SXTransPORT
extended to Hawaii, used in PTC demonstrations
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AARNet
News - 18 January 2005 - from David Lassner, CIO, University
of Hawaii
The University of Hawaii has demonstrated Hawaii's first 10Gbps
(billions of bit per second) connection outside the State. The
new link, which connects Hawaii to Australia and the U.S. mainland,
is part of the SX TransPORT project, a partnership between the
Southern Cross Cable Network (SCCN) and AARNet, Australia's Academic
and Research Network.
On January 10 the University of Hawaii first used the new connection
for a remote microscopy demonstration between the Lariat project
meeting in Honolulu and the National Center for Microscopy and
Imaging Research (NCMIR) at the University of California at San
Diego. Between January 17 and 19, the link is being demonstrated
for a variety of applications at the Pacific Telecommunications
Council (PTC) meeting at the Hilton Hawaii Village in Waikiki.
David Lassner, University of Hawaii Chief Information Officer
and Chair of the PTC 2005 conference thanked the many partners
who helped bring this multi-year initiative to fruition. "Through
SX TransPORT, our colleagues at AARNet and Southern Cross have
provided the foundation for Hawaii to begin to participate in the
continuing transformation of research and education through advanced
broadband connectivity. Our collaborators in the Pacific Northwest
and California are making it
possible for Hawaii and Australia to leverage this capability by
assisting in acquiring the additional resources and support to
connect SX TransPORT to US-based advanced networks and exchange
points that reach the rest of the world.
Lariat is the physical networking project being conducted by the
Pacific NorthWest Gigapop as part of a $10m NIH award to Montana
State University to enhance the capability for biomedical research
in Alaska, Idaho, Wyoming, Nevada and Hawaii. The remote microscopy
demonstration on January 10 permitted participants at the Lariat
meeting at the East-West Center on the University of Hawaii at
Manoa campus to view in real-time the images from a multi-million
dollar laser scanning electron microscope at the NCMIR in San Diego. This
demonstration used over 500Mbps (millions of bits per second) to
send the uncompressed data from San Diego to Honolulu. The
Lariat meeting also included remote video participants from Canberra,
Australia and NIH in Maryland.
The new link is also being shown at PTC 2005, the 27th annual
PTC conference which is the longest-running annual telecommunications
meeting for the Pacific hemisphere. PTC attracted over 900
delegates from more than 40 countries as well as several thousand
additional "
networkers" who do business alongside the PTC meeting. Advanced
applications of broadband are being highlighted in a series of
demonstrations in the Broadband Playground and Exhibit Hall.
The Communications Research Centre (CRC) of Industry Canada, which
coordinated the entire Broadband Playground at PTC 2005, has arranged
a number of innovative demonstrations of broadband technology in
E-Learning using Canada's advanced CA*net 4 network which interconnects
with SX TransPORT via Pacific Wave in Seattle. These demonstrations
include a real-time demonstration of remote piano control, high-quality
real-time audio and video for coaching music students, multiparty
collaborative virtual reality, and a sharing of indigenous culture
and educational performance events.
The ResearchChannel, based at the University of Washington, is showing
interactive High Definition Television (HDTV) over the Internet at
speeds of 270Mbps per stream. One of the HDTV programs being
shown is PBS Hawaii's "First Light" documentary about Mauna
Kea, which has been digitized for playback in Honolulu from a server
in Seattle.
Videoconferencing with AARNet in Canberra is being shown using
uncompressed and inexpensive but high-quality consumer-grade DV-Cam
technology and desktop PCs.
Another HDTV-over-IP technology is being shown by the Japanese
National Institute of Information and Communications Technology
(NICT), which operates the Japan's JGN2 advanced network. In
addition to transmitting HDTV among Alaska, Honolulu and Osaka,
NICT also brought their popular wireless Internet-based car racing
technology that permits drivers in Alaska, Japan and Hawaii to
compete against each other in real-time using a physical race-track
at PTC in Honolulu.
Internet2 is showing the new "DVGuide," which shows
the digital video programming available on global research and
education networks from around the world.
In addition to the 10Gbps trans-pacific fiber optic lightwave
provided for SX TransPORT by SCCN to AARNet, a number of other
components have been required to realize this level of advanced
broadband technology. The Lariat project provided support
for the high-speed connection from the SCCN landing in Oregon to
the Pacific Wave optical
exchange point in Seattle.
A new NSF award for international networking to the University of
Southern California will assist in extending SX TransPORT from Australia
to the Big Island and on to California using a second 10Gbps SX TransPORT
lightwave on the southern route of SCCN.
Pacific LightNet Incorporated (PLNI) provided the University of
Hawaii with the 10Gbps lightwaves on Oahu to connect between the
SCCN landing point at Kahe Point and the UH-Manoa campus. Pacific
Wireless Corporation and fSONA provided the free space optics link
to connect between UH Manoa and the Hilton Hawaiian Village for
the PTC
demonstrations.
The SX TransPORT network is currently in "pre-production" for
these and other demonstrations. Work is planned on the production
configuration to support education and research after the conclusion
of PTC.
See the following links for additional information:
University of Hawaii - http://www.hawaii.edu
SX TransPORT - www.aarnet.edu.au/news/sxtransport.pdf
AARNet - http://www.aarnet.edu.au/
Southern Cross Cable Network - http://www.southerncrosscables.com/
Lariat - http://lariat-west.org/
PTC 2005 - http://www.ptc.org/ptc05
Pacific Wave - http://www.pacificwave.net/
NCMIR - http://ncmir.ucsd.edu/
CRC - http://www.crc.ca/en/html/crc/home/home
CA*net 4 -http://www.canarie.ca/canet4/
ResearchChannel - http://www.researchchannel.org
NICT - http://www.nict.go.jp/overview/index.html
JGN2 -http://www.jgn.nict.go.jp/e/02-about/02-1/
Internet2 - http://www.internet2.edu
PLNI - http://www.plni.net/
PWC - http://www.pwchi.com/
fSONA - http://www.pwchi.com/
Working photos available at:
http://laphroaig.uhnet.net/~whinery/PTC2005/PTC2005-001/
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