The Naval Postgraduate School celebrates 50 years in computing

CHIPS, Jan-March, 2005 by Christine Cermak

Information technology pioneers from around the world gathered at the Naval Postgraduate School to celebrate 50 years of academic computing leadership and share their visions for the future. This watershed event, held Aug. 27, 2004, featured Mark Pullen, Director of George Mason University's Networking and Simulation Laboratory C3I Center; Dr. Robert Kahn, the "Father of the Internet"; Professor Peter Denning, chairman of the NPS Department of Computer Science and director of the university's Institute for Information Innovation and Superiority; and Dr. Christine Cermak, NPS Executive Director of Information Resources and chief information officer.

CHIPS celebrates with NPS by featuring three articles that highlight the NPS leadership role in pursuing advanced technologies. We will begin with an article by Dr. Christine Cermak, which traces some of the school's proud "firsts" in U.S. Naval computing.

The Naval Postgraduate School has a rich history in computing and information technology. Established in 1909 in Annapolis, Md., we will soon be celebrating our centennial year.

In 1951, NPS moved to its present location in Monterey, Calif. Almost immediately after the move to Monterey, NPS began to assume its leadership role in computing. The graduate and research programs at NPS used computing and information technology as a scientific tool, and as the subject of inquiry and experimentation. Not surprisingly, NPS was one of the first ARPANET nodes in California because the NPS faculty and students quickly recognized the value of networks and demanded connectivity.

To put NPS progress in context, I thought it might be helpful to give you a quick snapshot of NPS today. We have about 450 full-time tenured and tenure-track faculty members and approximately 1,500 students. Our student body is comprised of officers from all military services and Department of Defense employees. About 33 percent of the students are foreign officers representing over 50 countries around the world.

Last year, our faculty brought in more than $95 million in research funding. As a result, NPS is considered a research-intensive university and ranks among the top 100 U.S. universities in research funding--particularly impressive when you consider our comparatively small size.

Our information technology environment is complex. We support both .edu and .mil domains; we have classified and unclassified networks, and support wireless and VoIP (Voice over Internet Protocol). Our faculty and students access supercomputers all over the United States and participate in Internet2 initiatives. Our faculty are members of National Academy committees forging recommendations about technology research, and they serve on international organizations crafting Web policies.

NPS supports about 55 gigabytes of Internet traffic daily, 110 terabytes of mainframe data and 924 gigabytes of email data. Every NPS curriculum and research program uses information technology. In many cases, the technology itself is the subject of the course or the research program. The technology world has also changed, as you can see below.

[check] IPv6 will increase the number of Internet addresses from 4 billion to 340 trillion.

[check] A National Center for Education Statistics 2003 report noted that 75 percent of 5-year-olds use computers and about 25 percent use the Internet.

[check] The number of Internet hosts grew from four in 1969 to just under 200 million today.

[check] According to an Internet Domain Survey, the Internet is growing at a rate of about 40-50 percent per year. Americans, who dominated Internet use for so long, are now dropping in the percentage of total users--illustrating the true global nature of this technology.

[check] A recent report to Congress compared the diffusion of technologies in the United States. From invention, it took 38 years for phones to be used in 30 percent of households. Television took 17 years. Personal computers took 13 years. Commercial Internet took less than 7 years to be used by 30 percent of U.S. households.

[check] The Corporation for Education Network Initiatives in California, or CENIC, is calling for gigabit connectivity to every California educational institution, business and home by 2010. This level of connectivity is seen as integrally linked with economic development and the vitality of the state. In fact, Gartner's 2003 report on this subject estimated a $376 billion increase in gross state product and 2 million additional jobs as a result of implementing the CENIC "Gigabit or Bust" initiative.

As a result of the changes in the larger environment, we at NPS realized that we could only participate in these exciting changes through a network of strategic partnerships. Our partnership with the city of Monterey and California State University, Monterey Bay is possible by connectivity with CENIC. That, in turn, made Internet2 membership possible.

Through the vision of the City of Monterey's chief information officer, we were able to construct a local-area, high-speed network with regional Defense Department and federal partners at the Defense Language Institute, Fleet Numerical Meteorology and Oceanography Center, Naval Research Laboratory, National Weather Service and the Defense Manpower Data Center. This creative joint effort permits us even more efficient vehicles for collaborative work.

 

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