i2-news - Ontario and Michigan Research Networks Achieve International Connection
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- From: Jennifer Hensley <>
- To:
- Subject: Ontario and Michigan Research Networks Achieve International Connection
- Date: Thu, 02 Feb 2006 14:36:05 -0500
Ontario
and Michigan research networks achieve international
connection Windsor
- A
different kind of traffic is
flowing over the US-Canada border today as Ontario and Michigan
officially
interconnect their high-speed optical research and education networks
utilizing
the Detroit-Windsor Tunnel. The
direct
fiber connection is believed to be a first across international borders
for
regional research and education networks. The
new cross-border link, passing through the tunnel
infrastructure, was marked at an official optical fiber splicing
ceremony at
Windsor City Hall today. Officials
from the City of Windsor, the Ontario Research and
Innovation Optical Network (ORION) and Merit Network Inc. which
operates
Michigan’s research and education network, presided over the symbolic
splice of
optical fiber. “This link is of
immense future value to Ontario and
Michigan,” said ORION President/CEO Phil Baker, who noted the
connection will
make it easier for researchers and institutions to collaborate and
pursue new
cross-border partnerships in science and learning.
“Merit’s member
institutions are very excited about this
achievement,” added John Camp, CIO of Wayne State University and chair
of the
Merit Board of Directors. “We see this
as a critical step in developing a Regional Optical Network (RON) in
the Great
Lakes Region. A Great Lakes RON will
eliminate geographic barriers for cross-institutional and cross-border
collaborative research.”
“This
project is an excellent example of the knowledge-based,
cross-border, regional approach that the Windsor/Detroit area is
becoming known
for worldwide,” said Windsor Mayor Eddie Francis. “The
speed-of-light exchange of information by optical fiber is
crucial to the continued growth of our region’s communications
capacities, and
for education, research and development in all sectors.
My congratulations go to everyone on both
sides of the border, who have put this vital link together.” Research
partnerships that can be facilitated by the new
link range from collaborations in automotive design to environmental
research.
Ultra high-speed networks provide more efficient connections enabling
distributed high-performance computational clusters and devices,
applications
in data mining, life science research and joint participation in global
scientific projects.
As part of the
growing global cyber-infrastructure, advanced
research and education networks like those managed by ORION and Merit
have
become critical infrastructure for next-generation science and
learning.
This new
Detroit-Windsor connection has the capacity to
transmit large amounts of data at very fast speeds. It can transmit the
equivalent of a full data CD in just under a second. There are also
plans to
boost the capacity from the current one Gigabit per second link to
multiple
wavelengths creating one of the most advanced optical infrastructures
of its
kind in the world.
Officials also
see this link as a first step toward creating
a new Great Lakes and Atlantic Research Alliance, involving ORION,
Merit and
advanced networks in New York and Quebec. A similar cross-border
connection is
being finalized between Fort Erie, Ontario and Buffalo, New York.
Baker and Camp
acknowledged the critical support of the City
of Windsor and the Detroit and Canada Tunnel Corporation, which owns
and
operates the tunnel infrastructure. "The Tunnel
Corporation is pleased to have had a part
in facilitating this international collaboration between these two
research and
education networks" said Neal Belitsky, Executive Vice President &
General Manager of the Detroit and Canada Tunnel Corporation. Baker also
acknowledged the critical support of the
University of Windsor and the Windsor Essex
Development Network (WEDnet), a part of the Centre for Smart
Community
Innovation. He also acknowledged the Government
of Ontario, a key contributor to the project. About ORION The Ontario Research and
Innovation Optical Network (ORION),
a not-for-profit organization, is Ontario’s leading-edge research and
education
telecommunications network. ORION connects Ontario’s universities,
colleges,
medical and other public research facilities, and a number of school
boards to
one another and to the global grid of research and education networks.
Learn
more at www.orion.on.ca.
About Merit Merit Network Inc.
(Merit), a non-profit corporation
governed by Michigan’s public universities, owns and operates America’s
first
regional research and education network. Founded in 1966, Merit
supports the
high-performance networking needs of Michigan’s universities, colleges,
K-12
schools, libraries, state government, health care and other non-profit
organizations. Through Merit, Michigan’s research and education
organizations
have access to leading-edge network research, state and national
collaborations, and international peering connections. For
more information, please visit
www.merit.edu/.
-30-
For
further
information contact:
Shari
Balga
Jennifer
Hensley
Brian Worrall |
- Ontario and Michigan Research Networks Achieve International Connection, Jennifer Hensley, 02/02/2006
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