100-400GB/s - no lag here!

MrBishop

Well-Known Member
The Internet2 advanced networking consortium is preparing to open the world's fastest Internet backbone which will connect Chicago, New York and Washington at speeds up to 100Gbits per second.

The 20,920km network will initially be open to research and healthcare organisations and operate at a speed that could rise to 400Gbps if the higher-capacity circuits are implemented. But even at 100Gbps it is 10 times faster than the current Internet2 network, which opened in 1998.

By the middle of 2007 the new network will be extended to cover all the 46,000 organisations currently connected to the existing Internet2 infrastructure.

As well as aiding data-intensive research projects, the new backbone is expected to make remote surgery common practice - where surgeons carry out operations by controlling robotic equipment over the Net.

'The big problem with health care using the Internet for actual clinical practice is that the quality of service is quite questionable,' said Mike McGill, manager of the health-sciences initiative for Internet2. 'If you were actually doing remote telesurgery or telepathology or tele-anything, there is a chance you can get congestion on the network. The new network allows us to dedicate portions of the network to specific activities, so the quality of service people can expect on the network is clearly going to be better, and will allow them confidence.'

Most of the new bandwidth will be allocated to science projects to transmit date from atomic collisions in particle accelerators, for example. It will also let astronomers connect radio telescopes in real time, effectively creating a single enormous eye into space.

Which will not leave much room for ordinary Internet users, who may have to wait as long as five years or more for these latest Internet2 technologies to trickle down.

Simon Aughton

Now this is FAST :beardbng:
 

Gato_Solo

Out-freaking-standing OTC member
Most of the new bandwidth will be allocated to science projects to transmit date from atomic collisions in particle accelerators, for example. It will also let astronomers connect radio telescopes in real time, effectively creating a single enormous eye into space.

Betcha the gummint will have a say in which research gets dibs, too...
 

Professur

Well-Known Member
Y'know what I find laughable? If the gov't did fund stem cell research, everyone would be bitching that they were trying to control it.
 

Gonz

molṑn labé
Staff member
It really is so much better to leave government to do government work & private industry to do the important stuff. Hell, priavet industry could probably do government too but the reverse is not likely (unless we want 50% waste & insufficient results)
 

MrBishop

Well-Known Member
Oh? Do tell.

You've got 24 more to go.

Laws covering: the requirements for consent from women or
from couples who donate cadaveric fetal tissue or embryos remaining following infertility treatments; restrictions on the sale of fetal tissue or embryos and limits on the designation of those who may benefit from their use; the role of federal agencies in the review of research; and the encouragement of the private sector to comply with the same requirements recommended for federally funded researchers.
 
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