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Arkansas Research and Educational Optical Network
(ARE-ON) News
3-04-09: ARE-ON Connection Creates Opportunities for Arkansas and Its
Universities
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. – The University of Arkansas and all of the state’s
four-year public universities will soon be connected to the Arkansas
Research and Education Optical Network, ARE-ON, a high-speed
fiber-optic-based Internet communications network. ARE-ON will expand
research, academic, health care and emergency preparedness capabilities
throughout the state by providing the universities access to national and
international high-speed Internet networks such as the National LambdaRail
and Internet 2.
Access to these networks has many benefits. For example, it allows
researchers to send and receive large files; gives classrooms access to
ultra-high-definition video conferencing; and expands opportunities in
telemedicine for the state’s health care providers.
“This is a huge economic development initiative for Arkansas,” said Mike
Abbiatti, executive director of ARE-ON, who participated in the founding and
construction of a similar network in Louisiana before coming to Arkansas.
“University researchers already fuel investment in the private sector
through the development of new products and services. ARE-ON will only
expand economic development opportunities and create additional high-paying
jobs in the state. This network will bring Arkansas to a new level in terms
of research and technology, giving us opportunities we’ve never seen
before.”
ARE-ON is a supporting and unifying initiative that does not compete with
existing resources. The network will give Arkansas campuses unique access to
research and academic resources and allow for sharing among the
universities’ current and future supercomputers.
The connection to LambdaRail also brings Arkansas into a national network of
other research institutions and universities. The connection will provide
more opportunities for collaboration among researchers, academics and health
care professionals.
“The high-tech capabilities and potentials of the new system are much more
than simply a fast Internet connection,” said Abbiatti. “Technologies such
as virtual learning environments, data sharing and multi-media access will
be readily available to Arkansas’ campus communities through this network.”
The University of Arkansas was the first to be linked to the ARE-ON network
in December 2006, and it’s been put to a variety of uses since then. For
example, professors at the university’s School of Law are using the network
to hold regular video conferencing sessions with students, colleagues and
government officials in Ukraine to exchange ideas about ways to strengthen
legal systems and enhance the rule of law. ARE-ON also provides a way to
connect the university’s two supercomputers to other supercomputers around
the country, enabling researchers to share information and work together on
complex problems.
ARE-ON officials have been working for the past two years to connect
Arkansas’s public four-year universities, the University of Arkansas for
Medical Sciences and the University of Arkansas Division of Agriculture to
the network through new and pre-existing fiber-optic cables running
throughout the state. Information technology representatives from each
campus are working together as members of the ARE-ON steering committee.
ARE-ON member institutions include:
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Arkansas State University, Jonesboro
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Arkansas Tech University
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Henderson State University
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Southern Arkansas University
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University of Arkansas Division of Agriculture
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University of Arkansas
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University of Arkansas at Fort Smith
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University of Arkansas at Little Rock
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University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences
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University of Arkansas at Monticello
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University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff
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University of Central Arkansas
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