| about
pacific northwest gigapop |
 |
Leadership and Experience
With the privatization of the Internet (and the end of the NSFNET
program) in the 1990's, it became essential to establish a super
high-speed advanced network services fabric to tackle the shortcomings
inherent in the technologies of today's commercial Internet. And
it was clear that as a matter of national priority we needed R&D
programs and a testbed infrastructure to address the already well-known
problems of future high-speed and advanced services networks. "Aggregation
Gigapops," new "advanced services," and the very
high-performance national network fabric, along with collaborative
application and middleware development efforts are the industry's
and the advanced Internet communities' strategy for addressing
the challenges.
Key regional and national partners worked to establish such a
major "aggregation gigapop" site for the Pacific Northwest
in Seattle - an intersection point where the rich mix of partners
in Oregon, Alaska, Washington and neighboring states could be brought
to bear. The University of Washington was invited to host such
an effort. As such, the PNWGP is essentially a descendent of the
pioneering NSF-funded NorthWestNet, the regional network that brought
the modern version of the Internet to the Pacific Northwest early
enough (starting in 1989) to enable full regional participation
and the development of highly advantageous market positions in
the emergence of the commodity Internet.
At the working level the PNWGP has so far been designed and built
largely by the University of Washington's Office of UW Technology
group. The University of Washington has long been a leader in the
deployment of Internet technologies in the Pacific Northwest including
their successful role in bringing the Internet itself via ARPANET
and then the NSFNET to organizations and businesses in the region.
(The University of Washington was a founding member in 1986 of
NorthWestNet, one of the nation's original nine NSF-funded ISPs,
and the University served as its NOC and principal engineering
resource). Each of these initiatives proved vital in the growth
of the region's high technology industries, as well as to the innovation
of wide ranging commercial applications.
Today, in addition to the PNWGP, the University of Washington
is: the Internet NOC for, and a principal designer of, the WA Statewide
K-20 Network; a major provider of advanced networking services
in the medical community; and creator and host of the Pacific Wave International Peering Service,
the area's original and highest performance n-way peering and exchange
point.
Not only does the University of Washington boast of some of the
nation's best network engineers, it is well represented on the
boards and planning groups of Internet2 initiatives:
- Ron Johnson - Vice President and CTO, Office of UW Technology; UCAID Network Planning & Policy
Council Member
- Ed Lazowska - Bill & Melinda Gates Chair, UW Computer Science & Engineering; UCAID Network Research Liaison Committee
Member
- Terry Gray - Associate Vice President for University Technology Strategy
and Chief Technology Architect, Office of UW Technology; UCAID End-to-End Performance
Initiative (E2EPI) and Quality of Service (QoS) Work Group member;
Co-PI on "Security at Wirespeed" project
- Sherrilynne Fuller - Director, UW Health Sciences Libraries
and Information Center; Associate Dean University Libraries, Health Sciences Libraries; Professor, Medical Education and Biomedical Informatics, UW School
of Medicine
- Jacqueline Brown - Assistant Vice President, Information Technology Partnerships, Office of UW Technology; Chair of the Quilt National Gigapop Project
of UCAID
- Louis Fox - Associate Vice President, UW Learning & Scholarly Technologies; Research Associate Professor, UW Information School; Co-director of the Internet2 K20 Initiative,
interim CEO of Washington Digital Learning Commons
Similarly, Amy Philipson (Assistant Vice President, Streaming Media, Video & TV Technologies, Office of UW Technology) and a number of colleagues serve as key members of
the various Internet2 "Digital Video" efforts. They are
also the organizers of the national ResearchTV initiative which
demonstrated the first successful coast to coast, sustained, multiple
MPEG2 on-demand video streams of better-than-broadcast quality
TV programming.
But here the University of Washington and PNWGP are just the tip
of the iceberg. Much more importantly, the region is filled with
similar and complementary expertise that PNWGP partners will bring
to the table and share. Through constituents' councils and open
forums, the PNWGP will create a highly synergistic and thoroughly
collaborative environment by bringing together a rich mix of participants
and partners - be it the amazing expertise within Microsoft's
Research Groups, the leading edge distributed operating systems
group at OGI, the visualization experts at the Arctic Region Supercomputing
Center, OSU's high-performance systems user interface efforts,
or any of the other world class network technology and applications
scientists, engineers, and technicians throughout the Pacific Northwest.
Bottom line: The PNWGP is built and managed to be the best high-performance
and advanced services networking hub in the nation.
|