serenate david williams cern, also president terena tnc 2002, limerick june 2002

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SERENATE David Williams CERN, also President TERENA TNC 2002, Limerick June 2002

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Page 1: SERENATE David Williams CERN, also President TERENA TNC 2002, Limerick June 2002

SERENATE

David Williams

CERN, also President TERENA

TNC 2002, Limerick

June 2002

Page 2: SERENATE David Williams CERN, also President TERENA TNC 2002, Limerick June 2002

Topics

• What is SERENATE about?

• What are the strategic questions?

• Structure and timescales of SERENATE

• How can you participate?

Page 3: SERENATE David Williams CERN, also President TERENA TNC 2002, Limerick June 2002

What is SERENATE about?

Page 4: SERENATE David Williams CERN, also President TERENA TNC 2002, Limerick June 2002

The acronym

• SERENATE = Study into European Research and Education Networking as Targeted by eEurope

• Funded as an EC project – FP5

• Looking at our strategic needs, say up to 5 years ahead

• NOT making detailed plans

Page 5: SERENATE David Williams CERN, also President TERENA TNC 2002, Limerick June 2002

Who are the partners?

• Academia Europaea• Centre for Tele-informatics (CTI), Technical University

of Denmark• DANTE• European Science Foundation• TERENA (coordinating partner)

• We also anticipate considerable involvement from the NRENs, and hopefully of other actors, including industry

Page 6: SERENATE David Williams CERN, also President TERENA TNC 2002, Limerick June 2002

Strategic assumptions

• Three-level model– Campus– National (and sometimes also regional and

metro) infrastructure– European interconnect– [inter-continental connectivity]

Page 7: SERENATE David Williams CERN, also President TERENA TNC 2002, Limerick June 2002

What are (some of) the strategic questions?

Page 8: SERENATE David Williams CERN, also President TERENA TNC 2002, Limerick June 2002

Strategic questions (1/3)• What should the nature of NRENs be – how much technical expertise? –

how much direct responsibility for operation? More crudely – and the question is sometimes posed to some of our members – why cannot commercial ISPs do everything?

• Now clear that we are moving from “best efforts IP” to multi-service networking – with a huge number of “end-to-end” services going across multiple organisational boundaries. How can this be handled? Remember the three layers (campus, NREN, European interconnect) – it is hard to balance the need for local autonomy (“subsidiarity”) with the users’ need for coherent high-quality “end-to-end” performance.

• From TAC discussion – NRENs cannot only provide low layer services - urgent to develop coherent infrastructure AAA (for example), but that’s across the campuses, the NRENs, the national university system(s) and international users communities (such as grids). How?

Page 9: SERENATE David Williams CERN, also President TERENA TNC 2002, Limerick June 2002

Strategic questions (2/3)• Are present economic assumptions likely to evolve smoothly, or be

disrupted?– Optical fibre developments much more bandwidth

– Turbulence in the bandwidth market

• Several examples of NRENs moving to “own” their own fibre infrastructure – is this a good idea or not? As far as I know at least Czech Republic, Poland and Switzerland have that as a declared goal, maybe others.

• NRENs traditionally worked with tertiary education – to what extent should they become involved with primary and secondary education? And what about 168/7 coverage (student lodging and week-end coverage) for higher education students?

• And what about libraries and healthcare/hospitals?

Page 10: SERENATE David Williams CERN, also President TERENA TNC 2002, Limerick June 2002

Strategic questions (3/3)• What are networking needs of FP6 and the ERA? Are we addressing the

proposals made in the Harbour Report?• How should NRENs react to eEurope Action Plan?

– Council requested Commission to study higher speeds and connecting schools and libraries – SERENATE is part of that work

– In general - keep proposing ambitious goals

• What is the proper geographical extent of the “Europe” that the NRENs should feel concerned by?

• eEurope and ERA looking for “equality of opportunity” for researchers across different countries in Europe– Should people with (much) higher costs have to pay higher charges?– How could we alleviate discrepancies?– What cost-sharing models can be recommended?

Page 11: SERENATE David Williams CERN, also President TERENA TNC 2002, Limerick June 2002

Out-of-scope strategic questions• We should not try to tackle everything

• I believe that connectivity to “neighbouring” countries, such as Russia, NIS, SEE, Mediterranean, Caucasus, is very important politically. Actually trying to get to grips with the issues in each area is beyond the scope of SERENATE (IMO). Could eventually be done with more resources.

• I also believe that the issues of proper intercontinental connectivity are being handled effectively in the GEANT context, and do not need further attention here. – [ Maybe need to keep some focus on the “end-to-end” service issues?]

Page 12: SERENATE David Williams CERN, also President TERENA TNC 2002, Limerick June 2002

Structure and Timescalesof SERENATE

Page 13: SERENATE David Williams CERN, also President TERENA TNC 2002, Limerick June 2002

The EU project

• Runs from 1 May 2002 for 15 months, so until 30 July 2003

• Total cost ~960 kEUR

• Comprises 14 areas of work, of which some workshops, some studies and some report writing

Page 14: SERENATE David Williams CERN, also President TERENA TNC 2002, Limerick June 2002

Workshops

• Initial workshop (17-18 Sept 2002 in La Hulpe, close to Brussels)

• Operators’ views on infrastructure status and evolution (~Nov 2002)

• Possible models for the future (~Dec 2002)

• User needs and priorities (Jan 2003, probably in Montpellier)

• Final workshop (~May/June 2003)

Page 15: SERENATE David Williams CERN, also President TERENA TNC 2002, Limerick June 2002

Initial Workshop (La Hulpe)

• By invitation. Mix of NREN staff, NREN funders, campus responsibles, real end users, some suppliers

• Interactive. To discuss and define scope and working approach.

• 150 max attendance – so a few per country

• Five break-out groups:-– Technical evolution

– Economics

– Other user communities (schools, libraries, healthcare/hosptials,…..)

– Geography

– User needs

Page 16: SERENATE David Williams CERN, also President TERENA TNC 2002, Limerick June 2002

From the Web page…

• Technical perspectives – LAN, WAN, switched circuits vs QoS bandwidth, optical networking

• Economic, commercial and financial perspectives– including telecommunications regulations

• Needs of the research community– for all disciplines of science, technology and the humanities)

• Needs of the education community (from Kindergarten to university education) and other user communities (libraries, museums, healthcare, etc.)

• Geography– the borders of Europe, the “digital divide” inside Europe, connectivity

to other continents, organisational issues).

Page 17: SERENATE David Williams CERN, also President TERENA TNC 2002, Limerick June 2002

Workshop participation

• We have some funding for each workshop

• In general you will have to cover your own travel and accomodation costs

• We do have some funding to support some participants who would not otherwise be able to attend

Page 18: SERENATE David Williams CERN, also President TERENA TNC 2002, Limerick June 2002

Reports• A report will be generated after each workshop (see previous slide

for list)• PLUS• Deployment and trends in transport and infrastructure market (~Jan

2003)• Regulatory situation, especially for alternative approaches (~Jan

2003)• Equipment trends (~Feb 2003)• Telecoms market and infra deployment forecast (~April 2003)• Possible infrastructure scenarios (~April 2003)• Overall strategic plan – input to Final Workshop (~May/June 2003)

Page 19: SERENATE David Williams CERN, also President TERENA TNC 2002, Limerick June 2002

Other areas of work• Education and other fields (libraries, healthcare….)

• Geographic coverage– Equality of opportunity

– [Connectivity to neighbouring regions]

– [Intercontinental connectivity]

Page 20: SERENATE David Williams CERN, also President TERENA TNC 2002, Limerick June 2002

How can you participate?

Page 21: SERENATE David Williams CERN, also President TERENA TNC 2002, Limerick June 2002

NRENs• This is your project – please participate actively in all workshops

• Especially the initial workshop – to give your input

• Your experts regulatory evolution

• You technical staff equipment evolution

• Your users user needs and priorities

• Your local experts extension of NRENs to early education, libraries and healthcare

• Your local experts geographic coverage

Many of these bullets are also directly applicable to ENPG members and potentially to members of other interested national bodies

Page 22: SERENATE David Williams CERN, also President TERENA TNC 2002, Limerick June 2002

Network and Infra Service Vendors

• Submit thoughts to Steering Committee

• Participate in operators’ workshop – its especially for you

Page 23: SERENATE David Williams CERN, also President TERENA TNC 2002, Limerick June 2002

Equipment vendors

• Submit thoughts to Steering Committee

• Participate in the “equipment trends” activity

Page 24: SERENATE David Williams CERN, also President TERENA TNC 2002, Limerick June 2002

More info and contacts

Page 25: SERENATE David Williams CERN, also President TERENA TNC 2002, Limerick June 2002

Steering Committee

Bonac - ARNES - chairs “geographic”

Butterworth - AE

Davies - DANTE

Jaume - RENATER - chairs “education and other”

Liello - chair NREN Consortium

Mayer - ESF

Skouby - CTI

Vietsch - TERENA

Williams

Page 26: SERENATE David Williams CERN, also President TERENA TNC 2002, Limerick June 2002

Addresses

• http://www.serenate.org

• mailto:[email protected]

Page 27: SERENATE David Williams CERN, also President TERENA TNC 2002, Limerick June 2002

SERENATE

David Williams

CERN, also President TERENA

TNC 2002, Limerick

June 2002