Special Features:
LEVEL 3 HELPS UNIVERSITIES CREATE FLORIDA LambdaRail
Services from Level 3 Communications Inc are helping a consortium of nine
public and private Florida universities create a statewide high-performance
network to facilitate collaborative research and education in a full spectrum
of disciplines, including hurricane-related studies.
Members of the consortium -- embodied as Florida LambdaRail LLC (FLR, LLC) --
include Florida Atlantic University (FAU), Florida Institute of Technology
(FIT), Florida International University (FIA), Florida State University (FSU),
Nova Southeastern University (NSU), University of Central Florida (UCF),
University of Florida (UF), University of Miami (UM) and University of West
Florida (UWF).
One of the overriding drivers behind the new network -- called the Florida
LambdaRail (FLR) -- is to provide networking infrastructure that will improve
all aspects of network connectivity for participating institutions, thus
allowing them to access resources and collaborate in ways that currently are
not possible or affordable. The objective is to facilitate academic, clinical,
and scientific research, as well as technology development and education, by
enabling high-speed communications among the nine member universities and with
other state, national, and international research entities. The new network is
expected to provide a 100-fold increase in data transfer capability.
Level 3 is providing (3)Link Dark Fiber and (3)Center Colocation services
under a multi-year, multi-million-dollar IRU agreement with the FLR, LLC, as
well as providing (3)CrossRoads high-speed Internet access service. Level 3 is
the preferred provider of dark fiber and colocation services for the National
LambdaRail (NLR) network, with which the regional FLR network will connect.
"Enabled by Level 3's robust, reliable network, colocation and high-speed
Internet access services, the new high-performance FLR network will virtually
eliminate the issue of 'place' for participating institutions' faculty,
research partners, students, and staff," said Larry Conrad, chairman of FLR
LLC. "Together with the NLR, the FLR network will fundamentally redefine the
ability of Florida universities and their public and private research partners
to collaborate, cooperate, and compete, and create new economic development
opportunities in Florida. It will do so by helping establish the
next-generation network infrastructure that will enable collaboration in ways
we cannot even imagine today."
The FLR is being implemented with no dependence on additional state funding by
offsetting a significant portion of FLR, LLC member costs. This includes lower
costs through aggregation of Internet and Internet2 connectivity, wholesale
purchase of bandwidth, combined network capabilities, and future cost
avoidance of network-related costs -- cost offsets anticipated in part by
leveraging the Level 3 services.
"We're proud that the FLR organization has chosen Level 3 as its preferred
provider to support its vital research and education initiatives," said Jerry
Hogge, senior vice president of Government, Research and Academic Markets for
Level 3. "As a recognized pioneer and leader in providing next-generation
telecommunications networks, Level 3 is well-prepared to help the research and
academic communities create the next-generation network infrastructure that
will allow them to achieve their most demanding collaborative research goals."
In addition to recognized work in the full spectrum of traditional and
emerging disciplines, consortium members' efforts include hurricane-related
studies requiring the capability to reliably transfer very large data files at
high speeds on a daily basis. These include:
- The meteorology departments at FSU, UF and other member institutions, which
support the work of the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) in its
ongoing efforts to develop instruments and computer models to more accurately
track and predict hurricanes.
- The Center for Ocean-Atmospheric Prediction Studies, with facilities at
FAU, FSU and NSU.
- The FIU International Hurricane Center, which is the nation's only
university-based research facility dedicated to mitigating the damage of
tropical storms to people, the economy and the environment.
- The FIT Wind and Hurricane Impacts Research Laboratory (WHIRL).
"All of WHIRL's various Internet traffic will flow over the one new network
backbone," said Jean-Paul Pinelli, associate professor in the FIT Civil
Engineering Department, and director of the FIT Wind and Hurricane Impact
Research Laboratory. "In particular, we're deploying instrumentation during
hurricane landfall, where we record the time histories of wind speeds,
pressures and temperatures, resulting in extremely large data files, which we
anticipate the new network will allow us to transmit quickly and reliably in
real-time. Our latest such deployments were for hurricanes Charley, Frances
and Jeanne."
Benefits Of The FLR Network
Some of the anticipated opportunities for Florida researchers and educators
through the Level 3-enabled FLR network include:
- Virtual "collaboratories" where researchers and work teams in multiple
locations can share work and interact in real-time through video, audio,
shared whiteboards, and shared laboratory notebooks available online.
- Interactive distributed simulations linking high-powered computational
resources with remote users and other computers.
- Processing and visualization of large data sets utilizing distributed
computation.
- Distance learning, by enabling delivery of courses and programs over the
Internet, extending the reach of education to wider geographic areas and
demographic populations.
- Access to digitized databases, enabling researchers to access
supercomputing resources across the country without leaving their local
offices.
- Video teleconferencing, enabling geographically dispersed work teams to
bridge time and place by utilizing video transmission over high-speed
connections.
Level 3's (3)Link Dark Fiber (3)Link Dark Fiber provides the academic and
research communities with the infrastructure and services required to operate
and maintain an advanced fiber-optic network that will serve highly
specialized, bandwidth-intensive needs now and into the future. (3)Link Dark
Fiber services include optical fiber cable, fiber-based network extensions,
colocation and running line facility space, power, and operation and
maintenance of the network.
Level 3's intercity dark fiber services feature approximately 16,000 intercity
route miles in the United States connecting more than 150 cities, and an
approximately 3,600-mile pan-European network. Level 3's network employs high
fiber counts, the latest generation of optical fiber, and carrier-neutral
colocation facilities.
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