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- N-1-1-020.06 Education, by Steve Ruth, <ruth@gmuvax.gmu.edu>
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- An evolving project in CSFR has made a contribution to improving the
- ability of universities, laboratories, and other complex and expensive
- improvements in data communications infrastructure. Funded by the
- Mellon Foundation, the project has had a role in making CSFR's first
- year as a full-fledged user of international networks successful.
- Since last November when the first node was established in Prague,
- over two thousand new network users have been registered and monthly
- message volume has steadily risen to over a billion characters per
- month. CSFR's monthly EARN volumes are consistently higher than those
- of other Eastern European users like Poland and Hungary. The Mellon
- grant offers "Value Added Services" that are aimed at bringing the low
- unit costs of academic networks to many more users than would normally
- be possible. Also, these users become much more sophisticated in
- network capabilities and are better prepared to take advantages of
- better hardware and software as they become available.
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- Many smaller institutions are particularly helped by this process.
- For example, the Palecky University in Olomouts in central CSFR
- probably would have had to wait for a year or more--until mid or late
- 1992--to be able to connect to the networks under normal
- circumstances, but through special training and network services they
- were connected in January of 1991. This enabled the rector, Dr. Josef
- Jarob, and his faculty to have the ability to be in direct contact
- with hundreds of thousands of researchers in nearly sixty countries at
- a cost of a few cents (five CSFR crowns) or less per message. Jarob
- immediately took advantage of this opportunity, using the network to
- contact various institutions to establish fellowships, scholarships
- and major grant arrangements around the world. The faculty of Palacky
- University routinely exchange manuscripts, research findings and other
- data with an expanding group of colleagues around the world. In
- addition, one of their major grant proposals, to establish a
- university wide local area network, has already been funded and the
- equipment and training provided. Using the network greatly
- facilitated the preparation and approval of the grant.
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- A similar case is that of the Czech Academy of Physics which received
- help to revise existing network software to accommodate several
- hundred researchers who would normally have had to wait for a year or
- more to be connected to the international networks. They were
- connected in the spring of 1991. About a dozen other diverse value
- added projects are already completed or under way.
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- The administrator of the Mellon grant, Dr. Stephen Ruth, director of
- the International Center of Applied Studies in MIS at George Mason
- University (RUTH@GMUVAX or INTMIS@GMUVAX), sees the value added
- services approach as appropriate for all of Eastern Europe as well as
- the former Soviet republics. "It makes sense to take full advantage
- of the networks that already exist by giving every professor and
- student in the world a chance to be in contact with others.
- Eventually the telecommunications infrastructure will improve, but
- these opportunities exist now and we don't have to wait." Ruth is
- particularly impressed with the results in CSFR where the first year's
- outcomes have been three times the estimates made before the project
- began. He is now working with organizations in Moravia and Slovakia
- to assist in increasing their network use and expects nearly a
- thousand new users from that region in the coming year. The project
- also aims to involve the faculties and students in liberal arts and
- the humanities, medicine, law and other disciplines that frequently
- are among the last to become proficient in informatics technologies.
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- Ruth and Harry Barnes, former US ambassador to Romania, have recently
- received approval and funding to begin a similar project in Romania
- where they begin with three major nodes in Bucharest sometime later
- this year. Says Professor Ruth, "We would like to do this in all the
- countries of Eastern Europe, the Baltics and of course the former
- Russian republics. By concentrating on the user and not so much on
- the hardware, our approach is very low in unit cost and the results in
- CSFR speak volumes about who is benefitting."
-