Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Kiwi Advanced Research and Education Network

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Abbreviation
  
REANNZ

Legal status
  
Crown-owned company

Chair of the Board of Directors
  
Jim Donovan

Founded
  
September 2005

Formation
  
September 2005

Region served
  
New Zealand

Headquarters
  
Wellington

Main organ
  
Board of directors

Kiwi Advanced Research and Education Network httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumbe

Purpose
  
To establish and operate the Advanced Network in order to promote education, research and innovation for the benefit of New Zealand

The Kiwi Advanced Research and Education Network (KAREN), now known simply as the REANNZ Network, is a high-capacity, ultra high-speed national research and education network (NREN) connecting New Zealand's tertiary institutions, research organisations, libraries, schools and museums, and the rest of the world. REANNZ (Research and Education Advanced Network New Zealand Ltd), a Crown-owned not-for-profit company, owns and operates KAREN.

Contents

Commissioned in late 2006, KAREN links to other established regional and national research and education networks, notably to JANET in the UK and to the Pacific Northwest Gigapop in Seattle.

E-research

New Zealand researchers and educators can use KAREN to participate in e-research:

  • to exchange large volumes of data quickly
  • to gain access to large-scale national and international infrastructure
  • to collaborate better on research and education projects at a distance.
  • KAREN aims:

  • to enable leading-edge e-research
  • to facilitate universal connectivity throughout the New Zealand and international research and education communities
  • to encourage broad participation by the research and education sector in New Zealand through accessible technology and reasonable pricing
  • to connect the research and education sector to the broader innovation community for pre-commercial research and development based collaboration
  • to facilitate participation by multiple telecommunications-sector partners to ensure the greatest possible flexibility for ongoing evolution.
  • Topology

    KAREN consists of a high-speed optical network connecting points of presence (PoPs) throughout New Zealand. A PoP provides an interconnection point between member sites around the network. Members may connect at one or more POPs. KAREN links universities and Crown Research Institutes within New Zealand via TelstraClear fibre-optic cable and FX Networks, at speeds of 10 gigabits per second. Development with the use of Infinera platforms will soon see 40 to 100Gbit/s backbones between many major PoPs.

    International links to Sydney and to Seattle (Pacific Northwest Gigapop) via the Southern Cross Cable connect KAREN to other national research and education networks in Australia and the United States, and through them to Asia and Europe, at 100Gbit/s for Research and Education traffic.

    A distinguishing feature of any NREN is its flexibility to meet the diverse needs of all its users. The numbers involved, coupled with increasing sophistication of personal applications, mean that managing demand and maintaining performance require the use of a hybrid Ethernet and Internet Protocol (IP) network architecture.

    Uptake

    The research community, driven by the development of various e-science grids, has developed large-scale applications that will individually use high amounts of bandwidth and can in some cases also have strict demands on the network that may require defined resources allocated temporarily to meet performance demands.

    KAREN will need to continually evolve so the range of production and development demands can co-exist. This means taking into account the collaborative nature of the development, and research processes, and therefore the need to deliver both advanced network services and associated development facilities to participating organisations.

    As of September 2015, 86 organisations at 66 sites across New Zealand had connections to KAREN.

    References

    Kiwi Advanced Research and Education Network Wikipedia