beginning decade #2…

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Beginning Decade #2…. StateNets 2004 Doug Heacock, Executive Director Kansas Research and Education Network. Overview. The first decade The KanREN backbone network The KanREN consortium, governance Fiscal growth and funding model The next decade: collaboration & Kan-ed. The first decade. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Beginning Decade #2…

StateNets 2004Doug Heacock, Executive DirectorKansas Research and Education

Network

Overview

• The first decade

• The KanREN backbone network

• The KanREN consortium, governance

• Fiscal growth and funding model

• The next decade: collaboration & Kan-ed

The first decade

• Beginnings in NSF Connections program, 1993

• Small staff—2 to 3 FTE until 1999• Relatively simple institutional needs to

meet– Internet access (4.5 – 21 Mbps)– Low-bandwidth connectivity between member

institutions (56k-T1 backbone)

• Internet 2 via GPN

The first decade

• Staff expansion in 2000-2003– 4 to 7 FTE– Approaching “critical mass”

• Institutional needs growing more complex– QoS, IP multicast, growing security issues

• Outgrowing our “host family”– KanREN leaves the umbrella of KUCR,

incorporates independently

The first decade

• New opportunities and initiatives– Video initiative: tuning the network for video

applications, putting up an MCU– EETT/TRC project: connecting 24 elementary

schools across the state to provide videoconferencing services for collaboration

– SEGP

The KanREN network

The KanREN Consortium

• Membership consortium serving:– Higher education– K-12– Libraries– Other non-profits

• Incorporated as a not-for-profit in 2002

• Filed for 501(c)(3) status

• Independent of the state

Governance

• Board of Directors– Representation from each major constituency

group (K12, community colleges, private colleges, regents universities, libraries, other organizations)

• Each member institution has a vote on matters of consortium policy, budget, rates

Fiscal growth

• 1993/94—NSF funding totals ~$790k

• 1995-present—self-funded– Annual budget increases from ~$400k to

~$2M– Increases reflect growth of staff and increased

bandwidth demands

Funding model

• Self-funded since NSF grant days– Membership fees– Fees for service (connectivity, circuits, etc.)– No state funding– No grants or gifts

• Kan-ed– Concept born in 1998 (KSDE)– Kan-ed Act passed in 2001—to be administered by

the Board of Regents– Funding bill passed in 2002

• A bumpy road at times– It took a long time for KanREN’s role to become clear– The politics were weird at times– But we were Kan-ed “evangelists” throughout the

process

The next decade

• Kan-ed commissioned an Engineering Trade Study to sort things out– Network design– Collaborations with vendors, providers

• Clear roles for KanREN have emerged– Assistance with network engineering– Operation of the Kan-ed NOC; network

management

KanREN/Kan-ed

The Kan-ed network

• A “network of networks”• NAPs (Network Access/Aggregation

Points) located strategically across the state—up to 20 of them

• NAPs bring connectivity to convenient/economical places for providers to connect

• Providers/“peering partners” connect their Kan-ed member customers to the network

The Kan-ed network

• Engineering trade study/RFP process• Juniper M7i/M10i selected for NAPs• OC-3 circuits from multiple telecoms

interconnect NAPs– Very aggressive circuit pricing– Some redundancy– Some details to be worked out

NAP distribution

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KanREN/Kan-ed

• Kan-ed has opened a funding stream from the state that simply didn’t exist before

• Kan-ed has engineered a collaborative environment that is unprecedented in Kansas– Equipment vendors– Big telecoms, independents– A zillion “K-acronym” organizations

Thanks!

• Doug Heacock, Executive Director, KanREN

• heacock@kanren.net

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