Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2006/02/22
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]In a message dated 2/21/06 9:22:01 AM, admin@edu-cyberpg.com writes: > Cypress, Calif. ? February 20, 2006 ? National LambdaRail (NLR), a > consortium of leading U.S. research universities and private sector > technology companies, today announced that it has completed > deployment of a nationwide advanced optical, Ethernet and IP > networking network infrastructure on more than 15,000 miles of fiber > optic cable across the United States. > > NLR provides researchers unprecedented control over a nationwide > network infrastructure with up to 40 individual lightpathseach of > which can transmit data at 10 gigabits per second and be used to > deploy dedicated side-by-side, but physically and operationally > separate, production and experimental networks. The infrastructure is > the result of over three years of work and nearly $100 million in > funding by members. > > "The fully operational National LambdaRail infrastructure marks an > unprecedented milestone for the U.S. research community," said Tracy > Futhey, NLR Board Chair. "For the first time, a nationwide networking > infrastructure is owned and operated by the research and education > community, giving scientists flexible access to advanced networking > capabilities and enabling experiments and collaborations across > geographic barriers." > NLR's WaveNet, FrameNet, and PacketNet services are already in use by > more than a dozen cutting-edge research projects, including the > National Science Foundation-supported Extensible Terascale Facility > and OptIPuter projects; the U.S. Department of Energy?s UltraScience > Net project; CENIC and the Pacific Northwest Gigapop?s Pacific Wave > project; the CAMERA project led by CalIT2, the Venter Institute and > UCSD's CEOA; the University of Virginia-led CHEETAH project; as well > as Internet2?s Hybrid Optical Packet Infrastructure (HOPI) project. > > "NLR provides a unique and invaluable resource for scientists > undertaking ambitious research that demands the highest performance, > most flexible networking available," said Dr. William R. Wing, a > researcher in the Networking Research Group of Oak Ridge National > Laboratory?s Computer Science and Mathematics Division. " The NLR > infrastructure provides unsurpassed breadth of services and > capabilities to researchers in the United States, outstripping those > available to many of their colleagues around the world." > > NLR is committed to promoting the extensive and active use of its > infrastructure and resources by diverse groups within the scientific > and networking research communities. In addition to committing to > provide up to half of its infrastructure to network research, it has > established Network Research and Scientific Research advisory > councils consisting of leaders from a wide range of scientific > disciplines. > >