UCSD's San Diego Supercomputer Center to Host CommerceNet Next-Generation Internet Application Center
released
September 21, 2001
Contacts
David L. Hart
SDSC
dhart@sdsc.edu
858.534.8314
Molly Petrick
CommerceNet
molly@commerce.net
408.446.1260 x234
Richard Jullig
CommerceNet
richard@commerce.net
408.446.1260 x286
SAN DIEGO CommerceNet, a global, not-for-profit organization leading the
advancement of e-commerce worldwide, has chosen the San Diego
Supercomputer Center (SDSC) at the University of California, San Diego
(UCSD), as one of two institutions to host its Next-Generation Internet
(NGI) Application Centers. The NGI Centers will promote the development,
incubation, and demonstration of new business and consumer applications
that will take advantage of the evolving Internet.
"The selection of the two Application Centers shows our commitment to
keep California at the forefront in the effort to convert research and
development into commercially viable high technology," Governor Gray
Davis said. "The Next Generation Internet program will help companies be
more productive, innovative and create jobs in the Golden State."
The Southern California NGI Center (CalNGI) at SDSC, in collaboration
with the California Institute for Telecommunications and Information
Technology (known as Cal-(IT)2), will focus on applications in the areas
of telemedicine, telemanufacturing, wireless networking, network and
application performance measurement, distance learning, Web marketing,
peer-to-peer networking, and high-performance distributed computing.
"This new center will allow us to provide Californians access to
advanced computational resources previously available only through
federal programs to national user communities," said Mike Vildibill,
Director of CalNGI and Deputy Director of SDSC. "These activities will
complement SDSC's mission to deploy leading-edge information
technologies for bioinformatics, environmental sciences, and critical
data-driven application areas."
"SDSC is a world leader in developing and applying advanced technologies
to scientific problems," said Fran Berman, director of SDSC. "Scientists
working on the frontiers of biology and biomedicine, environmental
sciences, and other fields depend on SDSC's computer networks to
transfer data between remote sensors, research labs, and information
archives across the country."
The University of California, Berkeley will host the Northern California
NGI Center, in collaboration with the Center for Information Technology
Research in the Interest of Society (CITRIS) and the Fisher Center for
Information Technology and Marketplace Transformation (CITM) in the Haas
School of Business.
Through a partnership with the California Technology, Trade and Commerce
Agency's Division of Science, Technology, and Innovation, CommerceNet
has granted $700,000 to the universities for the start-up and operating
costs of the two NGI Centers. These Centers will provide a collaborative
environment designed to accelerate the development of eBusiness
applications, encourage new Internet-related start-up businesses, and
test new NGI infrastructure services. CommerceNet expects that between
25 and 40 small businesses will use the Application Centers during the
next year, and that each Center will work with a minimum of eight to 10
development projects annually.
CommerceNet has a two-part initiative within its NGI Application Program
to further the development of the Next-Generation Internet. In addition
to funding the NGI Application Centers, CommerceNet is awarding grants
ranging from $100,000 to $300,000 to companies and individuals
developing NGI applications. The grant recipients will use the Northern
California Center and Southern California Center to develop, test and
showcase their NGI applications.
"California's Next Generation Internet Application Centers will be a
unique enabler for NGI application development," said Mark Resch,
President and CEO of CommerceNet. "By supporting the NGI Centers and NGI
Application development, the CommerceNet Consortium will not only have a
lasting impact on the Next Generation Internet, but also on the
California economy."
Research groups already at SDSC include investigators with the National
Laboratory for Applied Network Research, who study and extend the
performance of high-speed networks such as Internet2's Abilene, and the
Cooperative Association for Internet Data Analysis (CAIDA), which
conducts and coordinates efforts to maintain and extend the
infrastructure of the global Internet.
"I am very pleased to see this award go to SDSC," said Dr. Larry Smarr,
Director of Cal-(IT)2. Our Institute's faculty at UCSD and UCI are
conducting basic and applied research on future telecommunications
technologiesphotonics, multi-lambda switching, wireless internet,
microsensorswhich through our collaboration with SDSC can assure
continual upgrading of the capabilities of the Next-Generation Internet
Application Center."
For more information about the Southern California NGI Center at SDSC,
see http://www.calngi.org/.
For further information about the NGI Application Centers or the NGI
Program, please contact Molly Petrick, NGI Application Development
Manager, CommerceNet, molly@commerce.net, 408-446-1260 x234, or
Richard Jullig, NGI Program Manager, CommerceNet,
richard@commerce.net, 408-446-1260 x286.
SDSC is an organized research unit of the University of California, San
Diego, and the leading-edge site of the National Partnership for
Advanced Computational Infrastructure (NPACI). As a national laboratory
for computational science and engineering, SDSC is funded by the
National Science Foundation through NPACI and other federal agencies,
the State and University of California, and private organizations. For
more information, see http://www.sdsc.edu/ or contact David L. Hart,
SDSC External Relations, 858-534-8314, dhart@sdsc.edu.
CommerceNet is a global, not-for-profit organization of leading
business, government, technology, and academic minds working together on
the advancement of eCommerce worldwide. As guided by its partners and
sponsors, CommerceNet focuses on six initiative areas: Evolving Supply
Chains; Next Generation Internet; Security and Internet Payment;
Government, Public Policy and Advocacy; CommerceNet Investment
Initiatives; and Pervasive and Wireless Internet Access. In these areas,
CommerceNet is developing important new technologies and practices that
will chart the course for the way companies conduct business. For more
information, see http://www.commerce.net/.
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