Carleton builds out network for research activity

 Carleton University is turning to Hewlett-Packard Canada for a $10-million campus-wide network upgrade to help support increasing research needs, a new enterprise resource planning system, and new initiatives in e-learning.

The

current “flat” network with a one gigabit-per-second backbone will be replaced over the next three years with a hierarchical network that will deliver 10 gigabit-per-second Ethernet performance and bandwidth across campus.

Carleton’s chief information officer, Ralph Michaelis, said the network has been upgraded over time but this is the first major upgrade in 10 years. It is being fueled in part by a 200 per cent increase in research activity at the university over the past four years — research projects that are bandwidth hungry.

“What we’ve done is look at the future here,” said Michaelis. “Looking at where the university wanted to be from a strategic positioning viewpoint, we needed a new network that will support the demands for the next five to ten years.”

It will be a fundamental upgrade, moving to a hierarchal network. There will be a core network, and edge nodes will sit in the basement of each building. New access switches will be installed and new cabling will go to the wall sockets in offices and classrooms.

Michaelis estimated the project will take three years to complete.

“We’ve got 20 buildings on campus,” said Michaelis. “To go through those and put the new infrastructure in place, while working around classes because we still need to conduct business, we estimate it will take three years.”

Carleton issued a request for proposals (RFP) for the upgrade and received competitive bids from a number of major vendors, and while they all offered technology innovations and partnerships, Michaelis said HP really convinced them that they had the capabilities to do the upgrade in a time efficient and cost efficient manner.

“Their project management was strong, their ability to design and implement with us and to our requirements impressed us,” said Michaelis. “The new network will effectively be like a 10 times improvement.”

Among the projects hungry for that new bandwidth is a new Virtual Simulation Laboratory that has high bandwidth requirements, and a number of projects on particle physics require the capability to move large data files both around campus and to peer institutions across Canada and around the world.

There is also a need on the administration side. Michaelis said Carleton implemented a new ERP system a year ago, and they wanted to make sure they had the network capacity to support it properly.

The new bandwidth will also allow Carleton to expand its e-learning offerings. For years Carleton has offered an instructional television (ITV) program, where lectures are taped and broadcast over Ottawa cable television, and mailed to out-of-town students.

Carleton recently began to offer Webcasts of select courses and demand has been strong. But their stretched network meant it had to be done offsite and expansion of the program wasn’t possible. With the new network, that could change.

“Now we can begin to bring that in-house and maybe expand the offering,” said Michaelis.

Reg Schade, vice president and general manager of HP Services, HP Canada, said HP will partner with Cisco Systems on the Carleton upgrade, and will be implementing HP’s OpenView software to help Carleton manage the network.

“Academic institutions are constantly experiencing change with new students, faculty, curricula, programs and services, which collectively place new and different pressures on all of the university’s resources,” said Schade.

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Jim Love, Chief Content Officer, IT World Canada

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Jeff Jedras
Jeff Jedras
Jeff Jedras is a technology journalist with IT World Canada and a member of the IT Business team. He began his career in technology journalism in the late 1990s, covering the Ottawa technology sector for Silicon Valley North and the Ottawa Business Journal. He later covered the technology scene in Vancouver before joining IT World Canada in Toronto in 2005, covering enterprise IT for ComputerWorld Canada and the channel for Computer Dealer News. His writing has also appeared in the Vancouver Sun & the Ottawa Citizen.

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