SHARE
Follow this article on Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Bookmark and Share
Home >> IT Workplace >> IT Women

Let the games begin: Algoma U joins ORION

Let the games begin: Algoma U joins ORION

By:  Tim Wilson  On: 28 Oct 2007 For: Network World Canada Creator

Ontario's Research and Innovation Optical Network will allow a Sault Ste. Marie-based post-secondary school to team up with a Scottish university to provide collaborative degree in gaming technology

The Ontario Research and Innovation Optical Network (ORION) keeps on growing. The most recent addition is Algoma University College in Sault Ste. Marie.

Algoma U is now connected to a network that stretches 5,800 kilometres, linking to over 21 communities throughout the province. And although ORION, a not-for-profit organization, bills itself as “Ontario’s ultra high-speed research and education network”, the focus is increasingly international. Algoma U is no exception: it will be relying on the network to offer a collaborative MSc in computer game technology with University of Abertay Dundee, in Scotland.

ORION started with seed capital from the province of Ontario and Canarie Inc., a not-for-profit Internet development organization affiliated with the federal government. Now, however, ORION stands on its own two feet. Phil Baker, president and chief executive officer of ORION, promotes the network’s success as both financially self-sustaining and delivering to a global community.

"An institution pays an annual fee based on its size and the number of students,” says Baker. “We want to support researchers, educators, and learners in an environment in which bandwidth is not a consideration. Research is changing dramatically. It’s not local or regional, but international, with expertise tending to be in many locations.”

Danny Reid, Algoma U’s divisional director of information technology services, looked at ORION for a few years after it arrived in Sault Ste. Marie. Joining the network only became viable with the decision to go with the MSc program from Scotland.

Students arriving this past September could begin to take advantage of ORION. A classroom has two screens with distinct feeds – a live view of the remote classroom and another for content. Students then see the class in Scotland, and have presentations, demos, and coding examples presented separately.

“The instructor in Scotland is seeing the Canadian students, too,” says Reid. “We used to have a nine meg connection. Now we have one gig through ORION, and 100 meg over the Internet.”

ORION’s 5,800 kilometres of fibre optic cable is based on 20-year agreements, established in 2001, with underlying providers such as Bell and Toronto Hydro Telecom. About 90 per cent of the fibre is already there, with ORION sometimes making arrangements for last-mile delivery from local loop providers. With financial commitments set until 2021, ORION has developed a self-sustaining business model that works for higher education, research facilities, hospitals and, increasingly, the K-12 market.

“Today we have 16 school boards connected to ORION, approaching 1,000,000 students,” Baker says.

ORION has some corridors lit up at 10 gigs, and major intersecting corridors at 30 gigs. The idea is to keep ahead of demand, and to address the needs of major science research projects that, according to Baker, can be “cyclical and bursty.”

Prime examples are the physicists at Carleton University and the University of Toronto who participate in the large hadron collider (LHC) initiative in Switzerland.


Sign up for our Newsletters












Print |  Views: 1286   |   Rating:offoffoffoffoff  (0 votes)
Rate this article on a scale of
1 to 5 stars,5 being the best.




Tim Wilson Tim Wilson is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

Related Content

George Bernard Shaw plays sidestep copyright headaches
George Bernard Shaw plays sidestep copyright headachesYork University is taking advantage of network restrictions and IP filtering on the fibre optic ORION network to sidestep copyright issues associated with Shaw’s work.
McGill campuses go wireless
McGill campuses go wirelessMcGill University has begun deploying a new wireless network aimed at combating the performance and security challenges that come with having a downtown-area campus. Using Aruba Networks Inc.'s adaptive wireless LANs in both its Montreal-based campuses, the school has already deployed more than 2,700 wireless access points since beginning the project last year.
McGill campuses deploy wireless LANs
McGill campuses deploy wireless LANsWhat do you get when you mix more than 30,000 university students with Montreal’s downtown landscape? A logistical nightmare from a wireless network perspective. Read about how McGill is coping
IBM launches High School Technology Program in Kanata
ibm announced last week a pilot project that will expose high school students to it industry career options.the project is being run in partnership with the ottawa centre for research and the ontario centres of excellence, and will focus on sparking an interest in computer science and engineering specifically. (students will receive a laptop to work with during the program, which is in

Comments (0)

No Comments!
Name: (required) eMail: (optional)

Your email address will not appear online and will be used only if the editor wishes to contact you personally for additional comments.