Day/Time |
Monday Evening Presentation |
|
|
MON NOV 16
6PM
|
- John Delaney The University of Washington
-
Next-Generation Ocean Science: Cabled ocean observatories now under construction in the U.S. and Canada such as the Regional Scale Nodes component of the National Science Foundation
Ocean Observatories Initiative and NEPTUNE Canada, both in the northeast Pacific Ocean will enable bold
new approaches to studying the oceans. [ more ]
|
|
Day/Time |
Tuesday Presentations |
|
|
TUE NOV 17
10:30AM
|
- Celeste Anderson The University of Southern California
-
TransLight/Pacific Wave: (Description to come)
|
|
|
TUE NOV 17
11AM
|
- Akeo Masuda NTT Laboratories
-
Application-Network Collaboration for On-Demand Transmission of Uncompressed HDTV:
On-demand transmission of Gigabit-class wideband video is enabled interlocking with the automatic set up of huge bandwidth circuit in the IP-optical network. Control of the IP and optical network upon the user's request to start video transmission is exhibited at booth #2164. We also show the visualized map of the network topology to deliver the uncompressed video via international connection supported in part by the Pacific Wave.
|
|
|
TUE NOV 17
1PM
|
- Katsuhiro Sebayashi NTT Laboratories
-
PRESTA 10G Platform for High-Accuracy 10-Gbps Network Monitoring:
NTT has developed 10Gb/s network imonitoring platform which can be applied to very sophisticated packet monitoring and control applications, and Distributed In-service QoS Monitor System for high-speed video stream monitoring. These technologies are verified at several occasions including a few trans Pacific experiments connecting Japan and the USA. Within Japan we have successfully demonstrated an uncompressed 4K video transmission 6Gbps between Tokyo and Osaka.
And it also demonstrates in SC09 at NICT/NTT booth (#2164).
|
|
|
TUE NOV 17
2PM
|
- George Papen UC San Diego
-
Scalable Energy-Efficient Datacenters:
The principle goal of building the Scalable Energy Efficient Datacenter (SEED) testbed is to develop an integrated solution that encompasses
physical layer hardware, protocols, and topologies that can provide the expected size and performance scaling for future data centers while
minimizing the cost and energy per switched bit. [ more ]
|
|
|
TUE NOV 17
3PM
|
- Hisao Uose NTT Laboratories
-
NTT Lab's Collaboration with Pacific Wave:
NTT Laboratories has been collaborating with Pacific Wave for more than six years through the use of its experimental network GEMnet2 which is connected to the Pacific Wave node in Seattle. By this collaboration we've been able to conduct a number of international network experiments requiring very high bandwidth including uncompressed HDTV transmission and 4K video transmission. Other applications include remote fetal diagnosis project and astronomy project. We are going to upgrade our trans-Pacific link from current 2 Gbps to 10 Gbps this year and planning to test more advanced technologies over this infrastructure with Pacific Wave and other R&E network communities.
|
|
|
TUE NOV 17
3:30PM
|
- Kwangjong Jo KISTI
-
International Advanced Collaboration with GLORIAD/KREONet2 and Pacific Wave: (Description to come)
|
|
|
TUE NOV 17
4PM
|
- Dan Chang National Center for High-Performance Computing
-
TWAREN/TaiwanLight and International Collaboration: TWAREN is the national research and education backbone in Taiwan. We connect
TWAREN with GLIF partners via a TAIWANLight international circuit.
Several scientific collaborations such as OptIPuter, HPDMnet, and
medical video streaming are supported by IP/Optical exchange points such
as Pacific Wave, CANARIE, StarLight, NetherLight, and CESNET.
|
|
|
TUE NOV 17
4:30PM
|
- Tom DeFanti Calit2@UCSD
-
Better than Going There: Globally Shared Visualization: This has been a good year for tiled LCD panel displays the bezels have almost disappeared in 2D displays and 3D (with and without glasses) is finally here. The networks, switches, and interface cards are affordable at 10Gb/s, HD videoconferencing is easy to make work and software to integrate it all is propagating fast with SAGE (from EVL) and CGLX (from Calit2). So, you don't need to take off your shoes, jacket, and belt to "go there" to work with your colleagues. [ more ]
|
|
Day/Time |
Wednesday Presentations |
|
|
WED NOV 18
1PM
|
- Dr. Kei Hiraki The University of Tokyo
-
Talk Title To Be Announced: (Description to come)
|
|
|
WED NOV 18
2PM
|
- Akeo Masuda NTT Laboratories
-
Application-Network Collaboration for On-Demand Transmission of Uncompressed HDTV:
On-demand transmission of Gigabit-class wideband video is enabled interlocking with the automatic set up of huge bandwidth circuit in the IP-optical network. Control of the IP and optical network upon the user's request to start video transmission is exhibited at booth #2164. We also show the visualized map of the network topology to deliver the uncompressed video via international connection supported in part by the Pacific Wave.
|
|
|
WED NOV 18
3PM
|
- Katsuhiro Sebayashi NTT Laboratories
-
PRESTA 10G Platform for High-Accuracy 10-Gbps Network Monitoring:
NTT has developed 10Gb/s network imonitoring platform which can be applied to very sophisticated packet monitoring and control applications, and Distributed In-service QoS Monitor System for high-speed video stream monitoring. These technologies are verified at several occasions including a few trans Pacific experiments connecting Japan and the USA. Within Japan we have successfully demonstrated an uncompressed 4K video transmission 6Gbps between Tokyo and Osaka.
And it also demonstrates in SC09 at NICT/NTT booth (#2164).
|
|
|
WED NOV 18
4PM
|
- Celeste Anderson The University of Southern California
-
TransLight/Pacific Wave: (Description to come)
|
|
Pacific Wave is a state-of-the-art international peering exchange facility designed to serve research and education networks throughout the Pacific
Rim and the world. A joint project between CENIC and the Pacific Northwest Gigapop in collaboration with the University of Washington, Pacific Wave
creates a new peering paradigm by removing the geographical barriers of traditional peering facilities. It enables any US or international network
to connect at any of three locations along the US Pacific coast, as well as offers the option to peer with any other Pacific Wave participant,
regardless of physical location.
By presenting a seamless, unified, international peering exchange facility at strategic Pacific coast locations, the Pacific Wave peering facility
will be a magnet for research and education partners throughout Canada, Mexico, South America and the Pacific Rim. For more information,
visit www.pacificwave.net.