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Trans-Pacific Agreement Between Pacific Wave and APAN to Increase Global High-Performance Networking

SEATTLE, WA and LOS ANGELES, CA – Representatives of Asia Pacific Advanced Network Ltd. (APAN) and Pacific Wave have signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) building on their longstanding relationship by agreeing to promote their respective and mutual objectives by providing for appropriate collaborations and peerings between their participants/members.  They will collaborate on the development, deployment, and communication of network technologies, services and applications to support the global research and education community.

As part of this MOU, they will encourage the use and development of common standards and their technical implementations; the development of next-generation networking and applications in research and higher education; the encouragement of technology transfer to accelerate leadership in research and higher education; and collaboration with each other and government agencies and departments to promote and encourage the interconnection of advanced networks and deployment of advanced technologies around the world.

“The APAN membership is of enormous significance to global research and education, including CENIC members in California, and the Pacific Wave Internet Exchange provides the perfect venue to facilitate collaborations between APAN and other research and education networks in the Pacific Rim, the United States, and even Europe and South America ” said Louis Fox, President and CEO of CENIC, the nonprofit corporation which, together with the Pacific Northwest Gigapop, runs Pacific Wave with the support of the University of Washington and the University of Southern California.  “Strengthening the relationship between APAN and Pacific Wave in areas like collaboration, next-generation technology, and tech transfer will help maintain the Pacific Rim and their collaborators as major forces for innovation in the coming century.”

Pacific Wave is a joint project between the Corporation for Education Network Initiatives in California (CENIC) and the Pacific Northwest Gigapop (PNWGP), and is operated in collaboration with the University of Southern California and the University of Washington.

With a total of five exchange points located in Seattle, Sunnyvale, and Los Angeles and connected by a 100G fiber backbone, the Pacific Wave international peering facility provides research and education networks throughout the Pacific Rim and beyond the opportunity to peer with one another, removing international borders as boundaries to network-enabled global collaboration and innovation.  Current participants represent networks and agencies from Australia, Canada, China, Japan, Korea, Mexico, New Zealand, Qatar, Singapore, South America, Taiwan, and the United States.  Many multi-national networks such as GLORIAD, NORDUnet (Nordic countries), and redCLARA (Central and South America) also participate, bringing the total of nations whose research and education communities can collaborate on network-enabled projects via Pacific Wave to more than 40.

About APAN • www.apan.net

APAN (Asia Pacific Advanced Network) is the name both of the network itself and of the non-profit organization created in 1997 to undertake the network’s creation and development on behalf of its members.  The APAN network is designed to be a high-performance network for research and development on advanced next generation applications and services. APAN provides an advanced networking environment for the research and education community in the Asia-Pacific region, and promotes global collaboration.  The international members of APAN represent the global research and education network interests in the countries and economies of Asia and Oceania.

APAN’s objectives are to coordinate and promote network technology developments and advances in network-based applications and services, to coordinate the development of an advanced networking environment for research and education communities in the Asia-Pacific region, and to encourage and promote global cooperation to help achieve these.  APAN also coordinates developments and interactions among its members and with international peering organizations both in networking and applications.

About Pacific Wave • www.pacificwave.net

“Pacific Wave was created by organizations with a vested interest in serving research and education along the West Coast of the United States, as APAN was created on behalf of the Pacific Rim,” said Pacific Northwest Gigapop CEO Ron Johnson.  “Enabling vibrant collaboration between our respective communities is among the most important ways we can serve them in today’s landscape of boundary-free innovation.”

“APAN was founded not just to connect devices but to connect people,” said Dae Young Kim, Chairman of APAN and professor of Information Communications Engineering at Chungnam National University in Korea.  “As an organization, we must build pathways for collaboration and cooperation as well as for fiber-optic cable, including those between academic and commercial researchers.  This will maintain not only network-dependent research but the network itself in its most cutting-edge state.”

PNWGP Circular, September 2003

The Pacific Northwest Gigapop (PNWGP) Circular is an occasional update of news for and about PNWGP and Pacific Wave participants. To subscribe or unsubscribe to this update service, send email to gigapop-info@pnw-gigapop.net


In this Circular 005

OC-192 Abilene Backbone Connection to Pacific Northwest Completed
Pacific Wave Welcomes SingAREN and GEMnet
Comotiv Systems Joins Portland Research and Education Network
10GbE Connections to Pacific Wave Now Available
TransPacific High Definition Streaming Demo for APAN Busan Meeting
Internet2 Fall Member Meeting in Indianapolis October 2003

Current PNWGP and Pacific Wave Participants
Updating Your Contact Information
PNWGP Contact List


OC-192 ABILENE BACKBONE CONNECTION TO PACIFIC NORTHWEST COMPLETED

As part of its national backbone upgrade, Internet2 completed implementation of two Abilene OC-192 (10Gbps) segments into Seattle in July. One segment extends to Sunnyvale, California and the other to Denver, Colorado.

Much earlier this year, in preparation for the implementation of these two segments, the Pacific Northwest Gigapop upgraded its connection to the Abilene backbone to 10GbE. Internet2/Abilene participants at PNWGP may now benefit from the increased throughput to and throughout the Abilene backbone.

The two new OC-192 segments replace the prior OC-48 and OC-12 circuits at the Internet2 Seattle POP. The Abilene circuit is now supported on the Pacific Northwest Gigapop side by a Juniper T320 router and a Juniper T640 router on the Abilene side.


PACIFIC WAVE WELCOMES SingAREN AND GEMnet

Spring saw the arrival of two new Pacific Wave Participants: SingAREN and GEMnet.

SingAREN, the Singapore Advanced Research and Education Network, is a national initiative started in 1997 to create a high-speed broadband network platform supporting research and education (R&E) and advanced network technology development in Singapore, serving users from academia, research organizations and industry. SingAREN promotes and facilitates R&D in next-generation broadband and internet technologies, links Singapore's R&E community to the global information
infrastructure, and fosters collaboration.

GEMnet is based in Japan and funded by NTT laboratories to promote the use of high-speed communications infrastructure. Some of the projects supported by GEMnet include:

  1. A collaborative, very long-baseline interferometry (vlbi) project done with the Ministry of Education, the national Astronomical Observatory of Japan, and the MIT Haystack Observatory;
  2. The Galaxy Project, which uses six radio telescopes in Japan to study astronomy and crustal deformation;
  3. Super High Definition Video (Digital Cinema) transfer;
  4. CAVE technology and applications done in conjunction with the University of Chicago and the University of Tokyo;
  5. Testing of full-mesh DWDM network;
  6. Remote monitoring of the ALMA/ASTE millimeter/submillimeter radio telescope located in Chile.


COMOTIV SYSTEMS JOINING PORTLAND RESEARCH AND EDUCATION NETWORK

Comotiv Systems, Inc. is a Portland based company formerly called VirtualDesign.Net that provides hosted collaboration and video conferencing services. Comotiv is joining the Portland Research and
Education Network (PREN) and has been approved as a sponsored Internet2 member.

In a technology partnership with Portland State University (PSU), Comotiv will provide technology and services to support collaborative research between colleagues who are separated by thousands of miles and multiple timezones. Leading PSU faculty are also looking to this new technology to increase the effectiveness of distance learning. A pilot project with Comotiv is under discussion with PSU's Steve Reder, head of Applied Linguistics, to gauge the product's efficacy for a variety of
applications. The Comotiv server combines a shared project file facility and also allows participants to use IP-based audio and video conferencing.


10GbE CONNECTIONS TO PACIFIC WAVE NOW AVAILABLE

In August, PNWGP engineers upgraded one of Pacific Wave's two Foundary BigIron 4000 exchange switches to a 10GbE-capable Foundary BigIron 8000. Participants interested in peering over a 10GbE link at Pacific Wave may now do so. The remaining BigIron 4000 switch is scheduled for upgrade to 10GbE capability by the end of September. Shortly after installation of the BigIron 8000, Internet2/Abilene became the first participant to make a 10GbE connection to Pacific Wave. A 1GbE Abilene connection remains in place for redundancy.


TRANSPACIFIC HIGH DEFINITION STREAMING DEMO FOR APAN BUSAN MEETING

The Asia-Pacific Advanced Network (APAN) held its member meeting in Busan, South Korea during the last week in August. In support of this meeting, Pacific Wave and ResearchChannel conducted a demonstration highlighting 270Mbps streams of high-definition video. High-definition video servers were placed at the Portland end of the circuit, streamed to the client systems, and displayed in Busan. In multiple sessions over multiple days, these demanding streams successfully traversed the approximately 5000 miles (8000km) between the two locations.

The OC-12c circuit between Portland and Tokyo was donated to the IEEAF (Internet Educational Equal Access Foundation) by Tyco Telecommunications. ResearchChannel created and ran the application. Pacific Wave and the University of Washington coordinated the transpacific circuit
configuration with WIDE in Tokyo. Beyond Tokyo, the circuit was delivered over a variety of networks and infrastructures with contributions from KOREN (Korea Advanced Research Network), KT Corporation, QGPOP (Kyushu Gigapop project), JGN (Japan Gigabit Network), TokyoXP, ANF (Advanced Network Forum), WIDE, APAN, and LG Electronics.


INTERNET2 FALL MEMBER MEETING IN INDIANAPOLIS OCTOBER 2003

Internet2/UCAID will have its fall member meeting in Indianapolis October 13-16th. For more information,
http://events.internet2.edu/2003/fall-mm/index.html


CURRENT PNWGP AND PACIFIC WAVE PARTICIPANTS

Pacific Wave International Peering Services Participants
AARNet
ATTBI/Comcast
CA*net4
Defense Research & Engineering Network (DREN)
Energy Sciences Network (ESNet)
GEMnet
Microsoft Corporation
Peer1.net
Pointshare
TransPAC
TANET2
SingAREN

Pacific Northwest Gigapop Transit Participants
Arctic Region Supercomputing Center
AARNet (Australian Academic and Research Network)
Children's Hospital and Regional Medical Center
City of Seattle
- King County
- Seattle Public Library
Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center
Institute for Systems Biology
Microsoft Research
Montana State University
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration/Pacific Marine
Environmental Laboratory (NOAA/PMEL)
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Portland Research and Education Network
- Oregon Graduate Institute
- Oregon Health & Sciences University
- Portland State University
Seattle Cancer Care Alliance
Seattle Community College District
Seattle Pacific University
University of Alaska
University of Idaho
University of Montana
University of Washington
Washington State Dept. of Information Services
Washington State K-20 Network
Washington State University


UPDATING YOUR CONTACT INFORMATION

If you have changes in contact info for administration, billing, technical, routing, tech backup, or outage notifications, please email gigapop-info@pnw-gigapop.net or
call 206 934 5588.


PNWGP CONTACT LIST

General Information & Circular Subscriptions
1 206 934 5588 / 1 888 934 5588
gigapop-info@pnw-gigapop.net
www.pnw-gigapop.net
www.pacificwave.net

Network Operations Center (7x24)
1 206 934 5580 / 1 888 934 5580
noc@pnw-gigapop.net

Web Site Contact
webmaster@pnw-gigapop.net

PNWGP Services Manager
Jan Eveleth
1 206 221 2300
eveleth@cac.washington.edu

Network Engineering Manager
David Richardson
1 206 934 5580

Mailing Address
4545 15th Ave N.E.
Seattle, Washington 98105-4527
USA

Fax
1 206 934 5589 / 1 888 934 5589

Circular 005 September 2003
Copyright (c) 2003 Pacific Northwest Gigapop

Amy PhilipsonPacific Wave, APAN
PNWGP Circular, September 2002

The Pacific Northwest Gigapop (PNWGP) Circular is an occasional update of news for and about PNWGP and Pacific Wave participants. To subscribe or unsubscribe to this update service, send email to gigapop-info@pnw-gigapop.net

In this Circular 004

PRICE REDUCTION ON COMMODITY INTERNET SERVICES
PNWGP UPGRADES COMMODITY INTERNET CIRCUITS
UNIVERSITY OF ALASKA SETS INTERNET2 LAND SPEED RECORD
PACIFIC WAVE JOINS APAN
PACIFIC WAVE AND IPv6
NEW INTERNET ROUTING REGISTRY POLICY IN EFFECT OCTOBER 1
PNWGP EXPANDS PEERING RELATIONSHIPS
INTERNET2 FALL MEMBER MEETING IN LOS ANGELES OCTOBER 2002
CURRENT PNWGP AND PACIFIC WAVE PARTICIPANTS
UPDATING YOUR CONTACT INFORMATION
PNWGP CONTACT LIST

PRICE REDUCTION ON COMMODITY INTERNET SERVICES

Effective October 1, 2002, the Pacific Northwest Gigapop will reduce its fees for all commodity Internet services.

  • Port fees for Abilene plus Commodity Internet Services will sink from $7990/mo to $5995/mo (Usage fees for this service remain at $275/Mbps)
  • Usage fees for Commodity Internet Services will drop from $400/Mbps to $325/Mbps (Monthly port fees for this service remain unchanged at $2995/mo)

Additional savings are available to those organizations with monthly use levels regularly at or above 50Mbps.

There are three contributing factors to this decrease in PNWGP commodity service fees.

  • The telecommunications industry shakeup of the past 18 months has
    resulted in a lowering of IP transit fees.
  • The PNWGP has been an active member of The Quilt, a national collaboration of gigapops, and through The Quilt has been able to participate in some lower-cost aggregate IP transit purchases.
  • An increase in peering relationships by the PNWGP has diverted some of the traffic that would have gone over commodity links through regional peering points.

To receive the PNWGP Service Catalog reflecting this new pricing, please send email to gigapop-info@pnw-gigapop.net

PNWGP UPGRADES COMMODITY INTERNET CIRCUITS

The PNWGP estimates that the collective monthly commodity Internet bandwidth needs of its participants will reach 875Mbps by the end of this school year. To accommodate this growth, commodity Internet services for PNWGP have once again been expanded.

Last year, the PNWGP increased commodity Internet bandwidth from 445Mbps to 1.45Gbps. This year, the commodity capabilities have been expanded to 3Gbps. The new commodity services configuration provides unprecedented redundancy options, plus room to grow.

PNWGP will receive 1Gbps circuit from each of the following vendors: Level3, Verio, and Cable & Wireless. A failure or poor performance in any given circuit can easily be absorbed by the remaining two circuits. The new configuration also allows for simplified BGP configurations while continuing to offer optimal IP packet routes to and from the Internet.

In addition to retaining vendor diversity, these GbE (Gigabit Ethernet) commodity circuits are made at two geographically diverse connections at two separate nodes within Seattle, Washington, U.S.A. Some of the criteria used by the PNWGP in selection of IP transit providers are

National backbone
Seattle ingress/egress
Overall technical competence
Multicast service capability
BGP support
Significant peering with Tier One providers at multiple locations throughout the country
Response policies to security incidents
Engineering of their Point of Presence facilities
Backbone engineering
Corporate financial viability

UNIVERSITY OF ALASKA SETS INTERNET2 LAND SPEED RECORD

Congratulations to the teams at the University of Alaska (led by Kerry Digou) and the University of Amsterdam (led by Erik-Jan Bos) who blasted the Internet2 Land Speed Record last May! 625Megabytes of data were transferred from Fairbanks to Amsterdam at a rate of 401 Mbps.

See the full press release at http://archives.internet2.edu/guest/archives/I2-NEWS/log200205/msg00003.html


PACIFIC WAVE JOINS APAN

In September, Pacific Wave was accepted as an affiliate member of the Asia-Pacific Advanced Network (APAN). This higher-profile role in the APAN community will help the PNWGP in structuring its Pacific Wave services to meet the diverse and changing needs of Pacific Rim research and education partners, some of which are already active today at Pacific Wave, including AARNet and TANET2. APAN itself is also a Pacific Wave participant today through TransPAC.

Pacific Wave hopes to use this opportunity to leverage large-scale research and education projects between our regions, particularly in the areas of the physical sciences and health care.


PACIFIC WAVE AND IPV6

PNWGP regularly receive inquiries about IPv6 capabilities at Pacific Wave. The Pacific Wave switch infrastructure is capable of passing IPv6 traffic so long as each of the peering parties supports IPv6 on their Pacific Wave connected routers.

NEW INTERNET ROUTING REGISTRY POLICY IN EFFECT OCTOBER 1, 2002

Technical contacts at all PNWGP commodity transit sites were notified a few weeks ago of the upcoming implementation of a new Internet Routing Registry Policy by the PNWGP. In order to assure that your commodity routes are effectively and efficiently propagated over the PNWGP commodity circuits, your site will need to abide by this new policy. The full text can be found at http://www.pnw-gigapop.net/tech/irr.html


PNWGP EXPANDS PEERING RELATIONSHIPS

In the past six months, PNWGP staff spent considerable resources aimed at 'keeping local traffic local.' By becoming an active peer at strategic locations, data not only reaches its destination more efficiently, but money is saved as well.

In May of this year, the PNWGP joined the Northwest Access Exchange (NWAX) in Portland, Oregon (see http://www.nwax.org).

In August, the PNWGP joined the Seattle Internet Exchange (SIX) in Seattle, Washington (see http://www.seattleix.net).

Additional peering opportunities will be opened within the next few weeks for Pacific Wave participants, as well as the PNWGP.

Approximately 200Mbps (monthly 95th percentile) is being transmitted through PNWGP peering relationships, exclusive of Pacific Wave. Total peering traffic through Pacific Wave runs at about 500Mbps (monthly 95th percentile).

INTERNET2 FALL MEETING IN LOS ANGELES OCTOBER 2002

Internet2/UCAID will have its fall member meeting in Los Angeles, October 27-30th. For more information, see http://www.internet2.edu/activities/html/fall_02.html

CURRENT PNWGP AND PACIFIC WAVE PARTICIPANTS

Pacific Wave International Peering Services Participants
    AARNet
    ATTBI
    CA*net 4
    Defense Research & Engineering Network (DREN)
    Energy Sciences Network (ESNet)
    Microsoft Corporation
    Peer1.net
    Pointshare
    TransPAC
    TANET2

Pacific Northwest Gigapop Transit Participants
    Arctic Region Supercomputing Center
    AARNet (Australian Academic and Research Network)
    Children's Hospital and Regional Medical Center
    City of Seattle
    -- King County
    -- Seattle Public Library
    Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center
    Institute for Systems Biology
    Microsoft Research
    Montana State University
    National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration/Pacific Marine
    -- Environmental Laboratory (NOAA/PMEL)
    Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
    Portland Research and Education Network
    -- Oregon Graduate Institute
    -- Oregon Health & Sciences University
    -- Portland State University
    Seattle Cancer Care Alliance
    Seattle Community College District
    Seattle Pacific University
    University of Alaska
    University of Idaho
    University of Montana
    University of Washington
    Washington State Dept. of Information Services
    Washington State K-20 Network
    Washington State University
 

UPDATING YOUR CONTACT INFORMATION

If you have changes in contact info for administration, billing, technical, routing, tech backup, or outages notifications, please email gigapop-info@pnw-gigapop.net or call 206-934-5588.

PNWGP CONTACT LIST

General Information & Circular Subscriptions
1-206-934-5588 / 1-888-934-5588
gigapop-info@pnw-gigapop.net
www.pnw-gigapop.net
www.pacificwave.net

Network Operations Center (7x24)
1-206-934-5580 / 1-888-934-5580
noc@pnw-gigapop.net

Web Site Contact
webmaster@pnw-gigapop.net

PNWGP Services Manager
Jan Eveleth
1-206-221-2300
eveleth@cac.washington.edu

Network Engineering Manager
David Richardson
1-206-934-5580

Mailing Address
4545 15th Ave N.E.
Seattle, Washington 98105-4527
USA

Fax
1-206-934-5589 / 1-888-934-5589

More information about Internet2 can be found at
http://www.internet2.edu/

Circular 004 September 2002
Copyright (c) 2002 Pacific Northwest Gigapop