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Premium member Presentation Transcript Quantifying the Digital Divide:focus Africa: Quantifying the Digital Divide: focus Africa Prepared by Les Cottrell, SLAC for the NSF IRNC meeting , March 11, 2005 www.slac.stanford.edu/grp/scs/net/talk05/nsf-irnc-mar05.ppt Source: IDRC 2005 PingERGoal: Goal Measure the network performance for developing regions From developed to developing & vice versa Between developing regions & within developing regions Use simple tool (PingER/ping) Ping installed on all modern hosts, low traffic interference, Provides very useful measures Originated in High Energy Physics, now focused on DD Persistent (data goes back to 1995), interesting history Monitoring site Remote site PingER coverage Feb 2005World View: World View S.E. Europe, Russia: catching up Latin Am., Mid East, China: keeping up India, Africa: falling behind C. Asia, Russia, S.E. Europe, L. America, M. East, China: 4-5 yrs behind India, Africa: 7 yrs behind Important for policy makers Many institutes in developing world have less performance than a household in N. America or EuropeLoss to world from US: Loss to world from US 2001 Dec-2003 In 2001 <20% of the world’s population had Good or Acceptable Loss performance Loss Rate < 0.1 to 1 % 1 to 2.5 % 2.5 to 5 % 5 to 12 % > 12 % BUT by December 2003 It had improved to 77%Losses: Losses US residential Broadband users have better access than sites in many regionsLoss to Africa (example of variability): Loss to Africa (example of variability) From PingER projectAfrican Region Performance: African Region Performance N. Africa has better connectivity; typically 8 years behind Europe, lot of variability West Africa East Africa South Africa North Africa Keeping up Keeping up Catching up Median 75% 25% Europe ’95-97Compare with TAI: Compare with TAI UN Technology Achievement Index (TAI) Note how bad Africa isCollaborations/funding: Collaborations/funding Good news: Active collaboration with NIIT Pakistan to develop network monitoring including PingER Travel funded by US State department for 1 year FNAL & SLAC continue support for PingER management and coordination Bad news (Operational support currently unfunded, could disappear): DoE funding for PingER terminated Hard to get funding for operational needs (~0.3 FTE) For quality data need constant vigilance (host disappear, security blocks pings, need to update remote host lists, hosts move (e.g. proxy web servers …)Summary: Summary Performance from U.S. & Europe is improving all over Performance to developed countries are orders of magnitude better than to developing countries Poorer regions 5-10 years behind Poorest regions Africa, Caucasus, Central & S. Asia Some regions are: catching up (SE Europe, Russia), keeping up (Latin America, Mid East, China), Maybe falling further behind (e.g. India, Africa)Further Information: Further Information PingER project home site http://www-iepm.slac.stanford.edu/pinger/ PingER methodology (presented at I2 Apr 22 ’04) http://www.slac.stanford.edu/grp/scs/net/talk03/i2-method-apr04.ppt ICFA/SCIC Network Monitoring report http://www.slac.stanford.edu/xorg/icfa/icfa-net-paper-jan05/20050206-netmon.doc ICFA/SCIC home site http://icfa-scic.web.cern.ch/ICFA-SCIC/ Extra slides: Extra slides Countries covered: Countries covered Sites in 114 countries are monitored Goal to have 2 sites/country Reduce anomalies Orange countries are in developing regions and have only one site Megenta no longer have a monitored site (pings blocked)View from CERN: View from CERN Confirms view from N. America From the PingER project August 2004.Another view of Improvements: Another view of Improvements Increase in fraction of good sitesFrom Developing Regions : From Developing Regions As expected Brazil to L. America is good Actually dominated by Brazil to Brazil To Chile & Uruguay poor since goes via US Brazil (Sao Paolo) Novosibirsk NSK to Moscow used to be OK but loss went up in Sep. 2003 GLORIAD may help NovosibirskWithin Developing Regions: Within Developing Regions In ’80s many Eu countries connected via US Today often communications within developing regions to go via developed region, e.g. Rio to Sao Paola goes directly within Brazil But Rio to Buenos Aires goes via Florida And… NIIT – NSC (Rawalpindi – Islamabad) few miles apart, Route goes via England!!!! Takes longer to go few miles than to SLAC! Doubles international link traffic, increases delays, increases dependence on others Within a region can be big differences between sites/countries, due to service providersCompare with TAI: Compare with TAI UN Technology Achievement Index (TAI) You do not have the permission to view this presentation. In order to view it, please contact the author of the presentation.
nsf irnc mar05 Bianca Download Post to : URL : Related Presentations : Share Add to Flag Embed Email Send to Blogs and Networks Add to Channel Uploaded from authorPOINTLite Insert YouTube videos in PowerPont slides with aS Desktop Copy embed code: (To copy code, click on the text box) Embed: URL: Thumbnail: WordPress Embed Customize Embed The presentation is successfully added In Your Favorites. Views: 23 Category: Travel/ Places.. License: All Rights Reserved Like it (0) Dislike it (0) Added: March 31, 2008 This Presentation is Public Favorites: 0 Presentation Description No description available. Comments Posting comment... Premium member Presentation Transcript Quantifying the Digital Divide:focus Africa: Quantifying the Digital Divide: focus Africa Prepared by Les Cottrell, SLAC for the NSF IRNC meeting , March 11, 2005 www.slac.stanford.edu/grp/scs/net/talk05/nsf-irnc-mar05.ppt Source: IDRC 2005 PingERGoal: Goal Measure the network performance for developing regions From developed to developing & vice versa Between developing regions & within developing regions Use simple tool (PingER/ping) Ping installed on all modern hosts, low traffic interference, Provides very useful measures Originated in High Energy Physics, now focused on DD Persistent (data goes back to 1995), interesting history Monitoring site Remote site PingER coverage Feb 2005World View: World View S.E. Europe, Russia: catching up Latin Am., Mid East, China: keeping up India, Africa: falling behind C. Asia, Russia, S.E. Europe, L. America, M. East, China: 4-5 yrs behind India, Africa: 7 yrs behind Important for policy makers Many institutes in developing world have less performance than a household in N. America or EuropeLoss to world from US: Loss to world from US 2001 Dec-2003 In 2001 <20% of the world’s population had Good or Acceptable Loss performance Loss Rate < 0.1 to 1 % 1 to 2.5 % 2.5 to 5 % 5 to 12 % > 12 % BUT by December 2003 It had improved to 77%Losses: Losses US residential Broadband users have better access than sites in many regionsLoss to Africa (example of variability): Loss to Africa (example of variability) From PingER projectAfrican Region Performance: African Region Performance N. Africa has better connectivity; typically 8 years behind Europe, lot of variability West Africa East Africa South Africa North Africa Keeping up Keeping up Catching up Median 75% 25% Europe ’95-97Compare with TAI: Compare with TAI UN Technology Achievement Index (TAI) Note how bad Africa isCollaborations/funding: Collaborations/funding Good news: Active collaboration with NIIT Pakistan to develop network monitoring including PingER Travel funded by US State department for 1 year FNAL & SLAC continue support for PingER management and coordination Bad news (Operational support currently unfunded, could disappear): DoE funding for PingER terminated Hard to get funding for operational needs (~0.3 FTE) For quality data need constant vigilance (host disappear, security blocks pings, need to update remote host lists, hosts move (e.g. proxy web servers …)Summary: Summary Performance from U.S. & Europe is improving all over Performance to developed countries are orders of magnitude better than to developing countries Poorer regions 5-10 years behind Poorest regions Africa, Caucasus, Central & S. Asia Some regions are: catching up (SE Europe, Russia), keeping up (Latin America, Mid East, China), Maybe falling further behind (e.g. India, Africa)Further Information: Further Information PingER project home site http://www-iepm.slac.stanford.edu/pinger/ PingER methodology (presented at I2 Apr 22 ’04) http://www.slac.stanford.edu/grp/scs/net/talk03/i2-method-apr04.ppt ICFA/SCIC Network Monitoring report http://www.slac.stanford.edu/xorg/icfa/icfa-net-paper-jan05/20050206-netmon.doc ICFA/SCIC home site http://icfa-scic.web.cern.ch/ICFA-SCIC/ Extra slides: Extra slides Countries covered: Countries covered Sites in 114 countries are monitored Goal to have 2 sites/country Reduce anomalies Orange countries are in developing regions and have only one site Megenta no longer have a monitored site (pings blocked)View from CERN: View from CERN Confirms view from N. America From the PingER project August 2004.Another view of Improvements: Another view of Improvements Increase in fraction of good sitesFrom Developing Regions : From Developing Regions As expected Brazil to L. America is good Actually dominated by Brazil to Brazil To Chile & Uruguay poor since goes via US Brazil (Sao Paolo) Novosibirsk NSK to Moscow used to be OK but loss went up in Sep. 2003 GLORIAD may help NovosibirskWithin Developing Regions: Within Developing Regions In ’80s many Eu countries connected via US Today often communications within developing regions to go via developed region, e.g. Rio to Sao Paola goes directly within Brazil But Rio to Buenos Aires goes via Florida And… NIIT – NSC (Rawalpindi – Islamabad) few miles apart, Route goes via England!!!! Takes longer to go few miles than to SLAC! Doubles international link traffic, increases delays, increases dependence on others Within a region can be big differences between sites/countries, due to service providersCompare with TAI: Compare with TAI UN Technology Achievement Index (TAI)