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This article is about a technology development organization. For the next-generation Internet backbone, see Abilene Network.
Not to be confused with Web 2.0.
Internet2 or UCAID (University Corporation for Advanced Internet Development) is a non-profit consortium which develops and deploys advanced network applications and technologies, for education and high-speed data transfer purposes. It is led by 212 universitiesInternet2 Universities, Internet2. and partners with 44 affiliate membersInternet2 Affiliate Membership, Internet2. and 59 corporate members drawn from companies in the publishing, networking and other technology industries.Internet2 Corporate Membership, Internet2. "Internet2" is a registered trademark.Terms of Use, Internet2. The consortium is based from administrative headquarters in Ann Arbor, Michigan.Internet2 Contact Information, Internet2.
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This section may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia\'s quality standards. Please improve this article if you can (February 2008). |
Internet2, with help from its members, created the Abilene Network and was a prime investor in the National LambdaRail (NLR) project [1], with nearly 10 million dollars. During 2004–2006, Internet2 and NLR held extensive discussions regarding a possible merger [2]. Key to this merger was the condition that Internet2 would operate its successor to Abilene using NLR\'s infrastructure (NLR has IRUs on actual fiber infrastructure from WilTel, now Level(3), where Internet2 utilizes leased optical wavelengths from Qwest for Abilene). Those talks paused in the Spring of 2006, resumed in March of 2007 and eventually fell apart in September of 2007 [3].
These technologies and their organizational counterparts were not only created to make a faster alternative to the internet. Many fields have been able to use the Abilene network to foster creativity, research, and development in a way that was not previously possible. Users of poor quality libraries can now download not only text but sound recordings, animations, videos, and other resources, which would be otherwise unavailable. Another application is the robust video conferencing now available to Internet2 participants. Neurosurgeons can now video conference with other experts in the field during an operation in a high resolution format with no apparent time lag.
The beginnings of the internet were based on the communications of computers over a network. One of the first major examples of such a network was ARPAnet, developed by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency. Another was the University of Illinois PLATO educational network. As more networks like ARPAnet were created, the need to standardize and make them compatible arose.
Governments and universities are among the first institutions to outgrow the internet\'s bandwidth limitations. Some universities realized the need for a network that would better support bandwidth- and computer-intensive work, like data mining, medical imaging, and particle physics. This need for a higher bandwidth network resulted in the creation of the very-high-performance Backbone Network Service, or vBNS. The vBNS was developed in 1995 by the National Science Foundation and MCI telecommunications company specifically to meet the needs of the supercomputers at educational institutions. The concept of “the next generation of internet” was born. MCI engineered this backbone for the National Science Foundation, but when their agreement expired the participating institutions looked to the Internet2 organization to offer the same service as MCI.
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