IEEAF Vision: - Asia Pacific Advanced Network

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Transcript IEEAF Vision: - Asia Pacific Advanced Network

IEEAF Global Opportunities APAN 2002 August 26, 2002 Shanghai, China

Dr. Donald R. Riley Chair, IEEAF Vice President and CIO University of Maryland, College Park

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IEEAF Objectives

"Non Nobis Solo" (Not by ourselves alone) •Act to ensure equitable access to bandwidth for academic institutions and their educational, research and services/outreach needs.

• Through donations of physical facilities (co-location and riser space), equipment, licenses to "rights of way","dark fiber" or conduits at selected points of build-out of the US and global fiber optical network, or “wave-lengths ”. •Promote Partnerships with government/private entities/ educational institutions to distribute education content across networks, nations,and on a truly global basis

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EC/GEANT Strategies

"Non Nobis Solo" (Not by ourselves alone)

Exploiting the “cooperative model” as a global model to advance global networking for our collective benefit is a challenge worth pursuing!!!

Spyros Konidaris. European Commission 21 February 2002

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IEEAF Organization Honest Broker Group (IEEAF)

• Accepting assets • Granting of assets as Free Use licenses • Matching Corporate assets with Educational needs • Advocate for assets on behalf of Education

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IEEAF Board of Directors John Charles

(CSU Hayward)

CENIC Jerry Hanley

(Cal Poly SLO)

John Silvester

(Univ. of So.Cal)

GEO

(Geographic Network Affiliates, Intl.)

PI2

(Pacific Internet2 Coalition)

Ed Fantegrossi David Lassner

(Univ. of Hawaii)

P/NG

(Pacific/Northwest Gigapop)

Ron Johnson

(Univ. of Washington)

University of Maryland Don Riley UCAID

(University Corporation for Advanced Internet Development)

Steve Corbato

Indiana University

Michael McRobbie

International Member International Member (TBD) (TBD)

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GEO - The Catalyst

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

Government Submarine Fiber + Universities Terrestial Fiber 6

CENIC-GEO MOU led to IEEAF

• GEO will donate real estate • 15K sq.ft. in each of two new International carrier hotels (Hayward/CA, MD/DC) • 200 sq.ft. in each of other facilities • GEO will get business partners (wet fiber/dry fiber/equipment/etc.) to donate as part of business negotiations

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Think Globally Strategic – Act Locally Opportunistic

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IEEAF Strategies

"Non Nobis Solo" (Not by ourselves alone)

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

Its mission is a global family - the Global Quilt fabric

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The Global Quilt North America Scandinavia Asia Central America Europe Central Asia and CIS South America Africa Asia Pacific and Australia

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Netherlands Example: Project “Glasbak”

• New cable landing: Eemshaven (near Groningen) • New telecom 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 + additional Europe • New R&D and Economic Development Opportunities

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Tycom Groningen: Wet meets Dry = Opportunity North America Asia Pacific Eemshaven Municipality Groningen Hamburg Essent Amsterdam 12

Groningen Carrier Hotel: February 2001 13

Groningen Carrier Hotel: March 2002 14

GroNingen Internet eXchange

INTERNET Europa

Access Routers Dedicated verbinding

KPN Telfort Versatel Essent

GNIX GTI Klant Client Trans-atlantisch Project (Tycom) GNIX PROJECT

INTERNET Wereldwijd (Worldwide)

Groningen

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Groningen Zernicke Research Park 16

Tyco GEO ‘Atlantic Donation’ to IEEAF

• Tyco connectivity (622 Mbps POS + 10 Gbps Wavelength) and co-location donations • New York City via London to Groningen, Netherland • Groningen, Netherlands: New Tyco landing site, Carrier Hotel, New fiber build by Essent Kabelcom • Co-Lo space in GNIX carrier hotel and internet exchange • 2 strands fiber (Amsterdam-Groningen-Hamburg) • New York City, USA • Colocation rack space at GEO 60 Hudson facility • Colocation rack space at Tyco 32 Ave of Americas facility • Additional colocation space as needed at Tyco NYC and New Jersey facilities • Manhattan Landing (MAN LAN): NYC 2nd Generation International Research & Education Exchange Point

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Tyco Atlantic Donation

IEEAF: 622 Mbps POS +10 Gbps l

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Tyco Northern Europe Donation 19

Tyco Southern Europe Donation 20

Manhattan Landing – emerging NYC exchange point

•MAN LAN is an Internet2 project initiated to meet the needs of our international peers in NYC • Abilene ITN does not provide transit to the U.S. fed nets • MAN LAN is an I2 effort - not part of the Abilene Network • NYC analog to Pacific Wave and STAR LIGHT EPs • designed to integrate closely with the GTRN effort •Gigabit/10-Gigabit Ethernet switch for bilateral peerings between U.S. and int’l research nets • Cisco 6509 NEBS-compliant switch at 60 Hudson St, 23 rd • NG Abilene will connect at 10 Gbps – summer, 2002 •IEEAF donated facilities and connectivity fl • Facilities: 60 Hudson (GEO) & 32 Ave of Americas (Tycom) • Connection to Tycom-donated Atlantic donation •Partnership • UCAID/Internet2, IEEAF/GEO,Tyco, Indiana University, NYSERNET, CANARIE • Project point: Paul Love

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Chicago StarTap/ Starlight MAX/UMD Wash,DC

Atlantic Donation Plan for iGrid2002

IEEAF Co-lo In Tyco NY POP 32 AoA Internet2 MAN LAN

SURFNET iGrid 2002 GEANT

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Tyco GEO ‘Pacific Donation’ to IEEAF

• Tyco connectivity (622 Mbps POS + 10 Gbps Wavelength) and co-location donations • West Coast, USA access to connectivity and co-location • Colocation rack space at Tyco Portland, OR, and Santa Clara, CA, facilities • Access to connectivity and co-location rack space in six cities • Tokyo, Seoul, Shanghai, Taipei, Hong Kong, and Singapore • Schedule • West Coast to Tokyo available January 2003 • Other sites on different schedules through end of 2003 • Status • Working with U.Washington/Pacific Northwest Gigapop and CENIC to connect donation into gigapops and U.S. infrastructure • Various stages of interaction at Asia-Pacific landing sites to identify “IEEAF Asset Stewards”

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Tyco Global Network and IEEAF Donations Connectivity Donations 24

Tyco Telecomm Donation Summary

• Colocation space in NYC for Expanded NY Int’l Exchange Pt • Colocation space in Oregon and California on US West Coast • Production R&E Bandwidth: 622 Mbps POS • NY-London-Groningen (Netherlands) • Connects to IEEAF fiber to Amsterdam and Hamburg • CA-OR-Tokyo, Seoul, Shanghai, Taipei, Hong Kong, and Singapore • “International Lambda”: Research 10 Gbps optical wavelength • NY-London-Groningen (Netherlands) • CA-OR-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

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Pacific Rim APAN Opportunities

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Tyco Transpacific Donation

IEEAF: 622 Mbps POS +10 Gbps l

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APAN Opportunites ?? !!!!!!

IEEAF: 622 Mbps POS +10 Gbps l AARNet

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Lambda Backbone in 2004 ?

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Global Opportunities Connectivity Donations

Future?

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Tyco TelExchange Centers - Colocation

• •

New York City (32 Ave of the Americas) Portland, OR, USA

• Los Angeles and

Santa Clara, CA

, USA • London (Heathrow and London (Stratford), England • Copenhagen, Denmark (planned) • Stockholm, Sweden (planned) • • Milan and Rome, Italy (planned) • Lisbon, Portugal (planned) • Madrid and Barcelona, Spain (planned) • • Athens, Greece (planned)

Tokyo, Japan Seoul, Korea

• Oslo, Norway (planned) • • Helsinki, Finland (planned)

Amsterdam and Groningen, The Netherlands

Hamburg

and Frankfurt, Germany • Marseille (planned) and Paris, France • • • • • Piti, Guam, USA

Hong Kong, China Singapore Taipei, Taiwan Shanghai, China (C2C) Tyco Cable Stations - Colocation

• Wall Township, NJ, USA • Hillsboro, OR, USA • Emi and Toyohashi, Japan • Hunmanby and Highbridge, England • Bilbao and Cabrera de Mar, Spain • Acilia, Italy (planned) • Koropi, Greece (planned) • Pentaskhinos, Cyprus (planned)

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What does IEEAF need from APAN?

• IEEAF only acquires network assets and makes them available -- does not manage/operate networks, etc.

• IEEAF needs APAN and each country partner to take ‘ownership’ of planning for use of the assets • IEEAF needs to identify appropriate local organizations in each country with whom to partner to make the donated assets ‘useful’: • Sign agreement as ‘IEEAF Asset Steward’ • Agree to IEEAF Conditions of Use • Agree to put into service • Agree to share the access/resource, not hoard -- be a good steward for the community, not about ownership and control

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Global Opportunities

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THE GLOBAL QUILT INITIATIVE SITES Seattle, WA Ireland Portland, OR CSU-Hayward NY-6 th Ave NY-Broadway NJ-Wall Township Stockholm Copenhagen London-Stfd London-Htrw Amsterdam Groningen Santa Clara, CA Los Angeles, CA College Park, MD Miami Geneva Lisbon Madrid Barcelona Marseille = Current = Future Paris Milan Rome Vienna Oslo Helsinki Dusseldorf Berlin Hamburg Frankfurt Russia Beijing Seoul Tokyo Guam Taipei Shanghai Hong Kong Tel Aviv Cypress Chennai Philippines Singapore Bangladesh Mumbai Bangalore 34

IEEAF-GEO U.S. Opportunities Cedar Falls, IA Spokane, WA Seattle, WA Albany, OR Eugene, OR Coos Bay, OR San Luis Obispo, CA Hayward, CA Los Angeles, CA Waverly, IA Maysville, KY Fayetteville, AR Oklahoma City, OK Lubbock, TX Houston, TX Starkville, MS Lexington, KY Cleveland, OH Nashville, TN Tiverton, RI Washington, DC Danville, VA Blacksburg, VA Morgantown, WV Raleigh-Durham, NC Charlotte, NC Winston-Salem, NC Columbia, SC Atlanta, GA Miami, FL Ruston, LA Tuskaloosa, AL New Orleans, LA 35

IEEAF Global Quilt

Government Submarine Fiber + Universities Terrestial Fiber Http://www.ieeaf.org/