The GENI Project Office at BBN Technologies Announces $10.5M in NSF Funding to Kick Off New, Larger-Scale Prototyping Efforts for the GENI Virtual Laboratory

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Mon Oct 19, 2009 8:28am EDT

The Global Environment for Network Innovations (GENI) brings together leading
researchers across 14 U.S. campuses and two national backbones
CAMBRIDGE, Mass.--(Business Wire)--
BBN Technologies, an advanced technology solutions firm, announced today a
$10.5M National Science Foundation grant to fund further prototyping for GENI, a
virtual laboratory for exploring future internets at scale. The funding will
enable three sets of collaborating academic/industrial research teams to
replicate those GENI prototype systems that have gained significant traction,
based on GENI-enabled commercial hardware, across 14 U.S. campuses and two
national research backbones. These prototypes will serve as a foundation for
creating major opportunities for early experiments on an end-to-end suite of
GENI infrastructure at a scale significantly larger than has been possible until
now. 

GENI, a project sponsored by the National Science Foundation, is a unique
virtual laboratory for at-scale networking experimentation where the brightest
minds unite to envision and create new possibilities of future internets. Open
and broadly accessible, GENI encourages collaboration among academia, industry
and the public to catalyze groundbreaking discoveries and innovation in network
science and engineering. 

GENI researchers employ a "spiral development" approach, with simultaneous
development and trials giving rapid feedback to help guide the evolving designs.
Spiral 1 focused on ways to discover, schedule, and control resources for
large-scale research experiments and to measure GENI capabilities. 

"GENI is now ramping up very quickly," said Chip Elliott, GENI Project Director.
"This new effort creates a compelling infrastructure for entirely new forms of
network science and engineering experimentation at a much larger scale than has
previously been available, and helps forge a strong academic / industrial base
by GENI-enabling commercial equipment from Arista, Cisco Systems, HP Labs,
Juniper Networks, and NEC Corp. and NEC Laboratories America, Inc., with
software from AT&T Labs and Nicira, Inc." 

The Principal Investigators and campuses funded under this grant are:

* Tom Anderson of University of Washington 
* Suman Banerjee and Aditya Akella of University of Wisconsin-Madison 
* Mark Corner of University of Massachusetts, Amherst 
* Nick Feamster of Georgia Institute of Technology 
* Michael Freedman of Princeton University 
* Mario Gerla of University of California, Los Angeles 
* James Griffioen of University of Kentucky 
* Dirk Grunwald of University of Colorado, Boulder 
* Thanasis Korakis of Polytechnic Institute of NYU 
* Nick McKeown, Guru Parulkar, and Guido Appenzeller of Stanford University 
* Dipankar Raychaudhuri and Ivan Seskar of Rutgers, The State University of New
Jersey 
* Henning Schulzrinne of Columbia University 
* Christopher Small of Indiana University 
* Kuang-Ching Wang of Clemson University 
* Martin Casado of Nicira, Inc. 
* Jen Leasure of The Quilt 
* Eric Boyd and Matthew Zekauskas of Internet2 
* Tom West of National LambdaRail (NLR)

About GENI and the GENI Project Office

GENI, a virtual laboratory for exploring future internets at scale, creates
major opportunities to understand, innovate and transform global networks and
their interactions with society. Dynamic and adaptive, GENI opens up new areas
of research at the frontiers of network science and engineering, and increases
the opportunity for significant socio-economic impact. GENI will:

* support at-scale experimentation on shared, heterogeneous, highly instrumented
infrastructure; 
* enable deep programmability throughout the network, promoting innovations in
network science, security, technologies, services and applications; and 
* provide collaborative and exploratory environments for academia, industry and
the public to catalyze groundbreaking discoveries and innovation.

The GENI Project Office provides system engineering and project management
expertise to guide the planning and prototyping efforts of the Global
Environment for Network Innovations (GENI). GPO systems engineers engage in
system design, identify and track technical risks, capture and manage system
requirements, provide oversight and support to GENI working groups, and monitor
and coordinate prototyping subcontracts. The GPO leads periodic GENI Engineering
Conferences for collaboration in the developer community and issues
solicitations to fund prototype development that addresses technical risks. The
GPO also performs project management, contracting, technical liaison, and
meeting coordination in close coordination with the National Science Foundation.
See www.geni.net for more information. 

About BBN Technologies

BBN Technologies is a legendary R&D organization that leverages its substantial
intellectual property portfolio to produce advanced, repeatable solutions such
as the Boomerang shooter detection system. With expertise spanning information
security, speech and language processing, networking, distributed systems, and
sensing and control systems, BBN scientists and engineers have amassed a
substantial collection of innovations and patented solutions. BBN now employs
over 700 people in seven locations in the US: Cambridge, Massachusetts
(headquarters); Arlington, Virginia; Columbia, Maryland; Middletown, Rhode
Island; San Diego, California; St. Louis Park, Minnesota; and O'Fallon,
Illinois. For more information, visit www.bbn.com.

BBN Technologies
Joyce Kuzmin, 617-873-8120
jkuzmin@bbn.com
or
Mark Gauthier, 978-325-7048
mgauthier@bbn.com

Copyright Business Wire 2009

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