►
From YouTube: CI WG demo: Internet2
Description
Date: 03/31/17
Presenters: Florence Hudson & John Moore
Institution: Internet2
Midwest Big Data Hub
A
Alright,
so
with
that
I'm
going
to
introduce
Florence
title
and
John
roar
from
Internet
to
community
support,
the
goal
of
this
presentation
is
to
provide
information
and
discussion
on
infrastructure
researcher
engagement.
The
data
sharing
both
workshops
have
the
Internet
to
member
based
collaborative
innovation.
Community
is
participating
and
distributed.
Big
data
and
analytics
opportunities
and
innovation.
Florence
is
senior
vice
president
and
chief
innovation
officer
internet
to
a
not-for-profit
consortium
of
315
academic.
A
C
Well,
thanks
Leah.
This
is
John
here
and
we
really
appreciate
that
introduction
and
thank
you
and
Karl
for
inviting
us
here
today.
We're
really
excited
about
the
opportunity
to
work
with
the
South
Region,
big
data
hub
and
I
guess
I
didn't
realize
this
was
in
all
hub
presentations,
I'm
happy
to
see
our
friend
up
in
New,
York
Renee,
vest
on
on
the
on
the
call.
C
So
Florence
are
going
to
tag
team
a
little
bit
today
on
the
presentation
and
all
I'll
start
out
with
some
background
information
about
Internet
to
just
talk
a
little
bit
about
you
know,
organization
and
what
we
currently
have
and
who
we
generally
work
with.
I'll
then
discuss
a
few
areas
that
are
particularly
engaging
for
me
of
late
talking
about
the
planning
for
the
next
infrastructure
investment
and
then
talking
a
little
bit
more
about
how
we're
trying
to
support
research
community
and
then.
C
Okay,
great,
let
me
dig
in
so
just
add
by
way
of
introduction
so
internet2.
For
those
of
you
not
familiar
with
us.
We
are
not-for-profit
member
owned
consortium.
This
is
kind
of
a
more-or-less
divisional
perspective
of
internet2,
so
we
have
a
network
services
group
I'm,
going
to
talk
a
little
bit
more
about
that.
I
have
a
slide
on
trust
and
identity
which
I'll
discuss
in
a
minute.
We
also
Florence's
innovation
office,
which
she'll
be
discussing
so
some
of
the
other
pieces.
C
We
have
a
organization
that
provides
Net+
services,
it's
kind
of
a
way
of
aggregating
some
of
the
buying
power
of
the
community
for
applications
that
are
widely
used
throughout
to
our
nice
base.
We
have
a
very,
very
active
community
engagement
organization.
They
do
a
lot
of
work.
Trying
to
grow
the
community
in
lots
of
different
directions.
C
They
do.
We
do
two
big
meetings
a
year,
they're
very
engaged
with
kind
of
meeting
services
and
polo
live
together
for
us
and
then
lastly,
there's
a
program
called
us.
You
can,
which
may
be
of
interest
to
this
group,
it's
one
in
which
we
try
to
bring
in
some
of
the
smaller
institutions
that
the
federal
government
is
sort
of
uses,
the
term
community
anchor
institutions.
C
But
you
know
our
not
our
one
institutions,
and
so,
but
with
in
partnership
with
our
regional
network
providers,
we
sort
of
bring
them
into
the
disco,
pand
I,
think
in
a
lot
of
ways
you
know
that's
an
important
place
that
we
look
for
in
terms
of
you
know:
workforce
development,
that's
kind
of
where
some
of
our
really
interesting
work
with
cities
is
happening,
etcetera.
So
it's
a
very
interesting
partnership
that
we
have.
That
came
from
the
investment
that
the
federal
government
made
in
internet2
and
the
community
and
the
be
top
program
a
couple
years
ago.
C
So
we
do
have
some
focus
areas
which
I
will
talk
about
in
a
minute.
So
there's
the
two
top
priorities
for
us,
as
directed
by
our
board,
is,
is
really
to
focus
on
the
network
and
Trust
and
identity
services.
You
can
think
of
a
lot
of
the
other
parts
of
Internet
to
that
sort
of
port.
Those
two
main
goals
on
the
network
is
the
thing
we've
been
doing
for
the
longest.
We
have
national
footprint
infrastructure
ml
I'll.
Go
into
that
a
little
more
detail
in
couple
minutes.
C
C
These
are
the
pieces
that
help
us
provide
a
trust,
Federation
called
the
in
common
and
with
services
like
edge
or
L
that
sort
of
help
situations
from
a
collaboration
perspective.
When
you
have
people
visiting
your
campus
and
want
to
get
access
and
get
up
indicated
back
to
their
institution,
it's
generally,
you
know
very
useful
set
of
middleware
services.
I
find
it
fascinating
because
they've
in
kind
of
looking
at
it
for
me,
is
kind
of
a
network
guy.
C
Currently
there
there's
a
big
focus
on
tear,
which
is
a
project
of
a
number
of
large
campuses
that
have
come
together
to
focus
on
common
campus
deployments
that
support
the
the
use
of
this
tres
Federation.
So
you
know
kind
of
another
one
of
those
situations
where
you
get
a
number
of
people
in
the
community
who
are
very
interested
in
a
specific
goal
and
they
get
together,
and
you
know
partner
and
and
do
a
lot
of
great
work.
So
it
sort
of
brings
into
focus
a
little
bit
of
the
community
and
convening
functions.
C
That's
a
strong
part
of
internet
too.
So
I'll
talk
about
the
network
just
a
little
bit.
Here's
a
snapshot
of
our
current
footprint.
We
do
provide
a
number
of
services
from
layers
one
to
three
and
the
network
stack.
We
provide
those
services
to
folks
really
kind
of
based
on
where
their
needs
are.
So
you
can
look
through
this
and
just
see
that
there's
you
know
certain
places
where
we
provide
all
services
where
there's
a
lot
of
demand.
Other
places
where
you
know
some
of
the
services
are
available.
C
We
have
number
of
metro
areas
that
you'll
notice,
or
we
have
a
couple
of
circles
and
in
those
areas,
is
where
we
connect
two
major
peering
points
to
provide
commercial
peering
services
for
the
community.
So
besides,
inter
connecting
all
of
the
research
and
education
institutions
in
the
country,
you
know
we
also
provide
commercial
peering
for
the
campuses
so
that
they
can
get
to
you
know
efficiently,
get
to
cloud
services
to
major
content
providers
etc.
C
Most
of
those
metro
areas
also
contain
exchange
points
that
are
either
provided
by
us
or
for
or
by
other
members
of
the
community,
so
that
we
can
exchange
traffic
with
other
research
and
education
networks
in
other
countries.
So
those
are
sort
of
our
international
peering
points
and
I'll
talk
a
little
bit
more
in
a
minute.
The
International
aspect
of
things
a
little
bit.
So
let
me
just
stop
there
as
you
look
at
this
particular
any
thoughts
or
questions
on
what
I've
gone
through
so
far,.
C
Okay,
let
me
push
on
so
this
is
kind
of
a
little
different
perspective
same
topology,
but
this
sort
of
highlights
some
of
our
partners
and
what
we've
sort
of
recently
been
calling
the
the
echo
system.
So
these
are
all
the
they
are,
what
we
refer
to
as
connectors
the
campuses
and
the
regional
partners
that
allow
us
to
extend
our
reach.
So,
if
you
think
about
internet
to
services,
we
really
provide
services
primarily
to
the
connectors
and
not
directly
to
campuses,
unless,
of
course,
your
campus
is
a
connector.
C
There
are
some
of
those
right
that
a
campus
who
would
connect
directly
to
the
Internet
to
backbone.
In
our
cases
you
know
the
regional
network,
so
for
those
of
you
sitting
in
North,
Carolina
MC
NC
is
the
local
regional
network
and
they've
been
a
strong
partner
for
many
many
years.
You
know
so
it's
a
it's.
It's
not
a
hierarchy.
It's
a
it's
really!
A
collaborative
and
cooperative
environment-
and
you
know
in
general,
MC
NC
is
a
statewide
nonprofit.
Most
of
the
connectors
are
functioned
somewhere
along
the
line
like
that.
C
C
Some
of
the
connectors
are
it's
basically
just
a
router
in
a
in
a
location
somewhere
and
a
couple
of
people
to
run
it
and
organize
community,
so
the
connector
is
very
all
over
the
place
and
it's
a
very
interesting
and
challenging
environment
to
work
with
them.
So,
just
in
terms
of
the
give
you
a
little
snapshot
of
kind
of
how
our
traffic
demand
is
growing
over
the
years,
the
chart
on
the
bottom
right
here
kind
of
shows
how
we've
grown.
C
C
So
if
there's
a
big
dispersal
of
data,
for
instance
from
the
Large
Hadron
Collider
in
Geneva,
that's
going
to
Caltech,
you
know
we
want
to
have
the
Headroom
on
our
network
that
allows
us
to
kind
of
burst
to
that
particular
capability
and
that's
sort
of
one
of
the
general
engineering
principles
that
we've
we've
adhere
to
over
the
years
we
have
actually
grown,
even
though
we
say
it's
100
gigabit
backbone.
We
have
grown
a
number
of
these
segments
to
two
to
three
hundred
gigabit
and
run
them
in
parallel.
C
It
sort
of
shows
that
we're
pushing
the
edges
of
this
technology
a
bit
and
some
of
our
forward
facing
efforts
are
going
to
look
at.
You
know
sort
of
what's
the
next
step
from
100
gigabit.
Is
it
400
big
bid?
Is
it
200
Giga
bit,
maybe
a
terabyte
right,
so
we
try
as
best
we
can
to
get
the
most
out
of
the
technology
we
haven't
had,
but
we're
always
looking
towards
the
future
to
try
to
see
what
the
next
thing
is
and
trying
to
get
there
ahead
of
just
about
anybody
else.
C
So
I
mentioned
the
international
thing
briefly.
Our
exchange
points
actually
allow
us
to
connect
to
some
of
these
transoceanic
circuits.
A
number
of
these
are
provided
by
some
of
them,
either
ourselves
or
some
of
our
national
RNA
partners.
So
we
have
a
good
collaboration
in
the
North
Atlantic,
with
a
number
of
European
and
Canadian
providers
of
RNA
services,
where
we
partner
on
actually
a
300
gigabit
connection.
C
The
cross
is
the
Atlantic
where
and
it's
an
interesting
partnership
where
you
know
each
of
us
invest
in
pieces
of
it,
and
then
we
run
it
operationally
as
a
unit.
More
recently,
we've
actually
I
bought
a
circuit
from
Los
Angeles
to
Singapore
we're
starting
to
try
to
develop
a
little
bit
more
of
a
similar
collaborative
organization
within
the
the
Pacific
region,
and
so
that's
really
kind
of
in
its
formative
stages.
But
you
know
we
have
a
lot
of
interest
in
that
area
in
particular.
C
A
C
And,
and
in
addition,
the
National
Science
Foundation
is
also
funding.
Some
links
across
the
oceans
via
their
RNC
program,
they're
doing
that
for
a
long
time
and
again,
what
we
try
as
much
as
best
we
can
is
to
try
to
coordinate
those
investments
and
just
kind
of
make
it
all
work
together.
It's
really
important.
These
connections
are
growing
in
importance
because
of
the
the
nature
of
science.
C
These
days,
in
fact,
that
a
lot
of
the
data
intensive
science
use
is
International
collaborations,
so
so
just
a
couple
things
about
how
we're
sort
of
changing
and,
as
I
mentioned,
some
of
the
things
that
are
keeping
me
busy
these
days,
we
were
in
a
phase
where
we
need
to
be
thinking
about
the
next
infrastructure
investment,
so
our
primer,
isin
is
is
two
to
five
years
and
beyond.
Really
at
this
point,
we're
going
through
a
requirements
gathering
process,
it's
been,
it's
been
really
great
of
late.
C
They
really
much
rather
see
an
incremental
approach
where
we
can
try
things
in
partnership
with
the
community
find
out
the
things
that
work
figure
out
how
to
get
those
into
production
service,
and
then
you
know
if
there
are
things
that
don't
work,
stop
doing
them,
and
so
part
of
that
I
think
is
driven
by
the
just
the
rate
of
change
that
we're
seeing
in
the
community.
The
hardware
is
commoditizing,
you
know
software
is
becoming
a
really
important
component.
C
What
the
folks
in
the
data
intensive
science
community
need-
and
you
know
one
community
we've
been
supporting
for
a
long
time-
is
the
networking
strips
these
research,
the
folks
who
are
sort
of
want
to
imprint
to
do
research
and
experimentation
on
the
infrastructure,
so
I
think
you
know
what
we're
at
with
that
is
is
that
we
have
a
big
meeting
coming
up
in
DC
in
May
we're
hoping
to
have
sort
of
first
drafts
of
the
requirements
and
in
particular,
for
this
community.
I
would
really
like
to
share
that
with
the
BD
hubs
group.
C
C
You
know
for
your
requirements,
so
look
for
that
after
our
global
summit
meeting
in
May,
hopefully
I
can
we'll
figure
out
what
the
appropriate
mechanism
is,
but
I'd
love
it.
If
we
could
circulate
that,
you
know
through
the
community
and
get
some
good
feedback
from
you
and
then.
Lastly,
for
my
part
here,
I
just
want
to
talk
about
the
fact
that
we
are
engaging
on
an
effort
to
try
to
beef
up
our
research
engagement
activities.
C
We've
brought
Jim
bottom
on
board
who's.
A
former
CIO
at
Clemson
University
he's
been
working
with
NSF
funded
project
called
a
CRF
for
a
number
of
years
and
we're
trying
to
take
that
model
and
grow
it
so
that
we
can
scale
those
kinds
of
facilitation
engagements
out
to
a
national
audience.
We've
pulled
together
a
great
advisory
group
of
people
throughout
the
community
in
various
places,
folks
from
exceed
folks
from
science
gateways.
You
know
number
of
regional
folks
and
CIOs
folks,
representing
the
the
you
know,
the
research
community.
C
So
it's
it's
we're
hoping
to
get
some
really
good
advice
on
how
to
appropriately
move
the
needle.
The
idea
is
that
campuses
need
human
beings
in
the
right
place
to
leverage
the
technology.
Those
folks
need
the
kind
of
skills
that
allow
them
to
do.
You
know
the
appropriate
level
of
integration
of
the
IT
structure
to
properly
support
the
research
community.
The
way
I
tend
to
think
of
it
is
is
sort
of
you
know.
We.
A
C
An
infrastructure
that
is
somewhat
generic
and
what's
really
needed
is
some
level
of
customization
for
the
specific
needs
of
the
researchers,
and
you
know
sometimes
it's
really
just
about
customizing
the
operational
profile
right.
People
who
are
using
the
the
infrastructure
need
to
understand
who
to
call
for
help
to
set
it
up
or
when
it
breaks,
etc.
So,
there's
a
lot
of
aspects
to
facilitation,
but
we're
hoping
to
see
if
we
can
bring
those
to
the
forefront
and
maybe
try
to
engage
a
little
bit
more
at
the
research
community.
We
have
a
scaling
issue
for
sure.
C
You
know
small
number
resources
with
a
fairly
big
program
of
what
we'd
like
to
do,
but
we're
hoping
that
we
can
organize
the
community
in
such
a
way
to
try
to
leverage
all
the
talent
that's
out
there
and
see
how
we
can
make
it
better
for
everybody.
So
with
that
I'll
turn
it
over
to
Florence
and
her
Innovation
Program.
B
Okay,
great
so
I
joined
two
years
ago,
internet2,
it's
been
so
fun
and
I
get
to
work
with
a
lot
of
you
which
for
them
very
grateful
for
and
when
I
joined.
The
idea
was
for
the
chief
innovation
officer,
get
established
to
figure
out
where
the
puck
is
going
and
make
sure
that
we
have
the
right
hockey
sticks
ice,
Zamboni,
whatever
it
is
that
we
need
to
be
able
to
help
the
scientists
and
researchers
and
educators
get
where
they're
going.
B
So
the
first
thing
that
we
did
is
we
did
a
member
survey
Ness
and
what
are
the
areas
of
open
collaborative
innovation?
You
want
to
work
on
I
think
it
was
8800
humans
at
the
time
I'm
sure
over
9000,
maybe
were
close
to
10
now
and
the
three
answers
that
came
back
where
the
top
was
in
in
trust
and
security
about
2/3
of
the
respondents
chose
that
it
was
multiple
choice
to
consider
more
than
one
and
right
in
anything.
You
wanted
to.
B
The
next
was
distributed:
big
data
analytics,
which
directly
aligned
the
NSF
Big
Data
house
handily.
This
was
in
May
of
2015,
so
I
guess
we
guessed
you
guys.
We
were
going
to
be
doing
this
or
the
members
did
and
then
the
Internet
of
Things,
and
so
what
we
did
is
we
convened
three
innovation
working
groups.
Alex
felt
this
is
actually
one
of
our
original
co-chairs
of
the
distributed
big
data
and
analytics
certain
group.
Thank
you
Alex,
and
then
we
have
three
soldiers
from
around
the
community
for
each
one
we
have
researchers
like
Alex.
B
We
have
professors
like
Rajesh
Romani
at
a
BW
Madison
that
runs
the
IOT
lab
is
one
of
the
co-chairs
of
IOT.
We
have
CISOs
like
mark
Gaither
who's,
the
chief
information
security
officer
at
UMBC
on
a
gen
trust
and
security.
So
we
have
a
real
good
mix
of
different
assets
with
different
points
of
view
and
we've
grown
from
a
start
up.
B
I
guess
you
would
say
in
that
global
summit
of
Internet
to
May
of
2015
over
330
people
that
are
involved
in
this
now
and
the
key
areas
were
brought
forward
as
use
cases
by
each
of
the
working
group.
So
the
top
one
it
has.
You
can
see
something
that
we
created
actually
with
I
Triple,
E
and
NSF.
Around
tips
for
IOT
trust,
identity,
privacy,
protection,
safety
and
security,
it
was
interesting.
B
B
The
way
we've
we
have
this
laid
out
on
this
page
was
the
way
we
used
that
the
NSS
Big
Data
API
me
a
couple
weeks
ago
in
DC-
is
that
a
lot
of
these
areas
do
align
with.
What's
going
on
in
the
hub,
which
is
really
cool?
So
if
you
see
in
the
bottom
left
that
distributed
they
data
analytics
area?
All
of
this
is
part
of
what's
going
on
in
the
hubs
at
the
time
when
we
created
these
working
groups.
B
Mark
Hoyt,
who
is
one
of
the
other
co-chairs
on
distributed
big
data
analytics,
was
leading
a
discussion
around
this
as
Internet
to
technology
exchange
the
fall
events
that
John
Moore
was
talking
about,
and
Mark
said
what
we
should
do
is
connect
within
SFA
data
hub
they're
all
over
this
stuff.
We're
like
okay.
B
As
a
matter
of
fact,
Melissa
Craig
and
reached
out
to
Internet
to
and
John
Moore
and
are
actually
engaging
with
the
University
of
Illinois
professor
now
who's
getting
ahead
of
it,
which
we
love
by
the
way.
So
if
you
anticipate
that
you're
going
to
need
some
help,
we'd
love
to
be
able
to
try
to
help
figure
that
ahead
of
time,
and
so
they
plan
on
having
a
large
genomic
data
transfers
with
Africa
and
with
Europe
I
believe
it
is,
and
so
we're
getting
that
correction
code.
B
B
How
do
we
kind
of
customize
this
but
make
it
efficient
at
the
same
time?
And
then,
when
we
were
chatting
and
all
the
hubs
were
there,
we
said
well,
let's
find
like
a
real-life
use
case,
so
we're
not
just
creating
a
vision
of
how
we
can
make
this
better
and
so
fan
who's.
Actually,
the
program
director
for
the
day
data
that
an
NSF
suggested
we
hook
up
with
the
smart
grid
spoke
which
is
out
of
the
cell,
so
Jane
Greenberg,
who
is
a
Drexel.
She
was
one
of
hosted.
B
The
workshop
on
data
sharing
at
the
end
of
September
and
I
are
going
to
be
going
down
to
Malad
ins,
smart
grids,
big
data
workshop
in
April,
at
Texas,
a
and
and
to
talk
about
how
we
can
work
together,
how
we
can
use
that
as
a
real
ideas
case,
which
has
data
issues,
regulatory
issues
and
then
bring
in
you
know
the
data
sharing
side
of
it
legal
side,
policy,
side:
renee!
Is
there
anything
you
want
to
add
to
that
about
how
we're
working
together
on
that.
B
Okay,
so
I'll
keep
going,
he
might
be
on
mute.
So
what
we're
looking
to
do
is
continue
working
with
all
of
you
and
listen
to
how
we
can
help,
and
then
you
don't
wait
for
us
to
hear
it.
Please
reach
out
proactively
on
the
next
page.
This
is
a
view
of
this
collaborative
ation
community.
We
created
of
these
three
working
groups,
which
actually
begat
use
cases
in
smart
campus,
table
smart
campus
initiative
with
a
smart
campus,
CIO
Advisory
Council
of
11
CIOs.
It
was
ten
and
then
one
of
them
moved
to
another
University.
B
She
want
to
stay
on
it,
which
is
a
good
sign,
and
so
now
we've
grandfathered
the
new
CIO
from
her
University
and
I'm,
a
she's
there
as
well
as
they
have
eleven
plus.
We
have
a
smart
grid
focus
group
we're
creating,
because
what
I
found
is
that
as
I
go
around
and
talk
to
universities,
I
do
that
quite
a
lot.
There
were
a
lot
of
people
asking
for
thinker,
phasor
data
and
p.m.
B
you
date
or
feds
or
measurement
unit
data,
and
so
what
we
can
start
doing
is
bringing
them
together
as
a
focus
group
and
a
special
interest
group
and
we're
starting
to
do
that.
So
one
of
the
things
we're
anticipating
is
that
milada
at
Texas
A&M
will
be
will
be
announcing
a
sinker
phase
or
consortium
and
then,
when
we're
down
there
in
April,
so
hopefully
we'll
be
able
to
get
the
family
together
again
around
the
internet,
to
community
that
care
about
this
stuff.
B
There
are
folks
that
NCSU
at
Lehigh
at
RPI,
a
number
of
institutions,
the
University
of
Arkansas,
so
that
we
can
help
the
researchers
collaborate
and
then
what
we
do
is
we
watch
and
listen
and
say
who
is
I?
Think
we
should
do
to
help
them
and
that's
where
John
and
I
have
a
great
partnership,
because
he
has
the
technical
team
that
understands
that
better
which
is
wonderful.
And
so
this
is
the
view
of
some
of
the
folks
who
are
working
with.
It
includes
industry,
members,
university
members,
national
labs
agencies,
all
sorts
of
folks.
B
So
as
what
we're
doing
today
and
as
we
move
forward,
we
would
love
to
continue
to
help
coordinating
use
of
the
current
infrastructure
for
current
and
future
needs
for
the
big
data
hubs
and
researchers
and
scientists
you're
supporting
I'm
here
and
for
collaboration
around
the
world.
As
John
mentioned,
we
can
help
coordinate
with
the
state
and
regional
network
for
international
providers
and
that's
part
of
what
John's
team
will
be
doing
as
we
look
at
data
sharing
from
Illinois
to
Canada
as
well
as
Africa
and
Europe.
How
do
we
do
that?
B
B
We're
participating
quite
heavily,
and
the
data
sharing
spoke
out
of
the
Northeast,
with
the
licensing
model
and
ecosystem
for
data
sharing
and
I
was
asked
by
a
number
of
people
for
the
report.
So
here's
the
hot
link
for
the
report.
They
came
out
of
the
data
share
and
we're
taught
that
the
in
September
and
we're
planning
to
do
another.
One
in
the
fall,
but
in
the
meantime,
we'll
be
at
the
Smart
Grid
big
data
workshop
in
April.
So
we
can
look
at
a
real
live
use
case
and,
as
you
heard,
were
engaging
in
the
genomics.
B
Data
transfer
needs
out
of
the
Midwest,
and
so
what
we
want
to
do
is
incorporate
all
your
needs
into
our
future
infrastructure
and
give
really
give
you
a
very
direct
voice
into
what
John
is
listening
to
to
create
this
next
generation
network
plan
for
today
and
our
future
needs.
So
we'd
like
to
hear
from
you
today
and
all
of
your
friends,
you
can
tell
them.
We
want
to
listen
and
and
in
the
future,
and
that's
what
we
wanted
to
share
today.
A
A
So
this
is
Stan
I
had
a
quick
question.
If,
if
it's
okay
for
me
to
ask
it
so
floors,
are
John
I
really
agree
with
you
that
this
idea
of
personnel
available
to
assist
people
with
you
know
that
usually
the
hard
part
is
kind
of
on
the
edge.
So
how
do
you
all
four
see
that
playing
out
in
the
near
future
and
I'll
mute
myself?
A
listen,
yeah.
C
C
You
know
they're
a
little
like
unicorns,
though
they're
really,
you
know
they're
beautiful
and
it's
nice,
but
they're
really
hard
to
find,
and
so
I
think
that
the
approach
that
we're
trying
right
now
is
sort
of
a
team
approach
to
try
to
put
people
in
different
disciplines
together
and
what
the
way
we've
approaches
to
say
that
na2
is,
you
know,
trying
to
sort
of
jumpstart
the
team
I'm
putting
resources
from
my
area
into
it
and
I'm
trying
to
then
via
this
advisory
group.
C
You
know
sort
of
create
a
little
bit
of
a
Coalition
of
the
Willing,
we're
going
to
start
out
with
doing
things
like
the
just,
for
instance,
the
engagement
that
we
have
with
the
Midwest
folks,
where
they've
come
to
us
and
said
you
know,
I've
got
a
lot
of
food,
a
lot
of
data
across
international
lines.
I
know
it's
going
to
be
a
challenge.
C
You
know,
let's
one
of
you
get
in
on
the
planning
and
help
and
that's
the
kind
of
engagement
that
I
think
we'd
like
from
that
I
think
we're
going
to
learn
a
lot
and
hopefully
build
some
process
and
best
practices
out
of
that.
C
I'd
also
love
that
if
we
can
grab
people
that
we
help
so
in
other
words,
if
we
go
and-
and
you
know
bring
a
team
to
a
specific
area
to
help
with
a
project
or
a
region-
and
you
know
we
end
up
doing
some
level
of
work-
shopping,
training,
I'd,
love
to
be
able
to
take
people
from
that
and
say:
hey,
okay,
you
go
ahead
and
help
us
with
the
next
one
right
and
so
to
grow
the
community.
That
way.
C
So
it's
you
know
it's
hard
because
it's
a
big
job
and
it's
hard
to
find
the
right
people,
but
I
you
know.
Fortunately
it
seems
like
a
very
enthusiastic
group
of
people
at
this
point,
we're
having
our
first
face
to
this
meeting
of
the
Advisory
team
at
Global
Summit
in
April,
so
I'm
very
excited
about
that.
So
does
that
answer
your
question
Stan?
It
does
thanks
a
lot
John
sure.
A
Okay,
well
with
that,
we
would
thank
you
so
much
John
in
Florence,
but
that
was
the
really
fantastic
item
for
me.
I
got
a
lot
out
of
it,
because
I
wasn't
as
familiar
with
everything.
You
were
doing:
hey,
hey
Lia!
If
there's,
if
there's
a
second
I,
did
want
to
ask
Florence
a
little
bit
about
the
ILP
and
privacy
and
security
work,
sorry
I!
It
took
a
while
for
my
from
my
to
find
the
controls
for
two
years
so
Florence.
A
What
can
you
tell
us
a
little
bit
more
about
what
you're
doing
with
trust
and
security,
and
are
you
working
right
now
with
any
kind
of
national
skills
after
national
scale
efforts,
whether
it's
in
transportation,
smart
cities?
You
know
any
any
of
the
above,
just
just
to
get
a
sense
of
the
work,
you're
doing
I!
Think
and
we've
talked
about
it
a
little
bit
before,
but
not
in
any
detail,
so
it
would
be.
It
would
be
helpful.
B
There's
a
Smart
Grid
effort
around
your
Chakravarthy
wants
to
work
on
that
from
NCSU
milada
and
because
the
Nova
gem
Texas
A&M,
is
interested
in
working
on
that
and
we
go
to
his
workshop
Renee.
The
one
thing
he
doesn't
really
have
a
really
front
and
center
in
that
workshop
is
is
privacy
and
security,
which
I
think
is
a
key
issue
in
smart
grid,
and
he
knows
it
too,
so
I
think
that's
part
of
what
we're
going
to
talk
about.
Is
there
a
follow
on
that?
We
could
do
together
around
that
space.
B
We
started
talking
to
Yael
about
this
topic
in
the
internet
of
medical
things
and
how
you
really
need
to
worry
about
all
these
spaces
around
that
and
they're
very
interested
in
collaborating
on
that,
because
they
have
the
medical
school
as
well
as
the
hospital,
as
well
as
Medtronic
like
in
East
Hartford,
or
something
like
that,
as
well
as
the
center
for
bioinformatics
and
innovation
and
technology,
something
that
sounds
like
that.
It's
an
acronym
and
so
we've
started
down
these
paths
and
we
started
the
work
with
I
Triple
E.
B
It's
really
more
visionary
right
now,
the
two
things
that
are
happening
in
the
community
to
try
to
push
this
forward
beyond
the
smart
grid
discussion.
The
smart
sidious
discussion
is
the
Ipana
discussion
that
we
just
started
and
I
can
tell
you
what
about
that.
But
I
just
left
that
call
and
they're
looking
at
how
at
the
campus
deal
with
all
this
stuff
and
then
there's
also
some
work.
B
And
if
has
a
glucose
meter
on
it,
actually
is
wirelessly
connected?
She
looks
at
it
and
she
says
three
thousand
that
can't
be
right
and
she
doesn't
know
what
to
do
before
her
glucose
meter
talks
to
her
insulin
pumping.
Is
there
too
much
insulin?
What
do
we
do
about
that?
So
we're
actually
going
to
start
talking
about
that
with
Princeton
hosting
a
workshop
that
we're
hoping
to
have
in
the
May
or
June
timeframe.
So
we
have
organizations
that
want
to
start
diving
into
it.
We
put
this
on
the
table.
B
There
was
metric
article
about
it
last
summer,
so
we
could
start
worrying
about
it.
I
could
I
see
this
way
as
you
soon.
We
have
a
problem
here
being
a
narrative
engineer
right
and
now
what
do
all
the
smart
people?
How
can
we
help
and
it's
not
internet,
it's
the
community
of
smart
people
and
we're
just
trying
to
help
people
come
together
around
it.