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- Xref: sparky alt.amateur-comp:439 comp.misc:4744 news.misc:2091 alt.bbs.internet:4892
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- Path: sparky!uunet!caen!ronda
- From: ronda@ais.org (Ronda Hauben)
- Subject: What Is Happening to NSF Net?
- Message-ID: <TJb=+P@engin.umich.edu>
- Date: Fri, 01 Jan 93 19:33:21 EST
- Organization: UMCC
- Keywords: NSF NET
- X-Newsreader: TIN [version 1.1 PL6]
- Nntp-Posting-Host: umcc.ais.org
- Lines: 106
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- The following was posted recently to a list that I am on.
- I thought it was helpful in seeing that a significant change is
- in process and it will be helpful to see what is happening to
- the important goal of the NSF - To create a net that would
- link every student and teacher in the U.S. -- from kindergarten
- to post college before the end of the century. What has happened
- to this goal?
-
- FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
- Wednesday, December 2, 1992
- National Science Foundation Network achieves major milestone
- T-1 NSFNET now part of Internet history
-
- (Wednesday, Dec. 2) Like it's predecessors, the ARPANET and
- the 56 Kbps National Science Foundation Network (NSFNET), the
- T-1 NSFNET passed into history today when the last router was
- moved to connect to the T-3 backbone service. As of 12:01
- a.m. EST on Wednesday, December 2, the T-1 NSFNET backbone is
- no more--its circuits are turned off--marking the beginning of
- a new networking era.
-
- When first implemented just over four years ago, the T-1
- (1.5 Mbps) NSFNET backbone was state-of-the-art for the
- Internet, deploying new levels of speed and management. With
- improvements in routing technology, the Internet moved from
- an experimental service to a production commodity. Demands
- for higher speed services and increasing backbone traffic led
- to the T-3 (45 Mbps) backbone service implemented over the
- Advanced Network & Services, Inc. Network (ANSnet) that has
- replaced the older T-1 NSFNET technology. The growth of
- NSFNET promoted a global internetworking industry estimated
- as generating billions of dollars in annual revenues.
-
- In five years, the communications capacity of NSFNET has
- expanded almost 700 times through the implementation of
- leading-edge technologies, growing from 56 Kbps to T-3. Today
- the network's backbone service carries data at the equivalent
- of 1,400 pages of single-spaced, typed text per second. This
- means the information in a 20-volume encyclopedia can be sent
- across the network in under 23 seconds!
-
- Today every major research, graduate, and four-year
- university is tied together through NSFNET, along with
- private and federal research institutions and industries.
- Over 700 colleges and universities are connected representing
- 80 percent of the nation's student population and 90 percent
- of the nation's federally sponsored research. Further, NSFNET
- provides access to hundreds of high schools, libraries,
- community colleges, and smaller educational institutions.
- With over 1,000 public and private research and education
- institutions, NSFNET links an estimated 10 million users. As
- the commercial Internet has grown, links are expanding
- between education and business communities which are promoted
- through expanding connectivity.
-
- Access to the network over the past five years has
- surpassed the most optimistic visions projected for it. The
- National Science Foundation's 1987 solicitation for NSFNET
- said, "It is anticipated that over the next five years NSFNET
- will reach more than 10,000 mathematicians, scientists, and
- engineers at 200 or more campuses and other research
- centers." After five years, these numbers have been more than
- exceeded and network growth continues to be exponential.
-
- A reflection of that growth is network traffic. Total
- NSFNET traffic grew from 195 million packets in August 1988
- to almost 24 billion in November 1992, a 100-fold increase in
- four years. During November, the network reached its first
- billion-packet-a-day mark. Network growth increases an
- averages of 11 percent per month. The total number of
- connected networks grew from fewer than 200 to over 7,500, of
- which one-third are outside the United States. Today NSFNET
- makes it possible to reach educators and researchers in over
- 75 countries around the world. Recent surveys show over a
- million host computers are connected to the Internet, with an
- even greater number of individual users accessing those
- computers.
-
- Meeting the challenges of building the central
- infrastructure for this high-speed data communications
- network has been the focus of a joint government, academic,
- and industrial partnership for the past five years. Merit
- Network, Inc., in association with Advanced Network &
- Services, Inc. (ANS), IBM, MCI, and the State of Michigan,
- has led pioneering efforts to put in place a national network
- service through a 1987 cooperative agreement with the
- National Science Foundation. The partnership deployed the T-1
- network on schedule in July 1988, and began the T-3 network
- service implemented over ANSnet in late 1990.
-
- "The T-1 NSFNET project has been a remarkable adventure,"
- said Stephen S. Wolff, director of the National Science
- Foundation's Division of Networking and Communications
- Research and Infrastructure (DNCRI). "It's an experiment
- whose success goes far beyond even the highest hopes we had
- for it. Because of this program, it's now conceivable that
- the U. S. can implement a network connecting every student
- and teacher in the country--from kindergarten to post-college--
- before the end of the century, revolutionizing education and
- research. Five years ago, this seemed only a very distant
- dream."
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