gordon cook - presentation at emerging communications conference & awards (ecomm 2011)

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Page 1: Gordon Cook - Presentation at Emerging Communications Conference & Awards (eComm 2011)
Page 2: Gordon Cook - Presentation at Emerging Communications Conference & Awards (eComm 2011)

A Collaborative Global OS: New Strategy from Research &

Education NetworksA presentation at eComm, San Francisco - June 27, 2011

Gordon Cook, Editor & Publisher

The COOK Report on Internet Protocol, Technology, Economics, Policy

http://cookreport.comPSTN (609) 882-2572Viop (609) 643-4067Skype: gordoncookreport

Page 3: Gordon Cook - Presentation at Emerging Communications Conference & Awards (eComm 2011)

The Internet “ain’t” what it used to be.

THEN The Internet of 1995 was an information utility with value delivered by users.

NOW The Internet is an advertising network largely run in a search of eyeballs while delivering endless entertainment.

NOW Silos are enforced at great cost to the public.

NOW Open innovation is more difficult.

FUTURE We need networks that deliver economic value through open access.

FUTURE There is a alternative -- a new network of opportunity!

Page 4: Gordon Cook - Presentation at Emerging Communications Conference & Awards (eComm 2011)

“the pickle we’re in…”

“ Commercializing NSFnet was a great idea, privatizing it was not.”

“ It is easier to hold a centrally funded not-for-profit to its social obligations than to subvert the investor focus of a for-profit corporation. ”

“ The good news is an expanded role for NRENs [National Research & Education Networks] is becoming more common.”

Steve Wolf, CTO, Internet2 NSF Seminar in October 2010

Page 5: Gordon Cook - Presentation at Emerging Communications Conference & Awards (eComm 2011)

R & E networks are the new opportunity. activity

They fly beneath the radar.

They deliver economic value to society in ways commercial operators do not.

They build open tools for global collaboration.

They create a global cooperative operating system.

The result is a network that is orders of magnitude more powerful than any network we’re using today.

Page 6: Gordon Cook - Presentation at Emerging Communications Conference & Awards (eComm 2011)

What do these R & E networks look like?

They form a global interconnected web of 10+ gig light waves.

National R & E Networks (NRENs) exist in about 75 nations.

NRENs allow for innovation AND standardization.

GLIF is a forum which enables interoperability.

Page 7: Gordon Cook - Presentation at Emerging Communications Conference & Awards (eComm 2011)

What do these R & E networks look like?

LIGHT PATHS are at the core of R & E networks.

Can handle huge amounts of data.

Are circuit-switched extremely efficiently.

Have the potential to be set up and torn down from user workstations.

There will be a demo of this provisioning in Rio in September 2011.

Page 8: Gordon Cook - Presentation at Emerging Communications Conference & Awards (eComm 2011)

There are many elements to consider in building the necessary architecture.

for scientific applications.

Page 9: Gordon Cook - Presentation at Emerging Communications Conference & Awards (eComm 2011)

Meeting the challenge of interoperability

A project at Frei University of Amsterdam is making sure all devices and resources can run shared applications and communicate with the grid in real time.

Page 10: Gordon Cook - Presentation at Emerging Communications Conference & Awards (eComm 2011)

What can users actually DO?

GLOBAL RESEARCH IN DATA INTENSIVE SCIENCE

R & E networks make “collaboration interfaces” for users and offer bandwidth, storage, and computational processing to globally dispersed virtual organizations.

• INNOVATIVE APPLICATIONS IN EDUCATION, HEALTH CARE, AND PUBLIC SAFETY

Bandwidth and cost considerations make it possible to create testbeds for innovative apps.

Page 11: Gordon Cook - Presentation at Emerging Communications Conference & Awards (eComm 2011)

First, we must answer these questions.

How do you find public-private models that let you tap 100 gigabit national backbones to provide more affordable resources for edge-based innovators and businesses who have local understanding and priorities?

How does the general public access the rich resources at the center?

How do you make these new network tools and collaboration interfaces sufficiently scalable?

Page 12: Gordon Cook - Presentation at Emerging Communications Conference & Awards (eComm 2011)

Portland: Northwest Access Exchange (NWAX_

Low-free interconnection

Intel Supercomputing + OHSU Genomic Data Center and OHSU Aging in Place

Permission given for interconnection with other large health-related nets in California and Washington

Oregon is an open network.

“I'm allowed to connect a bunch of commercial ISPs to I2 directly, and this will include routes for their commercial customers in addition to the Health Network participants.”

Don WestlightChairman, NWAX

Page 13: Gordon Cook - Presentation at Emerging Communications Conference & Awards (eComm 2011)

Durango: PACKETrail

Uses IRUs on fiber of local electric utility over lines from Grand Junction to Durango for about 150 miles

Uses skill of its seasoned CEO to build out via collaboration

Uses mostly available resources to Denver giga-pop and Albuquerque and via Grand Junction to Salt Lake city to the global Internet

Delivers 1GE to Cortez/Montezuma School District in Southwest Colorado

Page 14: Gordon Cook - Presentation at Emerging Communications Conference & Awards (eComm 2011)

Cleveland: Case Connection Zone

Built out over last several years to connect every apartment on a city block with one gig fiber

Home health care and high definition counseling with medical specialists

Public safety apps

STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Math) apps for high school students

Sensor nets and use of wireless

Page 15: Gordon Cook - Presentation at Emerging Communications Conference & Awards (eComm 2011)

US UCAN

Internet 2 plus about 20,000 miles new fiber

Goal - connect 200,000 schools, libraries, hospitals, and public safety institutions

Boundaries blurring between R&E and “commercial”

Thousands of local projects will need help. Find them at http://www2.ntia.doc.gov/infrastructure

Page 16: Gordon Cook - Presentation at Emerging Communications Conference & Awards (eComm 2011)

Takeaways

Treasure to be found - you just have to know where to look

URLs ---4th Paradigm (computing is transforming the practice of science)http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/26/science/26planetarium.html?scp=1&sq=markoff%20digging%20deeper&st=cse and http://research.microsoft.com/en-us/collaboration/fourthparadigm/

Sustainable Economy http://p2pfoundation.net/

FIND the NTIA Grants: http://www2.ntia.doc.gov/infrastructure

Summary of my book Fast Thinking: http://p2pfoundation.net/Report_on_Global_Education_and_Research_Networks

First part of Summary and Table of contents of the book http://blog.p2pfoundation.net/book-of-the-week-gordon-cooks-report-on-the-core-global-research-networks-in-their-relation-to-the-edge/2011/05/23

Building a National Knowledge Infrastructure - http://www.cookreport.com/knowledge.pdf

CONTACT: Gordon Cook, 431 Greenway Ave, Ewing, NJ 08618 [email protected] and http:www.cookreport.com Skype in (609) 643 4067 PSTN (609) 882-2572

Page 17: Gordon Cook - Presentation at Emerging Communications Conference & Awards (eComm 2011)