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Software-Defined Networks and the Maturing of the Internet

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Lecture
  • Session
  • Wednesday, 30 April 2014
  • 00:30 - 00:30
  • Duration: 1 hr 21 mins
  • Publication date: 30 Apr 2014
  • Location: IETTV_Room, IETTV_Venue, London, United Kingdom
  • Part of series The Appleton Lecture Series, IET Prestige Lecture Series and Part of event Appleton Lecture 2014

About the session

The genius of the pioneers of the Internet was to keep the network of links and routers - the 'plumbing' - dumb and minimal, placing as much of the intelligence as possible in the computers at the edge. Our computers at the edges could be upgraded over time to add new features - such as congestion control and security - without having to change the network. A streamlined network could focus on forwarding packets as fast as possible. A simple network is easier to manage and it was designed from the outset to be controlled in a distributed, rather than centralized, way. A simple network with distributed control allowed for organic, explosive growth in the 1990s, with small businesses popping up everywhere to offer Internet services, but over time the network became more and more bloated, straying far from the original intent, with thousands of complicated features locked inside closed, vertically integrated routers. Networks became harder to manage, and those who own large networks fell under a stranglehold from their equipment vendors. Innovation was slow, equipment was unreliable and profit margins were through the roof. The networking industry of the 2000s turned into the mainframe industry of the 1980s. Along came companies building data centres with thousands of switches and routers, with a pressing need to place the network under their control. Over-priced firewalls and load-balancers were replaced with home-grown software running on servers. Routers and switches were simplified, making them more reliable, lower-cost and lower-power. The entire network was placed under the control of software created using modern software practices. The software-defined network (SDN) was born. In turn, SDN made it easier to use the servers, storage and network more efficiently by virtualising the network; network virtualisation was born. In this talk, the speaker explains why software-defined networks and network virtualisation are an inevitable stage in the maturation of the Internet. In the next decade, it will be natural for many more networks - big Internet service providers, home networks, cellular networks and enterprise networks - to become software-defined and virtualised.

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  • The Prestige Lecture Series
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    Prof. Nick McKeown

    Stanford University, Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, Open Networking Research Center, Kleiner Perkins, Mayfield and Sequoia Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science

    Nick McKeown, Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, Stanford UniversityNick McKeown (PhD/MS UC Berkeley '95/'92; B.E Univ. of Leeds, '86) is the Kleiner Perkins, Mayfield and Sequoia Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at Stanford University, and Faculty Director of the Open Networking Research Center.From 1986-1989 he worked for Hewlett-Packard Labs in Bristol, England. In 1995, he helped architect Cisco's GSR 12000 router. In 1997 Nick co-founded Abrizio Inc. (acquired by PMC-Sierra), where he was CTO. He was co-founder and CEO of Nemo ('Network Memory'), which is now part of Cisco. In 2007 he co-founded Nicira (acquired by VMware) with Martin Casado and Scott Shenker. In 2011, he co-founded the Open Networking Foundation (ONF) with Scott Shenker.Nick is a member of the US National Academy of Engineering (NAE), a Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering (UK), Fellow of the IEEE and the ACM. In 2005, he was awarded the British Computer Society Lovelace Medal, in 2009 the IEEE Kobayashi Computer and Communications Award and in 2012 the ACM Sigcomm Lifetime Achievement Award.Nick is the STMicroelectronics Faculty Scholar, the Robert Noyce Faculty Fellow, a Fellow of the Powell Foundation and the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, and recipient of a CAREER award from the National Science Foundation.In 2000, he received the IEEE Rice Award for the best paper in communications theory. Nick's current research interests include software defined networks (SDN), how to enable more rapid improvements to the Internet infrastructure, and tools and platforms for networking research and teaching.
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