June 1, 1999
CHICAGO, IL -- The Electronic Visualization Laboratory (EVL) at the
University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC) has received a major award from
the National Science Foundation (NSF) to facilitate the connection of National
Research Networks (NRNs) in several European countries and Israel to the
NSF-sponsored advanced network, the vBNS. The consortium, "EuroLink,"
consists of EVL and four charter NRNs--NORDUnet (Nordic countries Denmark,
Finland, Iceland, Norway, and Sweden), SURFnet (The Netherlands), RENATER2
(France), and Israel's InterUniversity Computation Center (IUCC) network
consortium. Over the four-year award period, other European networks
will be added as appropriate. Recently, the CERN physics institute in Switzerland
has taken the necessary steps to connect with the vBNS and will most likely
join the consortium in the coming year.
Recent and rapid evolution of the Internet has led to vastly increased
expectations by university scientists and engineers for bandwidth, quality
of service (QoS), and connectivity. Science and engineering applications
expect to use technologies such as remote instrumentation control, virtual
reality, tele-immersion, real-time client server systems, multimedia, tele-teaching,
tele-medicine, and digital video, as well as distributed computing and
high-throughput, high-priority data transfers. These applications and underlying
technologies depend on end-to-end delivery of multi-tens-of-megabits bandwidth
with QoS control.
Countries worldwide are building next-generation networks to meet these
demands. NSF, to encourage the interconnection of US advanced networks
with foreign networks so American researchers can collaborate with remote
colleagues worldwide, initiated the High Performance International Internet
Services (HPIIS) program. This program provides funds to help defray
international connectivity costs. EuroLink is one of three consortia
receiving funds from this program. The others, created last year, are TransPAC,
a consortium of Indiana University and APAN (Asian Pacific Advanced Network
group: Japan, Singapore, Australia, Korea), and MIRnet, a consortium of
the University of Tennessee and Russia.
EuroLink, TransPAC and MIRnet networks connect to the vBNS through the
Science, Technology and Research Transit Access Point [STAR TAP(sm)] in
Chicago, Illinois. The vBNS, begun in 1995, is a federal investment of
$50 million in a five-year project with MCI Telecommunications Corporation.
University connections to this sophisticated network are evaluated by a
peer review process and approved based on scientific and technical merit.
Expected to remain several steps ahead of commercially available networking,
the vBNS currently runs at 622 million bits per second and has begun a
transition to operation at 2.4 gigabits per second (2400 Mbps).
Launched in 1997, the STAR TAP anchors the vBNS international connections
program and is a persistent proving ground for international high-performance
networking. A significant number of high performance international
research and education networks now connect to U.S. networks at the STAR
TAP, and several new connections will be made before year's end.
STAR TAP is operated by Ameritech Advanced Data Services, and managed by
the Electronic Visualization Laboratory at University of Illinois at Chicago
and Argonne National Laboratory.
UIC's EVL is a graduate research laboratory specializing in virtual
reality and real-time interactive computer graphics; it is a joint effort
of UIC's College of Engineering and School of Art and Design, and represents
the oldest formal collaboration between engineering and art in the country
offering graduate degrees to those specializing in visualization.
Having received recognition for developing the CAVE(tm) and ImmersaDesk(tm)
virtual reality systems, EVL's current research focus is "tele-immersion"--having
users in different locations around the world collaborate over high-speed
networks in shared, virtual environments as if they were together in the
same room. EVL receives major funding from NSF.