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Next Generation Networking Initiative Funding Opportunities for Industry

MPLS Forum. Next Generation Networking Initiative Funding Opportunities for Industry. Franck Boissière European Commission - DG Information Society Tel : +32/2-296.8054 Fax : +32/2-296.8389 e-mail : Franck.Boissiere@cec.eu.int. Next Generation Networks Defining Our Vision.

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Next Generation Networking Initiative Funding Opportunities for Industry

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  1. MPLS Forum Next Generation Networking InitiativeFunding Opportunities for Industry Franck Boissière European Commission - DG Information Society Tel : +32/2-296.8054 Fax : +32/2-296.8389 e-mail : Franck.Boissiere@cec.eu.int

  2. Next Generation NetworksDefining Our Vision

  3. The New Economy and the Knowledge Society New technologies are driving the economy • all sectors, all business • increase productivity • create new business • open new markets => A networked economy is the key factor for growth, competitiveness and employment

  4. Fibre Optic Deployment EU

  5. More choice Fast-growing market Some prices down Incumbents still dominate €191 bn 557 €160 bn 96% 91% Prices 1997 / 1999 218 + 7% 1999 2000 Telecoms servicesmarket 1998 1999 Network operators - 40% local Incumbents’market share 1997 / 1999 international 1998 Telecom liberalisation : Work in progress

  6. Evolution of Needs in EU

  7. Bandwidth Explosion: Undersea Example

  8. User and Service Requirements Source: Heinrich Hertz Institute 64kb/s 100kb/s 1Mb/s 10 Mb/s 100Mb/s 1E+04 1Gb/s 1E+03 D Response time (ms) F G E 1E+02 C A. POTS B. Videoconferencing (low quality) C. Videoconferencing (high quality) D. Teleworking E. Telelearning F. Information exchange and retrieval G. Entertainment A B 1E+01 (including Internet) 1E+00 1E+02 1E+03 1E+04 1E+05 1E+06 1E+07 1E+08 1E+09 Information content (bits)

  9. Traditional Communications NextGen Communications (Vertical Integration) (Horizontal Integration) Marketing Applications Portals commerce & Sales Marketing Intelligent Marketing Network Content and & Sales Data Sales Marketing Switching/Routing Switching/Routing & Transmission Sales The Communication Industry • New Business Models • New Actors E & Transmission

  10. From Telco to Comco

  11. Photonics Technologies 10000 1000 ~4 years DWDM boosts Performance 100 ~12x Transmission Rate Gbit/s 10 1 0.1 Research Commercial 0.01 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005

  12. Challenges for Access Networks LOW COST - AFFORDABLE ACCESS! Anyone, Anywhere, Anytime • Efficiency & Technology Independence (wireless, xDSL...) • Flexible Bandwidth Allocation • Cheap and easy-to-use Access Gateways • Always on

  13. Challenges for MANs • Support All Services (Internet, Mobile, Broadcast) • Flexible Bandwidth Allocation • Flexible Equipment • Interfacing with Higher Layers (IP) • Interworking with other Networks • Management System • Protection and Restoration

  14. Optical Networking Paradox • Problem areas are non optical • Optical hardware a decreasing problem • Priority toward the higher layer

  15. The rise of the stupid network • Simple open network • Third party innovation • Distributed intelligence on the edges • Smarter and more active than today’s Internet • Flexibility and scalability • Optical core/varied access • Premium for all

  16. Our Response: A New Initiative

  17. Portfolio of Work in Progress

  18. Computing and Networking EmbeddedSystems DistributedSystems } { Optical NetworkingNetwork ManagementDistributed ApplicationsService Provision Control SystemsFeature extraction and recognitionEmbedded web systems Real-Time Quality of Service PervasiveComputing /Networking

  19. Distributed Systems Functions and Enablers I N T E R N E T + 40% p.a. BACKBONENETWORKS PHOTONICS CORPORATENETWORKSVPNs COMPUTING NetworkIntegration(protocols) INDIVIDUAL ACCESS/HOME NETWORKSMOBILE/FIXEDMICROELECTRONICS

  20. Thematic Grouping of Projects ACCESS Optics HOME Copper HARMONICSATLASMETEOR Cable Power BASSOPENISE PALAS VideoGatewayHasVideoBox PROXiTV WITNESS InHomeNetSIRLAN Wireless WINEGNIUS DRIVEEMBRACEBRAIN ADAMAS

  21. IP Premium IP QOSIPSATRIUM SEQUIN TEQUILAAQUILA CADENUS GEOCASTBRAHMS MOEBIUS SUITED BRAHMS DAVID METEOR HARMONICS IPv6 6INITLONGMOBYDICK Optics WINE Wireless NETGATEINTERNODE GCAP ATLAS WINMANLION M3I SHUFFLE WINEGLASSVESPER MANTRIP STARLITEAGENTLINK FAINFORM ANDROID Network Mgt NGN60 Thematic Grouping (2)

  22. Network Management FORM VESPER ATS-NETWORK ANDROID FAIN Active Networks STARLITE SHUFFLE MANTRIP INTONE DIAMANT GEODAS HISCORE DSE GLOBDATA C-ARCTIC DAEDALUS INTERVAL SETTA Agent Technologies JAVA ORBs AGENTLINK HPCN (Open MP, MPI, ...) CORVAL2 VISOR BASE DOTS IB AJACS Time Triggered Architectures New Distributed Techniques Thematic Grouping (3) Distributed + Real-Time Systems CN2

  23. Workprogramme 2001Highlights & Opportunities

  24. 1999 Jan Apr Jul Oct 2000 Jan Apr Jul Oct 2001 Jan Apr Jul Oct 2002 Jan Apr Jul Oct ~1200 MEuro ~950 MEuro ~850 MEuro ~330 MEuro Call-1 Call-2 Call-3 Call-4 Call-5 Call-6 Call-7 Call-8 Budget 1999 Budget 2000 Budget 2001 Budget 2002 IST timetable

  25. Computing and Networking DEADLINES 15 Jan 2000 • Next Generation Networks • Distributed Systems and Service Provision • Network Interoperability Apr 2001 • Real-timeDistributed Systems • Network and Services Interoperability Oct 2001 • Terabit Optical Networks • Application Services Provision • Next Generation Networks CN1

  26. Next-Generation Networks 15 Jan 2001 Deadline (+ Oct 2001) • Objective • foster deployment of an “open” modern networking infrastructure supporting industry driven large-scale experimentation • Focus • technology validation - Fixed - mobile interworking, Management across different network layers, High layer protocols (e.g. IP) over WDM, Mobile IP, Access/core networks interoperability, IPv6, etc. • full service demonstration - Scalability, Security, Availability, Accounting/Settlements, QoS, etc. • usability testing - Application requirements in specific domains Background2

  27. How to apply succesfully • Clear Objectives • In focus, Innovation • Consortium • Cooperation, value added • Industrial relevance, Economic aspects • Exploitation potential, markets, actors • Resources • Cost, Existing base • Experiences from the past

  28. Infrastructure: GEANT • € 80 Million funding • Start 1 November 2000 • Duration : 4 years • Covers EU + Associated countries • Extends world-wide • Provides Infrastructure, Services and Management

  29. GEANT - Today

  30. Mediterranean Eastern Canada Asia Russia Countries Europe USA Pacific FSU NREN NREN Virtual Communities GRIDS GEANT in Context Edge/Access Network Terabit Testbeds IP Technology Applications

  31. SuperJanet Belnet Renater GARR Peering: the ATRIUM example ATRIUM VTHD

  32. 2000 Workprogramme Important details - official texts http://www.cordis.lu/ist

  33. Franck BOISSIERE/Mercé GRIERA I FISA Franck.Boissiere@cec.eu.int/Merce.Griera-i-Fisa@cec.eu.int Tel: +32 2 296 80 54 / Tel: +32 2 296 85 91       Fax: +32 2 296 83 89 http://www.cordis.lu/ist/ka4/ipcn/home.html

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