August 26, 2003 David Lassner Treasurer, IEEAF () Chief Information Officer University of Hawaii david@hawaii.edu

15

Tyco Global Network

Connectivity Donations

622 Mbps +10 Gbps

Page 16: 1 IEEAF Update August 26, 2003 David Lassner Treasurer, IEEAF () Chief Information Officer University of Hawaii david@hawaii.edu

16

Tyco Atlantic Donation

Put into ServiceSeptember 2002

Page 17: 1 IEEAF Update August 26, 2003 David Lassner Treasurer, IEEAF () Chief Information Officer University of Hawaii david@hawaii.edu

17

Tyco Northern Europe Donation

Page 18: 1 IEEAF Update August 26, 2003 David Lassner Treasurer, IEEAF () Chief Information Officer University of Hawaii david@hawaii.edu

18

Tyco Southern Europe Donation

Page 19: 1 IEEAF Update August 26, 2003 David Lassner Treasurer, IEEAF () Chief Information Officer University of Hawaii david@hawaii.edu

19

Tyco Transpacific Donation

Available last December,622Mbps Debut at Busan!

Donated,Available when lit

Page 20: 1 IEEAF Update August 26, 2003 David Lassner Treasurer, IEEAF () Chief Information Officer University of Hawaii david@hawaii.edu

20

Page 21: 1 IEEAF Update August 26, 2003 David Lassner Treasurer, IEEAF () Chief Information Officer University of Hawaii david@hawaii.edu

21

IEEAF Donations and correlating HEP facilities

Univ. MarseilleCentre Physique Particules

Marseille, France

Louis Pasteur U. Institute de Recherche Subatomiques

Strasbourg, France

Centre de Recherches Nucleaires Strasbourg, France

Univ. Claude Bernard Lyon Inst. de Physique Nucleaire de Lyon

The National Institute for Nuclear Physics and High Energy Physics

Amsterdam, NL

FOM Institute for Atomic and Molecular Physics

Amsterdam, NL

CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research

Geneva, CH

University of ZurichPhysics Inst. & Inst. for Theoretical. Physics

Zurich, CH

Imperial CollegeBlackett Laboratory

Department of Physics London, GB

Univ. College London, HEP GroupLondon, GB

Univ. of Warsaw Inst. of Physics

Warsaw, Poland

Univ. of GroningenGroningen, NL DESY

Hamburg, Germany

Inst. Of Nuclear PhysicsPrague, Czech Republic

National Inst. For Physics & Nuclear

Engineering,Bucharest, Romania

Frankfurt UniversityFrankfurt Germany

Hamburg FacilityHamburg, Germany

Z-Tech FacilityGroningen, NL

Inst. AstrophysParis, France

DAPNIA CEA SaclayService de Physique des

ParticulesGif-sur-Yvette, France

Meudon Observatory

Brussels U., Inter-University Inst. for High Energies

Brussels, Belgium

LIPLisbon, Portugal

CSICMadrid, Spain

CIEMATMadrid Spain

LMU, TUMunich, Germany

IFIC UVEGValencia, Spain

Page 22: 1 IEEAF Update August 26, 2003 David Lassner Treasurer, IEEAF () Chief Information Officer University of Hawaii david@hawaii.edu

22

Navi Mumbai Chennai

Page 23: 1 IEEAF Update August 26, 2003 David Lassner Treasurer, IEEAF () Chief Information Officer University of Hawaii david@hawaii.edu

23

Page 24: 1 IEEAF Update August 26, 2003 David Lassner Treasurer, IEEAF () Chief Information Officer University of Hawaii david@hawaii.edu

24

New Donations To/In Europe

• 7,000 km fiber pair in Europe: NL-BE-FR-CH-DE

(OC12 until lit)

• Fiber pair: Amsterdam-Groningen-Hamburg• Fiber pair: UK• Submarine bandwidth:

• NYC-UK-Groningen• UK-Lisbon• UK-Bilbao-Madrid-Valencia-Barcelona-Marseilles

Page 25: 1 IEEAF Update August 26, 2003 David Lassner Treasurer, IEEAF () Chief Information Officer University of Hawaii david@hawaii.edu

25

Tyco Global Network

Connectivity Donations

622 Mbps +10 Gbps

Page 26: 1 IEEAF Update August 26, 2003 David Lassner Treasurer, IEEAF () Chief Information Officer University of Hawaii david@hawaii.edu

26

Tyco Donation Summary• Committed Assets

• Production R&E Bandwidth: 622 Mbps • Research 10 Gbps optical wavelength (preemptable)• 200 sq ft Co-location space in each of global facilities

• Current Fiber Segments in Use• US - Netherlands (UK under discussion)• US - Japan - STM4 NOW IN USE

• Deployed but Unlit Fiber - Awaiting Business Case• Hong Kong - Local Tyco Staff• Singapore - Local Tyco Staff• Seoul - Tyco in conversations• Shanghai - Tyco seeking partner(s)• Taipei - Tyco seeking partner(s)

• Additional donations as global build-out continues

Page 27: 1 IEEAF Update August 26, 2003 David Lassner Treasurer, IEEAF () Chief Information Officer University of Hawaii david@hawaii.edu

27

Other IEEAF Activities

• Renewed Commitment to Board Engagement

• Developing New Relationships

• Open Consideration of Architectures --

Getting Beyond Link-by-Link Approaches

• Use of Tyco Co-Lo Space?