
Big sender: Internet2’s dynamic circuit network will help provide channels for large quantities of information to flow to and from academic research projects, such as CERN’s hadron collider, above. In the future, the technology may find commercial applications, such as for fast transfer of high-definition online video.  
Credit: CERN
Thursday,  February 14, 2008 - By Erica  Naone
An  academic internet provides clues about ways to improve the commercial Internet.
Internet2, a  nonprofit advanced networking consortium in the 
"The  idea here is to basically look at the network in a different way," says  Rick Summerhill, CTO of Internet2. The Internet Protocol (IP) currently used  for the Web breaks data into packets that are sent through fiber-optic cables  to their ultimate destination. The packets don't have to take a common path  through the network; routers act like way stations along the network, examining  every packet individually and deciding where it should be sent next. The  problem with this system is that large data transfers can clog the routers with  packets waiting for direction, and if the packets don't make it to their final  destination at the same time, the receiver may experience jitter--interruptions  to the data stream that can produce skips in online video, for example.
Summerhill  says that, using the dynamic circuit network, a researcher could set up a  temporary connection to another location that would work like a phone call: the  user's data would be carried directly to that other location, uninterrupted by  the traffic of others sharing the network. The result is that large quantities  of information could be transferred quickly and clearly.
The  dynamic circuit network is really an enhancement of a traditional network,  rather than a replacement. Internet2 still has a backbone that uses the  standard IP common across the Web. What makes the dynamic circuit network  different is that it uses a circuit-switched network, which can be set up so  that all the packets follow the same path. Also, those circuits don't have to  be in place permanently. Lachlan Andrew, a researcher at Netlab, at the California  Institute of Technology, explains that a circuit-switched network determines a  pathway for the entire stream of packets, so that at every way station, they  can be sent on without having to be individually examined. "Internet2 is developing  technology to communicate between nodes, find a path, and construct it,"  he says.
The idea  of the dynamic circuit network, Summerhill says, is that these circuits can be  set up on demand, so that traffic needing excellent quality of service can step  out of the regular flow. Because data is sent down fiber-optic cables at  different frequencies of light, he explains, data from the dynamic circuit  network can coexist with IP data and wouldn't require new cable to be laid.  Summerhill says that Internet2 is working on software that could eventually be  built into network devices to control these different flows and to set up  circuits when and where they are needed.
Among  the current applications for the dynamic circuit network, Internet2 expects to  facilitate the transfer of data from CERN's large hadron collider to  researchers at other institutions, and it has done trials in which circuits are  opened between the collider and the 
"The  methods for supporting that network are under investigation," Summerhill says.  Although right now, there are no commercial implementations, he notes that  Internet2 works with commercial partners that might eventually be a conduit to  bringing the technology into the ordinary Internet.
Clive  Davenhall worked on software for academic circuit-switched networks in  the United Kingdom, as part of his role as an engineer at the National  e-Science Centre, in Edinburgh, which works to improve methods for conducting  large-scale science research over the Internet. Davenhall says that, although  people have been talking about dynamic circuit networks for a long time, this  type of network hasn't had much of an impact on the commercial Internet, partly  because of concerns about how it might function in an environment less  controlled than academia. For example, if the average person could set up a  dedicated circuit on demand, it might be possible to hog resources that could  interfere with other users' experience.
Summerhill  says that the dynamic circuit network is still in its early stages, and  "still has some evolution to do." He recalls the time that IP wasn't  considered ready for commercial applications. So far, four universities in four  different regional networks are connected to the dynamic circuit network, says  Lauren Rotman, public relations manager for Internet2. Rotman adds that it will  be easy to add universities in regions that are already connected. The  organization hopes to increase the dynamic circuit network's reach  significantly in the coming year.
Source: http://www.technologyreview.com/web/20277/page2/
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