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-
- N-1-3-040.52, "U.S. - France/Ebone Link Upgrade", by Steven N.
- Goldstein*, <sgoldste@cise.cise.nsf.gov>
-
-
- The National Science Foundation (NSF) was asked by Renater to partner
- on an expanded capacity link (from 128 to 512 kbps) which would
- involve re-designating the NSF-INRIA link (with INRIA's concurrence)
- and re-homing it from Sophia-Antipolis to Paris. In addition, the
- link would be designated for service between North America and
- Europe's grass-roots multi-protocol backbone, Ebone. As such, routing
- and backup arrangements would be coordinated with other North
- America-Europe links to London and Stockholm.
-
- In a note from NSF addressed to Alain Bensoussan, President of INRIA on
- 31 July 1992, the past history of the NSF/NASA link with INRIA and its
- growing importance as an operational infrastructural link to Europe
- was reviewed by Steve Goldstein:
-
-
- Dear Alain,
-
- As we approach the third generation of U.S.-France research networking
- collaboration, I look back on the incremental steps NSF and INRIA have
- taken together toward achieving today's staging for the coming phase.
-
- I recall Larry Landweber's and Christian Huitema's transport gateway
- project (INRIA-NSF) and the NASA and INSU/CDS (Strasbourg)
- collaboration for access to SIMBAD, then at Orsay's Centre de Calcul.
- And how Mitch Tasman and Walid Dabbous and the Princeton and MCI
- control rooms remained on duty until early morning (Sophia-Antipolis
- time) and monitored the circuits to keep the demonstrations
- functioning during the 1988 congress of the International Astronomical
- Union in Baltimore and the associated meeting of astronomical center
- librarians in Washington.
-
- Then, we joined in the International Connections Manager's
- re-engineering of the connection and Rocquencourt's entrance into the
- collaboration for INRIA. We recall with gratitude INRIA's
- single-party funding of the old circuit during the institutionally
- complicated transition period to the new ICM circuit. INRIA has been a
- stalwart partner in this endeavor. Operational stability certainly
- improved fantastically during the second phase. And INRIA provided us
- with connectivity to Crete and Tunisia as well as to a large
- cross-section of France's research and academic community.
-
- And now, with the implementation of Renater, we prepare to take the
- next step of expanded capacity to a Renater/NSF-provisioned link
- between the U.S. and Ebone. In doing so, NSF looks back on the rich
- environment of collaboration we have enjoyed with our INRIA
- colleagues, and we acknowledge with deep appreciation INRIA's
- contributions to today's successes. We have made many personal and
- professional friendships, and we look forward to continued
- collaborations with INRIA personnel in our now-enlarged sphere of
- cooperation with Renater.
-
-
- *Program Director, Interagency & International Networking
- Coordination - Div. of Networking and Communications Research &
- Infrastructure - National Science Foundation
-