mexico facing future internet

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FORESTA is a project funded by the Information and Communication Technologies Programme of the Seventh Research Framework Programme www.forestaproject.eu www.lac-ictgateway.eu Mexico facing Future Internet A vision about interna.onal coopera.on projects Dipl,Ing. Isabel Kreiner ITESMCEM July ,2011

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Mexico facing Future Internet

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Page 1: Mexico facing Future Internet

FORESTA is a project funded by the Information and Communication Technologies Programme of the Seventh Research Framework Programme www.forestaproject.eu │ www.lac-ictgateway.eu

Mexico  facing  Future  Internet  A  vision  about    interna.onal  coopera.on  projects  

Dipl,Ing.  Isabel  Kreiner  ITESM-­‐CEM  July  ,2011  

Page 2: Mexico facing Future Internet

Europe  2020  -­‐  targets  

 1.  Employment    –  75%  of  the  20-­‐64  year-­‐olds  to  be  employed  

•  2.  R&D  /  innova2on    –  3%  of  the  EU's  GDP  (public  and  private  combined)  to  be  invested  in  R&D/

innovaVon  •  3.  Climate  change  /  energy    

–  greenhouse  gas  emissions  20%  (or  even  30%,  if  the  condiVons  are  right)  lower  than  1990    

–  20%  of  energy  from  renewables    –  20%  increase  in  energy  efficiency    

•  4.  Educa2on    –  Reducing  school  drop-­‐out  rates  below  10%    –  at  least  40%  of  30-­‐34–year-­‐olds  comple2ng  third  level  educa2on    

•  5.  Poverty  /  social  exclusion    –  at  least  20  million  fewer  people  in  or  at  risk  of  poverty  and  social  exclusion    

“Europe 2020 is the EU's growth strategy for the coming decade. In a changing world, we want the EU to become a smart, sustainable and inclusive economy”

Page 3: Mexico facing Future Internet

Digital  Agenda-­‐  Europe  

Governments have recognized the importance of ICT in enhancing the competitiveness of the nations. Digital Agendas are created. (http://ec.europa.eu/information_society/digital-agenda/index_en.htm ) The Digital Agenda is Europe's strategy for a flourishing digital economy by 2020. It outlines policies and actions to maximize the benefit of the Digital Revolution for all. Planned actions:

• Digital single market • Interoperability and standards • Trust and security • Very fast internet • Research and Innovation • Enhancing e-skills • ICT for social challenges

Future Internet plays a mayor role.

Page 4: Mexico facing Future Internet

Future  Internet  -­‐  today  

The Internet connects over 2 billion people today and billions of objects are expected to get connected tomorrow.

Page 5: Mexico facing Future Internet

 Challenges  to  face  for  Future  Internet:  •  Need  of    more  address  space  due  to  fast  growing  demand  in  Asia  and  

other  countries  …  solved  through  IPV6,  but  sVll  taking  up  needed;  •  Net  neutrality:    poliVcal  discussions;  

•  Main  alteraVons  of  the  Internet  since  its  incepVon:  –  Volume  and  nature  of  data;  mobile  devices;  physical  objects  on  the  

net;  commercial  services;  societal  expectaVons.  

Future  Internet  -­‐  today  

Page 6: Mexico facing Future Internet

http://ec.europa.eu/information_society/digital-agenda/scoreboard/index_en.htm

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Where  does  Europe  go?  

•  “Europe  has  idenVfied  new  engines  to  boost  growth  and  jobs.  These  areas  are  addressed  by  7  flagship  ini2a2ves  as  a  tool  to  reach  the  targets  set  for  2020.  

•  Within  each  iniVaVve,  both  the  EU  and  na2onal  authori2es  have  to  coordinate  their  efforts  so  they  are  mutually  reinforcing.  Most  of  these  iniVaVves  have  been  presented  by  the  Commission  in  2010.”  

 Source:  hbp://ec.europa.eu/europe2020/tools/flagship-­‐iniVaVves/index_en.htm  

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Examples  of  European  Flagship  Projects  in  Future  Internet  

•  2020  3D  MEDIA:  creaVng  a  3D  value  chain  in  the  entertainment  industry  hbp://www.20203dmedia.eu/:  research  on  how  technology  can  become  interoperable  to  capture,  produce,  distribute  and  display  3D  sound  and  images  and  create  value  cahin  as  teh  3D  industry  expands.      Finished  in  Dec.  2010.;  total  project  cost  EUR  15.2  million    

•  SENSEI:  integraVng  the  physical  world  into  the  digital  world  hbp://www.ict-­‐sensei.org/index.php:  research  on  how  the  physical  world  can  be  integrated  into  the  digital  world.      Finished  in  Dec.  2010;  total  project  cost  EUR  23.2  million  

•  Internet  of  Things  Architecture:  bringing  science-­‐ficVon  into  our  lives      hbp://www.iot-­‐a.eu/public:  research  on  how  computers,  objects  and  people  can  connect  to  the  Internet  in  an  open  and  standarised  way  while  safeguarding  privacy  and  security.        CompleVon  in  August  2013;  total  project  cost  EUR18.7  million  

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Some  staVsVcs  about  European  research    in  the  field  of  Future  Internet  

•  140  projects  ongoing  in  the  field  of  “Future  Internet  “    (  topics:  networks,  trustworthy  ICT,  Future  Internet  research  and  experimenta2on,  

services  and  cloud  compu2ng,  networked  media  and  Internet  of  things.)  

•  690    European  organizaVons  involved:  50%  industries,  50%  academic  partners.  

•  Total  investment  in  research  EUR  870  million  ,  funded  by  EC  EUR  570  million.  

•  AddiVonal  a  €600  million  “Future  Internet”  Public-­‐Private  Partnership  launched  on  3rd  May  2011.      ObjecVve:  develop  new  ways  of  building  beber  services  and      

 improving  business  innovaVon  for  the  Future  Internet    

(Source:  www.cordis.europa.eu  consulted  2nd  of  july  2011;    Luis  Rodriguez-­‐Roselló  et  al.  :The  Future  Internet  Assembly  2011:    Achievements  and  Technological  Promises,Budapest  2011)  

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Example:  NaVonal    IniVaVves  in  Europe  

Germany: Projects, focusing on areas such as:

• carrier-grade 100 gigabit Ethernet (100GET); • experimental facilities for the Next Generation Internet (G-Lab); • innovative radio transmission techniques for cellular networks (EASY-C); • the Internet of Services (THESEUS). • Definition of necessary technological developments for a “core infrastructure” for common demands of the various fields of application: health sector, transport ( traffic flow, safety), energy management, production. (examples: SIM-TD; SmartSenior, )

Further activities will be launched under the €1.5bn ICT 2020 Program.

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Spain: http://www.idi.aetic.es/esInternet/ Spain’s national initiative es.Internet is a platform which brings together government, industry and academia so to bundle efforts, promote collaboration, and provide continuity in funding for long-term R&D investment and reduce the associated risks. It also aims to improve the regulatory framework, facilitate standardization work, and promote internationalization of Spanish industry through participation in international programs. Leaders of this platform are Telefónica I+D , AETIC,Indra, Atos Origin and the Universidad Politécnica de Madrid with the participation of companies like Thales, Inteco or Alcatel-Lucent. France: Creation of ‘laboratories of excellence’ with partners from industry, state and universities ( e.g.: INRIA, Institut Télécom, UPMC, INRIA and Alcatel-Lucent Bell Labs France, and other universities) LINCS, Laboratory for Information, Networking and Communication Sciences; The GRIF initiative; COMIN Labs.

Example:  NaVonal    IniVaVves  in  Europe  

Page 12: Mexico facing Future Internet

More  informaVon  about  the  Future  Internet    in  Europe:    

Future Internet: http://ec.europa.eu/foi Future Internet Public Private Partnership: http://ww.fi-ppp.eu European Future Internet Portal: www.future-internet.eu … additional: http://www.future-internet.eu/home/future-internet-assembly.html Digital Agenda website: http://ec.europa.eu/information_society/digital-agenda/index_en.htm

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FP7  calls  related  to    Future  Internet  

•  Call  2tle:  ICT  call  8  •  •  Call  idenVfier:  FP7-­‐ICT-­‐2011-­‐8  •  •  Date  of  publicaVon65:  26  July  2011  •  •  Deadline66:  17  January  2012,  at  17:00.00  Brussels  local  .me  

•  •  IndicaVve  budget67,68:  EUR  785.5  million  

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FP7  Call  8  

 Challenge        Objec2ves        Funding  schemes      

 Challenge  1:  Pervasive  and  Trusted  Network  and  Service  Infrastructures      

 ICT  2011.1.1  Future  Networks      

 IP/STREP,  NOE,  CSA      

 ICT  20011.1.2  Cloud  CompuVng,  Internet  of  Services  and  Advanced  Sonware  Engineering        IP/STREP,  CSA        ICT  20011.1.4  Trustworthy  ICT      

 IP/STREP,  NoE,  CSA      

 ICT  20011.1.6  Future  Internet  Research  and  ExperimentaVon  (FIRE)  (b),  (c),  (e)        IP,  STREP,  CSA      

Page 15: Mexico facing Future Internet

Towards  FP8:  research  prioriVes  -­‐  Future  Internet  Assembly  2011  

Building  the  Future  Internet:  •  1.  Beyond  converged  infrastructure  –  the  Internet  infrastructure  beyond  2020  

brings  new  capabiliVes  and  capaciVes    •  2.  Networked  data  –  exploiVng  the  Internet’s  natural  resource    •  3.  Internet  Security  -­‐  maintaining  the  security  of  the  Internet  and  it’s  users  online    Using  the  Future  Internet:  •  4.  Networked  interacVon  –  people  interacVng  with  each  other,  with  informaVon,  

and  with  cyber-­‐physical  worlds    •  5.  Networked  augmentaVon  –  from  an  Internet  of  things  to  an  Internet  doing  

things    •  6.  Networked  innovaVon  –the  Internet  as  an  innovaVon  ecosystem,  supported  by  

architecture,  policy,  and  invenVon.    

Source: http://fisa.future-internet.eu/images/0/0c/Future_Internet_Assembly_Research_Roadmap_V1.pdf

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Research  capaciVes  in  Mexico  

Region  North  west  

Region  North  east  

Region  west    

Region  Center  

Region  South  west  

Region  South  east  

Total    per  challenge  

1:  Infrastructures  ,networks  and    services   41 23 23 92 18 3 200  

2:  Cogni9ve  systems,  interac9on,  robo9cs   16 24 13 71 31 2 157  

 3:  Components,  Systems  and  engineering   104 38 62 326 126 12 668  

4:  Digital  libraries  and  content   14 7 9 37 18 1 86  

 5:    ICT  and  health   11 1 2 16 1 2 33  

 6:  Transport,  environment  and  energy   0 0 0 1 1 0 2  

7:  Social  inclusion  and  e-­‐government   10 0 3 1 3 3 20  

8.  Future  and  emerging  technologies   3 0 0 2 0 0 5  

9:    Others   9 18 7 14 6 13 67  

Researchers    classified  in  all    challenges:     208   111   119   560   204   36   1238  

Source: NCP-ICT Mexico, June 2010

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Mexico´s  internaVonal  scienVfic  cooperaVon    

Opportunities to explore: Mexico has 37 bilateral scientific cooperation agreements. Most of the bilateral cooperation activities in Europe are done with Germany, Spain, France and Italy. But agreements exist also with Great Britain, Hungary, Poland, Czech Republic and Russia..

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Thank you for your attention!