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Smart Gigabit Communities Glenn Ricart January 26, 2016
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2016/01/26 Glenn Ricart - Smart Gigabit Communities

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Page 1: 2016/01/26 Glenn Ricart - Smart Gigabit Communities

Smart Gigabit Communities

Glenn Ricart

January 26, 2016

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Chattanooga EPBBurlington TelecomOne Community ClevelandUTOPIA

Verizon FiOsGoogle FiberAT&T GigapowerCenturyLink gigabitComcast 2-gigabit

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4 apps have receivedVC funding

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Sustainable Ecosystem of Smart Applications (SESA)

Gigabit

Community centric

Interoperable

Interconnected

Attract community investment

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Gigabit

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Community Centric

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What would a Metro Internet look like if it were designed to support:

- Internet of Things (IoT)?- Billions of wireless devices?- Industrial Internet?- Low-cost endpoints? (close digital divide)

Roll that out in cities across the U.S. and globally and use it to leverage innovative applications and services.

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Interoperable

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Interconnected

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Community Investment

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Sustainable Ecosystem of Smart Applications (SESA)

Gigabit

Community centric

Interoperable

Interconnected

Attract community investment

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Smart Gigabit Communities (SGC)Gigabit

Community centric

Interoperable

Interconnected

Attract community investment

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Smart Gigabit Communities (SGC)

Kickoff

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Smart Gigabit Communities

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Benefits for Participating Cities• A fully interconnected metro gigabit Internet• Smart city brain + smart city applications

• IoT• Industrial Internet (digital manufacturing)• Cyberphysical systems

• Attract entrepreneurs and economic development and tech jobs• Gigabit innovation and ecosystem of gigabit applications• Growing your initial metro gigabit Internet and smart city brain

• Nonpartisan rallying point for business-government-education collaboration

• Digitally self-sufficient communities• Bridge digital divide• Federal seed money• National recognition as a Smart Gigabit Community

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A Few Details

• 3 year NSF grant ends September 2018• But it only plants the seed –

we expect sustainable community investment• Grant provides for 3 more communities in the last year• Accepting additional self-funded communities• Interim results at Application Summits – June 13-15, Austin• Community

• Steering group• Support the new metro Internet architecture & apps• Activate the local tech community for sustainable growth

• Technical• Digital Town Square• Smart City Brain

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National Community LeaderNishal Mohan, Ph.D.

National Technical LeaderScott Turnbull

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Digital Town SquareInterconnect yourislands of gigabit

Google Fiber

CenturyLink

Local K-12Network

Slice Controller

Local datacenter w/

Docker containers

GENI Rack

Local University

Large Local Employer

Local WISP

Internet 2

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GENI Rack or equivalent

Interconnected with other communities

Privacy-protected slices

Transition to commercial infrastructure

Smart City Brain

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21SMART GIGABIT COMMUNITIES

SGCGigabit Apps

Gigabit Infrastructure

Gigabit Community Activities

More resilient cityEconomic growthBridge digital divideCivic prideInnovation

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Digital Town Square

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Digital Town SquareInterconnect yourislands of gigabit

Google Fiber

CenturyLink

Local K-12Network

Slice Controller

Local datacenter w/

Docker containers

GENI Rack

Local University

Large Local Employer

Local WISP

Internet 2

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Home or Business SDX – Paradrop.io

Chute

ChuteVia carrier to

digital town squareChute

Chute

OpenWRT with Paradrop

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Connectivity Options

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Connectivity OptionsA wide variety is possible

1.You have a GENI rack in your community – you’re already connected

2.US Ignite provides a GENI rack or equivalenta)State or regional education networkb)Internet2

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Examples of Smart Gigabit Community Applications

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What are the new applications and what do they need?

G = Gigabit to end user; I = slice Isolation for privacy/security; R= engineered deterministic response time and reliability

• Cloud-based Home Medical Monitoring (I, R, sometimes G)• Cloud-based Control of Home Medical Devices (I, R, sometimes G)• Cloud-based virtual reality headsets for experiential education (G, R)• Stream complex apps from a local cloud to close digital divide (G, R)

• Helping a child of immigrants learn to read by listening / correcting (I, R)

• Visualizing large databases (e.g., pollution sources, transit services, a patient’s own medical scans) (G, R, sometimes I)

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What are the new applications and what do they need?

G = Gigabit to end user; I = slice Isolation for privacy/security; R= engineered deterministic response time and reliability

• Coordinating peak energy uses across buildings (R, sometimes I)• Real-time infrastructure for continuous-motion vehicles (V2I) (I, R)• Consumer-based GIS systems (G, R, sometimes I)• Realtime license plate scanning (I, R)• Continuous health monitoring and response (e.g., smart underwear,

embedded sensors) (I, R)• Reduced-cost low-latency Telepresence (G, I, R)• Many more at us-ignite.org and globalcityteams.org

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Afternoon – White House Slide

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32SMART GIGABIT COMMUNITIES

SGCGigabit Apps

Gigabit Infrastructure

Gigabit Community Activities

More resilient cityEconomic growthBridge digital divideCivic prideInnovation

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Backup slides and notes

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Technical Observations

• Metro access capacity growing much faster than backbone capacity• Much of the new traffic from the Internet of Things and

Cyberphysical Systems can be acted on locally (within the city)• For latency and reliability purposes, much of that new traffic should

be acted upon locally (within the city)• Slicing (GENI style or multi-tenant style) would aid in security by

isolating traffic• Wireless is as important as wired (or fibered)

What Metropolitan Internet design would best support the above?

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Metropolitan Internet Design Objectives

• Keep local traffic local: Locavore / edge• Implies dispersing the cloud for local-only processing• Keep sensitive traffic isolated: Slicing / orchestration• Leverage bandwidth in the local gigabit access networks• Improve perceived quality of service for current customers• Leverage a city’s natural soft organizational infrastructure (mayor, office

of economic development, chamber of commerce, university expertise and student availability, etc.)

• Work with tech corporations to achieve their objectives (local + nat’l)• Focus on win-win actions to keep maximum constituency

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Metropolitan Internet Design Advantages

• Any design that meets the previous page also:• Makes a city more resilient (less prone to problems caused by natural

disasters elsewhere)• Attracts new economic development around smart cities, IoT,

cyberphysical systems, entrepreneurs• Establishes a basis for university / city partnerships• Fosters civic pride• Encourages competition in providing local services

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Draft: Intended Progression of Digital Town Square

1. Traditional layer 3 exchange pointIP adressing; no flow identification

2. Software-defined layer 2 flow identification / switchingFlows explicitly identified with their desired handlingApplications negotiate w/controllers for their desired flow handling(also needed for incremental billing)Deterministic handling may mean many things including:

PriorityDrop or queueWhen to re-negotiateWhen to notify application about actual packet handlingFlow isolation for securityEtc.