Indiana University
Office of the Vice President for Information Technology
HIGH PERFORMANCE NETWORK APPLICATIONS PROGRAM (HPNAP)
CALL
FOR PROPOSALS
1. Summary
The
Indiana University High Performance Network Applications Program (HPNAP) is an
initiative of the Office of the Vice President for Information Technology. It
will provide funding to assist IU faculty, graduate students and staff on all
campuses of the University to develop innovative applications in research and teaching
that require high performance local, regional or national research networks.
One-time
grants of up to $20,000 will be made for this purpose. Proposals are due July 7
and will be peer reviewed. Awards will be announced by August 1, 2000. Previous HPNAP awardees may submit
proposals for new projects or for funding to significantly modify the direction
or scope of their original inquiry.
2. Aim of the Program
High
performance digital networks and distributed software systems are transforming
the way we work, communicate, learn, retrieve and store information, and
conduct research. The purpose of the Program is to promote development,
implementation, and testing of innovative applications in research and teaching
that use advanced local, national and international networks available to the
IU community, as well as such emerging high performance domestic network
connection technologies as cable modems, xDSL, satellite and wireless. Descriptions of previously funded projects
may be seen at http://www.indiana.edu/~uits/hpnap/projects/index.html.
The
Program aims to significantly accelerate the development of next generation network-based applications
and development tools at IU through a joint effort of faculty, graduate
students and staff and University Information Technology Services (UITS). The Program provides funds, access to
advanced networks and support resources through peer reviewed proposals. Applications developed through the Program
can be expected to provide considerable competitive advantage to the
University.
Indiana
University, through a number of recent major developments at state, national,
and international levels, has been able to provide the IU community with
unprecedented access to high bandwidth networks. IU has achieved a position of
prominence in advanced networking through a number of efforts including
participation in the Internet2 Abilene, development of the TransPAC
international research network, and prior participation in the National Science
Foundation vBNS project. Major enhancements to these networks can be expected
to continue over the next few years.
The
development of advanced applications that capitalize on the capabilities of
high
performance
networks is in its infancy. Routine
access to such networks has only recently become available. At the moment the development of such
applications takes considerable effort, though this will change as development
techniques mature.
Some
examples of areas in the sciences, humanities, teaching, learning and
distributed education, and new collaboration technologies in which HPNAP
funding could support the development of applications include:
·
Sciences
- storage, analysis and retrieval of large data sets of research interest; use
of instruments at remote locations including seismographs, telescopes and
microscopes; distributed high performance computing and visualization
applications.
·
Humanities
- artistic expression using network-based facilities such as the CAVE VR
environment and similar environments; virtual museums and organized collections
with rich media content such as in music.
·
Teaching,
learning and distributed education - innovative student experiences involving
network-based interaction with field experts or specialized facilities not
available locally; delivery of digital media in support of teaching or
research.
·
New
collaboration and communication technologies - persistent shared virtual
workspaces for group work in research, instruction, consultation, or
professional development; tele-immersion; middleware for the development and
broad deployment of distributed applications.
Please
note that this is NOT an exclusive list and the Program seeks to identify
innovative applications not attempted before.
3. Proposal Requirements
Funding
under the Program will be available August 1, 2000, and will be for one year.
Funding is available principally for personnel, though proposals for hardware,
software and other direct costs of developing proposed network applications
will be considered. The involvement of staff from UITS Advanced Information
Technology Laboratory and the Telecommunications Division is also encouraged
where appropriate.
Proposed
applications should require such high performance network capabilities as high
bandwidth, bounded latency, IP multicast, and new protocols or services
including distributed storage, computing and visualization. The application and
the reason it needs such capabilities should be clearly described in the
proposal. Proposals to develop applications that require only commercial Internet
capabilities will generally not be considered.
Projects based on campuses with T1 connections should consider how high
volume or bandwidth services will be delivered, possibly by locating servers in
Indianapolis or Bloomington and maintaining these remotely.
Emphasis
will be placed on the potential of the proposed applications to advance the
research or educational mission of the University, and on the use of IU's
internal, national or international advanced network connections (Internet2
Abilene, TransPAC, etc). Proposals can be expected to involve multi-site
collaborations within or outside the University but this is not a required
condition.
In
addition to the application description, proposals should also address the
following:
·
The
importance of the application and its potential impact generally or in a
specific area.
·
Benefit
to the University through improvements in the way research and teaching are
carried out.
·
Potential
to strengthen connections between IU and such external organizations as
institutions of higher education, national laboratories, state and federal
government agencies and industry.
·
Plans
for deployment of the proposed application across local and national networks,
including an assessment of specific assistance that may be needed from support
groups in UITS and at the national networks (Internet2 Abilene, TransPAC,
etc.).
Awardees are expected to participate in several HPNAP events. These will include an initial briefing to be held shortly after awards are made on the high performance networking resources available to IU and the UITS staff assistance available to those who will be developing applications, and a final workshop at the end of the funding year to discuss individual results and outcomes of the Program. A report from the principal investigator for each successful proposal is expected at the end of the funding year. Dates for events and deadlines will be issued with award announcements.
4. Proposal Submission
Information
All
Indiana University faculty members, graduate students, and staff on all
campuses are welcome to submit proposals. The proposal should identify a
Principal Investigator, though multiple-investigator projects involving
researchers at different locations are encouraged. Proposals should be no more
than 10 pages long, excluding references and appendices and should contain the
following sections: executive summary (1 page), application description and
expected outcomes, budget summary, and justification. Please send one unbound
copy of your proposal to:
High Performance Network Applications
Program
Office of the Vice President for
Information Technology
c/o Rick McMullen
Franklin Hall 116
Indiana University
Bloomington IN 47405
Or
electronically to: mcmullen@indiana.edu
The
timeline for application, review, and award announcement is as follows:
Proposals Due: July 7, 2000
Awards Announced: August
1, 2000
For
further information please consult the IU High Performance Network Application
Program Web pages at http://www.indiana.edu/~uits/hpnap or contact Rick
McMullen by e-mail at mcmullen@indiana.edu.