Two states climb aboard new, 100-gigabit fast train

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Indiana and Ohio are the first states to take advantage of the next-generation backbone being built out by Internet2 and the Energy Department, linking in-state academic research networks to the 100-gigabits/sec cross-country network.

Indiana in January became the first state to link its research and education network to the backbone with a 100-gigabits/sec link from Indianapolis to Chicago. Gov. John Kasich (R-OH) announced that Ohio would upgrade its Ohio Academic Research Network (OARnet) in a $10.4 million program to link the state’s cities to the backbone. The Internet2 academic research consortium and DOE’s Energy Sciences Network in 2011 completed the first transcontinental links of the high-speed network using coherence modulation technology.

The prototype network is being built with a $62 million grant under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act and is part of DOE’s Advanced Networking Initiative to develop a next-generation science and research infrastructure. The backbone now stretches nearly 4,000 miles, linking New York, Washington (DC), Cleveland, Chicago, Kansas City, Denver, Salt Lake City and Sunnyvale (CA).


Two states climb aboard new, 100-gigabit fast train