Tech On Board
Next generation Internet rail solely for research
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Georgia Tech and a consotium of universitties are forming alliances to
tap thousands of miles of dark fiber cable - a fiber-optic cable that
is not carrying a signal - buried by telecommunications companies at the
height of internet boom.
The universities, research agencies and leading-edge technology companies
already have leased more than 10,000 miles of surplus dark fiber-optic
cable from telecommunications companies and are preparing to initiate
National LambdaRail, a high-speed, next-generation netweork dedicated
solely to research.
Ron Hutchings, cheif technology officer and associate vice provost for
research and technology at Tech, and Brian Savory, director of the Southern
Light Rail project, briefed the Georgia Senate Higher Education Committee
about the project in March.
"The purpose of the NLR is to access, exchange and process huge
quantities of scientific ad research data to this consortium which will
allow breakthroughs in research and development in biotechnology, advanced
communications and nanotechnology, the focal areas of Georgia Research
Alliance," Hutchins says.
The state's six research universities - Georgia Tech, Georgia State University,
Clark Atlanta University, the Medical College of Georgia, Emory University
and the University of Georgia - have been invited to join the regional
network initiative that will connect to the National LambdaRail from a
node at Tech.
Savory says the most pressing matter is forming strategic alliances with
companies that have access to dark fiber cable, placed at the height of
the Internet boom when many companies overestimated the demoand. Not long
ago, this equipment was very expensive, but today's equipment is affordable
and much easier to maintain.
In March, the link between Pittsburg and Chicago went live and by early
June the linkbetween Atlanta, Raleigh, N.C, and Washington, D.C., should
be activated.

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