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November 18, 2003

CAL-(IT)2, UCSD Team with Bigbangwidth to Speed “OptIPuter”

Researchers building a new type of Grid computing environment known as the OptIPuter have agreed to deploy BigBangwidth’s next-generation lightpath technology. The system will be installed at the University of California-San Diego (UCSD), and will act as an on-ramp for large data streams from high-performance workstations connected to packet-switched networks.

“This is an important system for the OptIPuter because researchers need advanced networking directly to the desktop,” said Larry Smarr, OptIPuter principal investigator and director of the California Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology (Cal-(IT)2). “BigBangwidth’s system will allow scientists to transfer files between two network hosts such as workstations, storage facilities or servers directly. As a result, interconnection speeds between the two could be many times faster.”

The BigBangwidth Lightpath Accelerator automatically lifts large data streams off of packet-switched networks to provide direct lightpaths to high-performance network and storage devices. “BigBangwidth originated from the University of Alberta, so we have first-hand knowledge of how important academic research projects are in the innovation process,” said Dan Gatti, president and CEO of BigBangwidth. “The Lightpath Accelerator extends network performance for large file transfers, real-time back-up, visualization and data-intensive Grid computing jobs - all critical for UCSD researchers linked to the OptIPuter network in San Diego.”

The Lightpath Accelerator brings up to 10 Gigabits-per-second connections directly to high-performance devices, by providing lightpaths between network hosts such as workstations and servers that are otherwise connected through a packet network. The lightpaths have minimal latency, no jitter, line-rate dedicated bandwidth and high security - allowing for large file transfers of up to twenty times faster than conventional LAN equipment. Because network traffic is lifted off the LAN, the Lightpath Accelerator also frees LAN resources and extends the life of current network equipment. The Lightpath Accelerator System is compatible with all IP-based networking equipment.

BigBangwidth is introducing the Lightpath Accelerator this week at Supercomputing 2003 in Phoenix. First shipments to UCSD will occur in December. The system will complement the main OptIPuter router on the campus, Chiaro Enstara, made by Chiaro Networks Inc. Very large files can bypass the router and go directly to the desired location.

“These systems enable experiments in optical network architecture, combining optical circuit switching, packet switching, and routing, while giving scientists at UCSD significantly greater capabilities in collaboration and file-sharing,” said Andrew Chien, chief software architect on the OptIPuter project and director of the Center for Networked Systems (CNS) at UCSD’s Jacobs School of Engineering. “Current network infrastructures are not designed for the size of files commonly found in visualization and collaboration environments.”

Chien’s research team will use the BigBangwidth technology in ongoing protocols research, specifically to carry storage protocols such as Fiber Channel and Infiniband directly between application servers and storage.

The OptIPuter gets its name from “opt” for optical networking, “IP” for Internet Protocol, and “uter” leveraging the end of the word “computer.” Researchers are prototyping the OptIPuter at UCSD as a new Grid computing and networking architecture. It is designed to enable scientists to collaborate and interact with large data sets via shared, distributed information-technology facilities linked by optical fibers, each carrying multiple wavelengths of light, or lambdas.

Added Gatti, “We hope this initial agreement will lead to a long-term relationship with OptIPuter scientists and Cal-(IT)2, as they push the envelope of networking for Grid computing, collaboration and visualization.”

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