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Cypress, Calif. - November 15, 2005 - National LambdaRail (NLR),
a consortium of leading U.S. research universities and private sector
technology companies that is deploying a nationwide optical, Ethernet
and IP networking infrastructure, has gathered a team of leading
researchers and technologists to guide and direct NLR's support
of networking research. The NLR Networking Research Council (NNRC)
is chaired by David J. Farber, NLR's Chief Scientist and a distinguished
professor at Carnegie Mellon University.
NLR provides researchers
unprecedented control over a nationwide network infrastructure with
up to 40 individual lightpaths-each of which can transmit data at
10 gigabits per second and be used to deploy dedicated side-by-side,
but physically and operationally separate, production and experimental
networks. NLR has committed to devoting half of this capacity to
support networking research, with the goal of bringing together
networking research communities to solve complex challenges of architecture,
end-to-end performance and scaling for future-generation networks.
"National LambdaRail
provides networking researchers a unique set of resources for exploring
revolutionary new approaches to networking," said David Farber,
chair of the NLR Network Research Council. "It is increasingly
clear that we need to look beyond incremental improvements to address
challenges facing the Internet, and NLR allows us to do that in
ways that wouldn't otherwise be possible."
In addition to providing
NLR with overall guidance relating to its support of networking
research, the NNRC will provide principles, policies and procedures
for the use of the NLR infrastructure for networking research purposes,
and will promote the extensive and
active use of the NLR infrastructure by networking researchers.
Craig Partridge, Chief
Scientist at BBN Technologies and a member of the NNRC, said, "Two
guiding principles in networking research are that good solutions
are those that work over wide area networks and that, to make progress,
one has to be willing to risk occasionally breaking the network.
The expense of building a big network means that we rarely get to
build big networks that can fail. NLR's great gift is it gives researchers
a wide area network where they can take risks."
In addition to David
Farber, members of the NNRC include:
+ Paul Barford, University
of Wisconsin, Madison
+ Dan Blumenthal, University of California, Santa Barbara
+ Javad Boroumand, Cisco Systems
+ Hank Dardy, U.S. Naval Research Laboratory
+ Constantinos Dovorlis, Georgia Tech
+ Gerald Faulhaber, University of Pennsylvania
+ Paul Francis, Cornell University
+ Dewayne Hendricks, Dandin Group
+ Larry Landweber, University of Wisconsin-Madison and Internet2
Jason
+ Leigh, University of Illinois-Chicago Steven Low, Caltech
+ Mike O'Dell, New Enterprise Associates
+ Phil Papadopoulos, University of California, San Diego
+ Craig Partridge, BBN Technologies
+ Harry Perros, North Carolina State University
The NLR infrastructure
is already supporting cutting-edge uses of optical networking capabilities
in research and education such as those being demonstrated at this
week's SC|05 conference in Seattle, Wash., including the National
Science Foundation-supported Extensible Terascale Facility and OptIPuter
projects, the U.S. Department of Energy's UltraScience project,
CENIC and the Pacific Northwest Gigapop's Pacific Wave project,
and Internet2's Hybrid Optical Packet Infrastructure (HOPI) project.
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About National LambdaRail
National LambdaRail, Inc. (NLR) is a major initiative of U.S. research
universities and private sector technology companies to provide
a national scale infrastructure for research and experimentation
in networking technologies and applications. NLR puts the control,
the power and the promise of experimental network infrastructure
in the hands of our nation's scientists and researchers. Visit http://www.nlr.net
for more information.
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