National Science Foundation Network: Difference between revisions
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* [[Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center]] (PSC), joint projects operated by [[Carnegie Mellon University]], University of Pittsburgh and Westinghouse. | * [[Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center]] (PSC), joint projects operated by [[Carnegie Mellon University]], University of Pittsburgh and Westinghouse. | ||
The National Science Foundation established NSFNET in 1985. [[Dennis Jennings]] was responsible in leading the development of NSFNET in linking the university based super computer networks to be able to share information and resources with each other. Jennings built NSFNET as a general purpose research network wherein the connection is not limited to the super computer centers, it would serve as a backbone connection for regional networks at every super computing sites and use [[ARPANET]]'s [[TCP]]/[[IP]] protocol. A team from the National Center for Superomputing Applications (NCSA) and Cornell University of Illinois built the initial backbone of NSFNET with 56 kbps lines. [[Dave Mills]] from the University of Delaware and [[Hans-Werner Braun]] of [[Merit Networks Inc.]] also assisted in building the backbone.<ref>[http://www.livinginternet.com/i/ii_nsfnet.htm NSFNET -- National Science Foundation Network]</ref> | The National Science Foundation established NSFNET in 1985. [[Dennis Jennings]] was responsible in leading the development of NSFNET in linking the university based super computer networks to be able to share information and resources with each other. Jennings built NSFNET as a general purpose research network wherein the connection is not limited to the super computer centers, it would serve as a backbone connection for regional networks at every super computing sites and use [[ARPANET]]'s [[TCP]]/[[IP]] protocol. A team from the National Center for Superomputing Applications (NCSA) and Cornell University of Illinois built the initial backbone of NSFNET with 56 kbps lines. [[Dave Mills]] from the University of Delaware and [[Hans-Werner Braun]] of [[Merit Networks Inc.]] also assisted in building the backbone.<ref>[http://www.livinginternet.com/i/ii_nsfnet.htm NSFNET -- National Science Foundation Network]</ref> | ||
In 1986, the super computer centers were officially connected and it became open to all academic networks. NSF decided to upgrade the NSFNET with private sector participation because of the rapid growth of internet users. In 1987, a Project Solicitation for Management and Operation of the NSFNET Backbone Network was released by NSF. IBM, MCI and Merit Networks Inc. won the contract.<ref>[http://www.merit.edu/about/history/timeline_1980.php Merit History]</ref> NSFNET was upgraded to 1.5 Mbps and recorded a traffic growth rate of 20% per month. By 1992, NSFNET has 12 billions packets of traffic per month. By December of the same year NSFNET was upgraded to T3. It had a capacity of 44.736 Mbps. By 1994 NSFNET recorded a monthly traffic level of 10 trillion bytes.<ref>[http://www.livinginternet.com/i/ii_nsfnet.htm NSFNET -- National Science Foundation Network]</ref> | In 1986, the super computer centers were officially connected and it became open to all academic networks. NSF decided to upgrade the NSFNET with private sector participation because of the rapid growth of internet users. In 1987, a Project Solicitation for Management and Operation of the NSFNET Backbone Network was released by NSF. IBM, MCI and Merit Networks Inc. won the contract.<ref>[http://www.merit.edu/about/history/timeline_1980.php Merit History]</ref> NSFNET was upgraded to 1.5 Mbps and recorded a traffic growth rate of 20% per month. By 1992, NSFNET has 12 billions packets of traffic per month. By December of the same year NSFNET was upgraded to T3. It had a capacity of 44.736 Mbps. By 1994 NSFNET recorded a monthly traffic level of 10 trillion bytes.<ref>[http://www.livinginternet.com/i/ii_nsfnet.htm NSFNET -- National Science Foundation Network]</ref> | ||
Revision as of 23:02, 5 December 2011
Type: | Research |
Industry: | Internet |
Founded: | 1985 |
Founder(s): | National Science Foundation |
Country: | USA |
Website: | NSFNET |
The National Science Foundation Network (NSFNET) was a program created and funded by the National Science Foundation to coordinate and promote advance research and education in networking in the United States. NSFNET served as a hub providing access to the five university based super computer centers created by NSF.[1] The five supercomputing centers connected to NSFNET include:
- John von Neumann Computing Center at Princeton University
- San Diego Supercomputer Center (SDSC) at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD)
- National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
- Cornell Theory Center at Cornell University
- Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center (PSC), joint projects operated by Carnegie Mellon University, University of Pittsburgh and Westinghouse.
The National Science Foundation established NSFNET in 1985. Dennis Jennings was responsible in leading the development of NSFNET in linking the university based super computer networks to be able to share information and resources with each other. Jennings built NSFNET as a general purpose research network wherein the connection is not limited to the super computer centers, it would serve as a backbone connection for regional networks at every super computing sites and use ARPANET's TCP/IP protocol. A team from the National Center for Superomputing Applications (NCSA) and Cornell University of Illinois built the initial backbone of NSFNET with 56 kbps lines. Dave Mills from the University of Delaware and Hans-Werner Braun of Merit Networks Inc. also assisted in building the backbone.[2]
In 1986, the super computer centers were officially connected and it became open to all academic networks. NSF decided to upgrade the NSFNET with private sector participation because of the rapid growth of internet users. In 1987, a Project Solicitation for Management and Operation of the NSFNET Backbone Network was released by NSF. IBM, MCI and Merit Networks Inc. won the contract.[3] NSFNET was upgraded to 1.5 Mbps and recorded a traffic growth rate of 20% per month. By 1992, NSFNET has 12 billions packets of traffic per month. By December of the same year NSFNET was upgraded to T3. It had a capacity of 44.736 Mbps. By 1994 NSFNET recorded a monthly traffic level of 10 trillion bytes.[4]
The NSF decided to transfer the operations of NSFNET to the private sector in the midst of the rapid growth of the network. Four Network Access Points (NAPs) were developed for commercial backbones with 155 Mbps which were operated by Sprint, MFS, Ameritech and Pacific Bell. NSFNET was officially dissolved on October 30, 1995 however a very high performance Backbone Network Service (vBNS) was already in place for the usedby selected researchers.[5]