[IP] LambdaRail Fiber-Optic Network Gains 6 New Members, Enough to Go National
Begin forwarded message:
From: Dewayne Hendricks <dewayne@xxxxxxxxxx>
[Note:  This item comes from reader Dave Staudt.  DLH]
LambdaRail Fiber-Optic Network Gains 6 New Members, Enough to Go 
National
By VINCENT KIERNAN
<http://chronicle.com/free/2004/06/2004060301n.htm>
 A consortium of research universities that is creating an $80-million 
fiber-optic computer network announced on Wednesday that it had added 
six members, enough to extend the network to most portions of the 
country.
 The system, called the National LambdaRail, initially will operate 
four separate national computer networks, each with a capacity equal to 
the most powerful national research network now in operation, the 
Abilene network operated by the Internet2 organization. LambdaRail will 
accomplish that feat by transmitting data over four different 
wavelengths of light. Each wavelength will be able to carry as much 
data as Abilene, and the fiber-optic network eventually could offer 40 
such wavelengths.
 The consortium of research universities owns the LambaRail network. 
Other research networks, like Abilene, instead have used leased 
telecommunications lines. Thomas W. West, president and chief executive 
of National LambdaRail, said groups of scholars -- like physicists 
around the world who want to collaborate with one another -- eventually 
may be able to lease wavelengths for their own use.
 LambdaRail is being constructed from unused fiber-optic lines sold or 
donated by telecommunications companies and network equipment sold to 
the consortium at a steep discount by Cisco Systems Inc., an 
Internet-network company.
 The consortium is selecting its network links according to the 
locations of its members, which must each pay $5-million over five 
years. "We're sort of following the money," said Mr. West.
 Since the first segment of the network, running from Pittsburgh to 
Chicago, became operational, in November, the network has added service 
to several other cities, including Atlanta; Portland, Ore.; Raleigh, 
N.C.; Seattle; Sunnyvale, Calif.; and Washington. The network is 
scheduled to be completed by the spring of 2005.
 Four of the new members are consortia or state education bodies: the 
Louisiana Board of Regents, the Oklahoma State Board of Regents, the 
Texas Lonestar Education and Research Network, and the University 
Corporation for Atmospheric Research. The latter group will provide 
connections for institutions in Colorado, Utah, and Wyoming.
 The other two new members are individual institutions: Cornell 
University and the University of New Mexico.
 Officials at Cornell hope to share their connection -- and its cost -- 
with other institutions. Other colleges in New York and New England, 
and computer networks serving those regions, were unable to find the 
funds to join LambdaRail on their own, said Polley Ann McClure, 
Cornell's chief information officer. But with Cornell's having made the 
upfront commitment, the others avoid having to commit the full 
$5-million, making it cheaper for them to join, she said.
 With enough partners, Cornell's cost could drop to $100,000 annually, 
she said. Cornell will save at least that amount from other savings on 
its network costs, made possible by routing some of its Internet 
traffic along the same fiber-optic line that will connect the Ithaca 
campus with National LambdaRail's facility in New York City.
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