Interactions News Wire #24-04
20 April 2004
http://www.interactions.org
*******************************************************************
Source: CERN
Content: Press release
Date Issued: 20 April 2004
*******************************************************************
New World Record announced for Internet Performance
CERN(*) and Caltech send data at more than 6.25 Gbps across nearly
11,000 km.
Geneva, 20 April 2004 - An international team has set a new
Internet2(R)(**) Land Speed Record by transferring data across nearly
11,000 kilometres at an average rate of 6.25 gigabits per second (Gbps), nearly
10,000 times faster than a typical home broadband connection, from Los Angeles,
USA, to Geneva, Switzerland. The Internet2 Land Speed Record (I2-LSR) is
an open and ongoing competition for the highest-bandwidth, end-to-end networks.
The mark of 68,431 terabit-metres per second, which used the same IPv4
protocols deployed throughout the global Internet, was set by a team consisting
of members from CERN and the California Institute of Technology (Caltech).
The same team previously set a new mark of four Gbps over the same distance
using IPv6, the next generation of Internet protocols.
"This new record
is of great importance to the future of data intensive Grids such as the Large
Hadron Collider (LHC) Computing Grid that CERN, together with its LHC partners
around the world, is actively deploying. We are hopeful that new IPv4 and IPv6
Internet2 Land Speed Records will be established this year, bringing us closer
to 100 petabit-metres per second marks, or nominal 10 gigabits per second
throughputs," said Olivier Martin, Head of External Networking at CERN and
Manager of the European Union DataTAG project.
"The team from Caltech
and CERN has again set a new measure for Internet performance," said Rich
Carlson, Chair of the I2-LSR judging panel. "By pushing the envelope of
end-to-end networking, their efforts demonstrate new possibilities for enabling
research, teaching, and learning using advanced Internet technology."
"This new multi-stream record is an important step towards next
generation Grids where scientists are able to share an ensemble of links based
on 10 gigabit per second optical wavelengths efficiently. Recent studies
of network requirements by the US Department of Energy have shown that high
energy physics, astrophysics, fusion energy, climatology, bioinformatics and
other fields will require networks in the terabit per second range within the
next decade. In order to realize this vision, we are now working on moving
these developments into a production setting, and moving on together with our
partners to higher speeds and hybrid networks involving both traditional links
and dynamically switched optical paths," said Harvey Newman, Professor of
Physics at Caltech, US CMS Collaboration Board Chair, and Chair of the Standing
Committee on Inter-regional Connectivity of the International Committee on
Future Accelerators.
The new mark was announced today in conjunction
with the Spring 2004 Internet2 Member Meeting in Arlington, Virginia, USA.
The most recent record was set with the support of Microsoft (
www.microsoft.com), S2io (
www.s2io.com),
Intel (
www.intel.com), Cisco Systems (
www.cisco.com),
HP (
www.hp.com),
the U.S. National Science Foundation (
www.nsf.gov), the U.S. Department of Energy (
www.doe.gov), the
European Union through the DataTAG project (
www.datatag.org), and the Corporation for
Education Network Initiatives in California (
www.cenic.org). More information can be
found at:
http://ultralight.caltech.edu/lsr/.
Details of the winning entries, complete rules, submission guidelines
and additional details are available at:
http://lsr.internet2.edu/.
Contacts:
Olivier Martin, CERN
olivier.martin@cern.ch Harvey
Newman, Caltech
newman@hep.caltech.edu Michelle
Pollak, Internet2
mpollak@internet2.edu
+1-202-285-4590
footnotes:
*CERN, the European Organization
for Nuclear Research, has its headquarters in Geneva. At present, its Member
States are Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland,
France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Italy, the Netherlands, Norway, Poland,
Portugal, the Slovak Republic, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and the United
Kingdom. India, Israel, Japan, the Russian Federation, the United States of
America, Turkey, the European Commission and UNESCO have Observer status.
** Led by more than 200 U.S. universities working with industry
and government, Internet2 develops and deploys advanced network applications and
technologies for research and higher education, accelerating the creation of
tomorrow's Internet. Internet2 recreates the partnerships among academia,
industry, and government that helped foster today's Internet in its infancy. For
more information, visit:
www.internet2.edu.
--
---------------------------------------------------------
Renilde Vanden Broeck
CERN - Press Office
CH-1211 Geneva
23, Switzerland
Tel: +41 22 767 2141 - Fax: +41 22 785 0247
http://www.cern.ch/Press
----------------------------------------------------------