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The South African National Research Network (SANReN) reached
a significant milestone when the first four research infrastructure
sites went live in Johannesburg on Monday, March 31, 2008.
This is a major step forward in the creation of an information
and communications technology platform for South African
research.
Teams from the Tertiary Education Network (TENET), the University
of the Witwatersrand (Wits), the University of Johannesburg
(UJ) and Neotel worked closely together to deploy the network.
This marks a key change in the research and development
community in South Africa, and is set to place local research
and development on par with the best in the world. Access
to high bandwidth is key in world-class research and development.
This translates to providing significant network capacity
to research institutions in South Africa, says Christiaan
Kuun of the Meraka Institute. This has now been achieved
on the backbone of Neotels Next Generation Network
(NGN), which is both flexible and scalable and custom-made
according to SANREN requirements.
The four sites are the main campuses of Wits, UJ, and two
of UJs satellite campuses, Bunting and Doornfontein.
The four sites are on a shared 10gbps ring network which
connects them to each other and to a major gateway site
operated by TENET and hosted by Internet Solutions in Johannesburg.
Future plans are to make all Wits satellite campuses
and the CSIRs Johannesburg campus live at the same
capacity. We also plan to upgrade the main campuses of Wits
and UJ, Kuun adds. Research and higher educational
institutions across South Africa will be connected to SANReN
as the network expands.
The SANReN project is sponsored by the Department of Science
and Technology and managed by the Meraka Institute of the
CSIR. Neotel provided the optical fibre circuit to ensure
a high capacity backbone for the SANReN Johannesburg ring.
SANReN provided the network equipment.
Neotels tailor-made solutions to ensure network capacity
have been vital in enabling SANReN to respond to network
demands. We are pleased that our participation in
the SANReN project is contributing to the ultimate success
of an initiative that is of national importance. This is
our contribution to the research and development community
in South Africa, says Stefano Mattiello, executive
head of enterprise services at Neotel.
TENET secures internet services for South African universities
and research institutions and provides operational services
to SANReN, currently this includes national and international
connectivity at the gateway. Operating costs are recovered
by TENET from the user institutions.
TENET and the user institutions are delighted to
work together with the DST and Meraka Institute on this
exiting project that is reshaping research and education
networking in South Africa, said TENET CEO, Duncan
Martin.
This is an example of how SANReN and TENET will work
together to bring true broadband to South African institutions;
the partnership has proven to be mutually beneficial. The
SANReN Johannesburg ring is just the beginning, Johan
Eksteen of the Meraka Institute concluded.
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