home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Subject: n-1-4-fill5
-
- NSF Provides New Latin American Connectivity
-
- by Steve Goldstein <goldstein@nsf.gov>
-
- The National Science Foundation has
- initiated a project to assist Latin American and Caribbean countries'
- academic and research networks to connect to the Global Internet and
- thereby to promote collaboration in research and education. The project is
- included in the overall International Connections Management (ICM)
- Project which NSF awarded to Sprint in early 1991.
-
- Specifically, ICM/Sprint will locate a router
- at the PanAmSat teleport in Homestead, Florida. Many Latin American
- countries use PanAmSat as part of their international interconnections
- and domestic telecommunications infrastructures. Latin American and
- Caribbean research and education networks such as Costa Rica's CRnet,
- Ecuador's ECUAnet, and
- Peru's RCP will connect to the ICMnet router at Homestead. The router will
- be connected via a private T1 circuit to the ICMnet router in Washington,
- D.C. which, in turn, is connected to a newly-forming Global Internet
- EXchange (GIX) in the Washington area. In addition to the global connectivity
- thus afforded, Latin American and Caribbean networks connected to the
- router will also be able to connect directly to each other through
- the router at Homestead. This will facilitate regional and inter-regional
- networking in Latin America and the Caribbean areas on an interim basis
- until more permanent solutions for regional networks are implemented.
- The Homestead installation had been expected to be operational in late 1992,
- but has been delayed in the aftermath of Hurricane Andrew to early January 1993.
-
- Normally, external networks pay membership and/or management fees
- to connect to networks which "host" their connections. In the case of
- the NSF-ICM project, NSF will pay Sprint a "port" management fee for
- each connection to the Homestead router from Latin America and the Caribbean.
-
-