Source: Corbis
Optical solutions: biomedical sciences are among the disciplines requiring faster networks for their data-intensive research
A Ā£25Ā million computer network designed to serve the needs of the UKās higher education sector for the next decade has arrived after three years of development.
The JANET 6 network, running on more than 6,500km of optical fibre, will be capable of carrying 8.8Ā terabits of data at any given time (the equivalent to some 480 piles of printed paper, each stacked as high as the Eiffel Tower). It is hoped that it will enable the UKās colleges and universities to cope with the ever-increasing amount of information they need to transmit each year.
According to Jeremy Sharp, head of strategic technologies at JANET, the network will enable researchers across the country to collaborate on projects that might previously have proved difficult ā such as those that require ābig dataā to be sent between institutions.
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āWe have fundamentally constructed the architecture of JANET 6 to cope with the very high bandwidth requirement of the research community,ā Mr Sharp said, adding that the network would facilitate more effective interaction with overseas universities, particularly on data-intensive projects. Disciplines such as genomics, biomedical sciences and climate science are known to be particularly data-hungry.
The increased bandwidth was also required to meet the needs of the growing number of institutions opting to outsource services such as email to companies that store information āin the cloudā, meaning it can only be accessed by users over an internet connection, he said.
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āUniversities are increasingly reliant on the cloud, and if they are to continue to outsource services they need a reliable network.ā
According to Mr Sharp, a large UK university can expect a connection speed of around 10 gigabytes per second, which is enough to transmit roughly 180,000 songs per minute.
As well as enabling more effective collaborations between UK institutions, JANET 6 is also designed to cater for the huge amount of data transmitted to institutions overseas. According to a recent report by Science Europe and Elsevier, more than half of all European research papers are the fruit of collaborations between institutions, and more than one in three involve academics in more than one country.
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The three-year development of the government-funded JANET 6 network was overseen by Jisc, the charity that supports and advises the UKās higher education sector on its use of digital technology.
The organisation has changed a great deal in recent years (see box below) and in January will welcome a new chair ā Martin Hall, vice-chancellor of the University of Salford, who said that making JANET 6 a success was his āmain priorityā.
āItās a game-changer; the best bespoke university and college network in the world,ā Professor Hall said, adding that its delivery āon time and in budgetā made the project a āhuge success storyā.
āWe have to make sure we get the full return on it ā and that people realise what they can do with it. For researchersā¦the challenge is shifting digital data around quickly, and JANET 6 gives them mechanisms for shifting large datasets,ā he said.
That will change the way research is conducted, he added.
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The improved performance will also ārevolutionise teachingā, he said, and had the potential to make online learning ā including massive open online courses ā āinteractive, rather than just passiveā by allowing lecturers to give feedback to thousands of students at once.
āYou wouldnāt be able to do that using [commercial] providers,ā he said.
Professor Hall will take over as chair from Sir Tim OāShea, vice-chancellor of the University of Edinburgh, and said he looked forward to assuming the role.
āIf Tim can do it, then I can do it,ā he said when asked whether the challenges of running a university would leave him enough time to take on the Jisc post.
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āVice-chancellors have an outward-facing role as well as an inward-facing one, and this position is complementary to [Salford].ā
With MediaCityUK, where the BBC is headquartered, nearby, āSalford is now the centre of the world ā not Londonā, he said.
He admitted, however, that the Jisc role would be an āintellectual challengeā.
āI will have to stretch my mind,ā Professor Hall said. āI am not a techie. Also, there is the scope [of Jisc]. It covers everything from Imperial College London to a small further education college in Lancashire.ā
He added that Jiscās new funding model, under which institutions will pay a subscription to access its services, would mean that universities will be keeping a close eye on the organisationās performance.
āJisc has gone through a radical changeā¦moving to a situation where institutions fund it directly,ā he said. āThere will be a lot more scrutiny by institutions looking at the value they are getting, and thatās right.ā
Taking the subs way: Jisc funding evolves
Jisc, the organisation that supports and advises the UKās higher education sector on its use of digital technology, and which has overseen the development of the JANET 6 network, is in a period of transition.
Previously a non-departmental public body, it became independent in December 2012 and is now a registered charity āowned by its communitiesā via the Association of Colleges, GuildHE and Universities UK.
Over the past five years, its government funding ā including grants from higher education and further education funding bodies ā has fallen by 17 per cent from Ā£95 million to Ā£79 million a year (not including the Ā£25 million in state funding for JANET 6).
Further cuts of between 5 and 10 per cent are expected over the next two years.
In a change intended to offset this decline, from August 2014 institutions will pay a āsubscriptionā charge to Jisc, although the majority of the charityās funds are still expected to come from the UKās government and funding councils.
The exact details of how much universities will pay have not been confirmed, but by 2016 their contribution will make up between 10Ā and 20 per cent of Jiscās overall funding.
The changes follow the recommendations of Sir Alan Wilson, professor of urban and regional systems at University College London, who conducted an independent review of Jisc.
Published in February 2011, his report recommended that the body shrink both its remit and its budget.
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