Internet2 Names IDEA Award Winners From University of Virginia, IUPUI, ESnet, UC San Diego and Columbia University
Projects to advance innovation of next-generation networks worldwide
Media contact: Todd Sedmak, 202-331-5373 or Todd@Internet2.eduRaleigh, N.C.—Oct. 4,
2011—Internet2, the nation’s most advanced networking consortium, today
announced two research and two student projects as the 2011 Internet2 Driving
Exemplary Applications (IDEA) award winners for innovation in advanced network
applications for collaborative research and education. Winners received their
awards, and presented their applications at the Internet2 Fall Member Meeting
in Raleigh, N.C. on Tuesday, Oct. 4.
Researcher winners Scott Deal from
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis, and Matthew Burtner from the
University of Virginia won for Auksalaq--a
Telematic Opera. Also, a team from the Department of Energy’s Energy
Sciences Network (ESnet) at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory won for
their application, On-Demand Secure
Circuits and Advance Reservation System (OSCARS). ESnet development
collaborators include Chin Guok, Evangelos Chaniotakis, Andy Lake, Eric Pouyoul
and Mary Thompson.
The IDEA student winners are Baris
Aksanli, a Ph.D. student in computer science and engineering from the
University of California San Diego, for
Monitoring and Visualization of Energy consumed by Networks (MAVEN), and
Kyung- Hwa Kim, a Ph.D. student in computer science from Columbia University,
for DYSWIS, a Collaborative Network
Fault Diagnosis System project.
"All of the winning applications
have applied advanced networking technology to enable significant progress in
research, teaching, learning or collaboration to increase the impact of
next-generation networks around the world,” said Tom Knab, chair of the IDEA
award judging committee and chief information officer, Case Western Reserve
University’s College of Arts & Sciences. “The winning submissions were from
an exceptionally strong nominations pool and represent a cross-section of the
wide-ranging innovation that is occurring within the Internet2 member
community. Also, for the first time, we added a category for applications
developed by students and those were remarkable for their creativity and
relevance.”
Auksalaq,
a Telematic Opera represents a new generation of artistic works
revolving around the exploitation of high bandwidth networks in the pursuit of
live, interactive expression by combining computer
interactivity with music, dance, drama, art and literature.
The opera introduces an innovative toolkit of telematic software applications
developed at the University of Virginia Interactive Media Research Group and
the IUPUI Tavel Arts Technology Lab that facilitate a seamless, multi-site,
integrated presentation entailing all of the artistic elements (music, media,
movement, videography, audio processing and audience interactivity) to
create an interactive, multi-dimensional experience. See www.Auksalaq.org
for more details.
On-Demand
Secure Circuits and Advance Reservation System (OSCARS)
is an open source, software application that allows users to create
and reserve virtual circuits with guaranteed end-to-end performance. These
circuits are tuned for exchanging large data sets between collaboration sites
and can do so across multiple network domains – especially important in
the R&E community where various national, regional and local networks are
used to connect collaborators. OSCARS provides users the ability to engineer,
manage and automate bandwidth based on the specific needs of their work with
geographically dispersed scientific instruments, supercomputing resources, and
collaborations. Currently OSCARS circuits carry 50 percent of ESnet’s annual 60
petabytes of traffic and has also been implemented by many R&E networks
worldwide including Internet2, U.S. LHCnet, NORDUNet, and RNP in Brazil to
enable virtual circuit services for their respective communities. OSCARS’
development was funded by the Department of Energy, Office of Science. See www.es.net/services/virtual-circuits-oscars
for more details.
Baris
Aksanli’s project, Monitoring and Visualization of Energy consumed by Networks
(MAVEN), is a prototype portal that intends to
allow network engineers, energy efficiency researchers and network equipment
vendors a real-time view of live network energy consumption and environmental
conditions in advanced networks and equipment. The
MAVEN software also will allow network operators to establish a power baseline
for their current generation of network equipment, which saves money and allows
better planning for power contracts with the collocation providers. Aksanli led
the development of the first MAVEN prototype as part of his summer internship
with ESnet. Inder Monga and
Jon Dugan of ESnet provided mentorship and guidance for the project. ESnet
intends to use MAVEN as a basis for monitoring power consumption on its network
in the future. As large-scale
science continues to become more data-intensive, MAVEN will help provide
valuable information to build the next generation of advanced networks and
equipment.
Kyung-Hwa
Kim’s project, DYSWIS, is a collaborative network fault
diagnosis system, with a complete framework for fault detection, user
collaboration and fault diagnosis for advanced networks.
With the increase in application complexity, the need for network fault
diagnosis for end-users has increased. However, existing failure diagnosis
techniques fail to assist end-users in accessing applications and services. The
key idea of DYSWIS is a collaboration of end-users to diagnose a network fault
in real-time to collect diverse information from different parts of the
networks and infer the cause of failure.
About
Internet2
Internet2, owned by U.S. research
universities, is the world’s most advanced networking consortium for global
researchers and scientists who develop breakthrough Internet technologies and applications
and spark tomorrow’s essential innovations. Internet2,
consists of more than 350 U.S. universities; corporations; government agencies;
laboratories; higher learning; and other major national, regional and state
research and education networks; and organizations representing more than 50
countries. Internet2 is a registered trademark.


