How Tomorrow’s Technology Will Impact Creativity and Industrial Innovation in the Totally Connected World Invited Lecture Industrial Research Institute Coronado, CA October 31 , 2003 Dr. Larry Smarr Director, California Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technologies Harry E. Gruber Professor, Dept. of Computer Science and Engineering Jacobs School of Engineering, UCSD
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How Tomorrow’s Technology Will Impact Creativity and Industrial Innovation in the Totally Connected World Invited Lecture Industrial Research Institute.
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How Tomorrow’s Technology Will Impact Creativity and Industrial Innovation
in the Totally Connected World
Invited LectureIndustrial Research Institute
Coronado, CA October 31 , 2003
Dr. Larry Smarr
Director, California Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technologies
Harry E. Gruber Professor,
Dept. of Computer Science and Engineering
Jacobs School of Engineering, UCSD
California’s Institutes for Science and Innovation A Bold Experiment in Collaborative Research
UCSBUCLA
California NanoSystems Institute
UCSF UCB
California Institute for Bioengineering, Biotechnology,
and Quantitative Biomedical Research
UCI
UCSD
California Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology
Center for Information Technology Research
in the Interest of Society
UCSC
UCDUCM
www.ucop.edu/california-institutes
Cal-(IT)2--An Interdisciplinary Research Public-Private Partnership on the Future of the Internet
www.calit2.net
220 UC San Diego & UC Irvine FacultyWorking in Multidisciplinary Teams
With Students, Industry, and the Community
The State’s $100 M Creates Unique Buildings, Equipment, and Laboratories
Two New Cal-(IT)2 Buildings Are Under Construction
• Will Create New Laboratory Facilities– Interdisciplinary Teams – Wireless and Optical Networking– Computer Arts Virtual Reality– Clean Rooms for Nanotech and BioMEMS
Bioengineering
UC San Diego
UC Irvine
See www.calit2.net for Live VideoCams
The UCSD Cal-(IT)2 Building Will Be Occupied in January 2005
Digital CinemaAuditorium
Virtual RealityCube
Nanotech Clean Rooms
RF and OpticalCircuit Labs
200 Single OfficesHundreds
of Collaborative Seats
Watch us Grow! [www.calit2.net]
Cal-(IT)2 Buildings Will Have Ubiquitous Tele-Presence
Falko Kuester, UCI, Laboratory with Smart Boards and
Optically Connected Large Screens
Cal-(IT)2 Industrial Partners are Supporting Academic Research and Education
• Hosting Seminars or Lectures• Co-Sponsoring Workshops/Conferences• Funding Faculty Research Projects
• Supporting Summer Undergraduate Fellows
• Funding Graduate Fellowships
• Providing Equipment for Living Labs
• Creating Chaired Professorships
We Collaborate With Over Fifty Industrial Sponsors
• Enormous Capacity Core Network– Multiple Wavelengths of Light Per Fiber– Linking Clusters, Storage, Visualization– Massive Distributed Data Sets
• Wireless Access--Anywhere, Anytime– Broadband Speeds– Cellular Interoperating with Wi-Fi
• Billions of New Wireless Internet End Points– Information Appliances (Including Cell Phones)– Sensors and Actuators– Embedded Processors
Major Internet Technology TrendsThat Will Have Major Impact on Industry
Where is Telecommunications Research Performed?A Historic Shift
Source: Bob Lucky, Telcordia/SAIC
U.S. Industry
Non-U.S. Universities
U.S. Universities
Percent Of The Papers Published IEEE Transactions On Communications
70%
85%
Transitioning to the “Always-On” Mobile Internet
0
200
400
600
800
1,000
1,200
1,400
1,600
1,800
2,000
1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005
Mobile Internet
Fixed Internet
Subscribers (millions)
Source: Ericsson
Two Modes of Wireless:Wide Area Cellular Internet
Local Access Wi-Fi
Using Students to Invent the Futureof Widespread Use of Wireless Devices
• Broadband Internet Connection via Wireless Wi-Fi– Over 600 Access Points on the Campus
Geolocation Will Be an Early New Wireless Internet Application
• Technologies of Geolocation– GPS chips– Access Point Triangulation– Bluetooth Beacons– Gyro chips
Source: Bill Griswold, UCSD
UCSD ActiveCampus – Outdoor Map
Students Are Creating New Uses of the “Always-On” Internet
Only Three Years From Research to Market New Broadband Cellular Internet Technology
• First US Taste of 3G Cellular Internet– UCSD Jacobs School Antenna
– Three Years Before Commercial Rollout
• Linking to 802.11 Mobile “Bubble”– Tested on Campus CyberShuttle
• Verizon is Now in Final Tests Rooftop Qualcomm 1xEV Access Point
www.calit2.net/news/2002/4-2-bbus.html
VerizonRollout
Fall 2003
CyberShuttle March 2002
InstalledDec 2000
Experimenting with the Future -- Wireless Internet Video Cams & Robots
Computer Vision and Robotics Research LabMohan Trivedi, UCSD, Cal-(IT)2
Mobile Interactivity Avatar
Linked by 1xEV Cellular Internet
Useful for Highway Accidents
or Disasters
High Resolution, Low Jitter Video Diagnosis Tool Cal-(IT)2, Qualcomm, Path 1, & UCSD Stroke Center
End-to-End QoS ManagementVideo Delivered Over CDMA 2000 1x EV-DO To SpecialistsViewing Station –Standard Laptop With 1xEV-DO Modems
Current Coverage 10 Mi. Around Campus
Prototype Led to a $5-million, 5-Year Grant from the National Institute of Neurological Diseases and Stroke
As Our Bodies Move On-LineDigital Medicine Will Emerge
• In Body Sensors—Israeli Video Pill– Battery, Light, & Video Camera– Images Transmitted to Hip Device
• Next Step—Putting You On-Line!– Wireless Internet Transmission– Key Metabolic and Physical Variables– Model -- Dozens of Processors and 60
Sensors / Actuators Inside of our Cars
• Post-Genomic Personalized Medicine– Combine Across Populations
– Genetic Code– Digital Imaging – Body Data Flow
– Use Powerful AI Data Mining
www.givenimaging.com
www.bodymedia.com
www.philometron.com
Over the Next Decade Nano-Info-Bio EngineeringWill Revolutionize in Vivo Sensors
5 nanometersHuman Rhinovirus
IBM Quantum CorralIron Atoms on Copper400x
Magnification
From MEMS to Nanotech
VCSELaser
500x Magnification 2 mm
Nanogen MicroArray
The OptIPuter Philosophy
“A global economy designed to waste transistors, power, and silicon area
-and conserve bandwidth above all- is breaking apart and reorganizing itself
to waste bandwidth and conserve power, silicon area, and transistors."
George Gilder Telecosm (2000)
Bandwidth is getting cheaper faster than storage.Storage is getting cheaper faster than computing.
Exponentials are crossing.
The OptIPuter Project – Removing Bandwidth as an Obstacle In Data Intensive Sciences
• NSF Large Information Technology Research Proposal– UCSD and UIC Lead Campuses—Larry Smarr PI– USC, UCI, SDSU, NW Partnering Campuses
• Industrial Partners: IBM, Telcordia/SAIC, Chiaro, Calient• $13.5 Million Over Five Years• Optical IP Streams From Lab Clusters to Large Data Objects NIH Biomedical Informatics Research Network