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NSF Tags $30M For Game-Changing Internet Research

coondoggie writes "So you want to build a better Internet? The National Science Foundation today said it would spread $30 million over 2-4 projects that radically transform the Internet 'through new security, reliability and collaborative applications. The NSF said its Future Internet Architectures (FIA) program wants: "Technological innovations and the requirements of emerging and yet to be discovered applications, the Internet of the future is likely to be different from that of today. Proposals should not focus on making the existing Internet better through incremental changes, but rather should focus on designing comprehensive architectures that can meet the challenges and opportunities of the 21st century."'"

2 of 119 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Time to disolve NSF? by Truth+is+life · · Score: 4, Informative

    There is much better use for 30M such as spending it on education, which is broken rather than Internet which isn't not so broken.

    That's not the point of the NSF. Besides, as this link http://nsf.gov/pubs/2010/nsf10001/toc.jsp to their FY 2009 report shows, they already spend almost a billion dollars a year on education. Or over 30 times the value of this award. I really don't think you can claim that canceling this award and giving the money to the DoEdu (or even shifting it to the education side of NSF) would be better value for the money.

  2. Re:Likely to be different? by raddan · · Score: 3, Informative

    Actually, rethinking global addressing schemes is on the table for many next-gen Internet projects I've spoken to researchers about. The reason is that router-table growth is not adequately handled in IPv6, nor is the meaning of an IP address very clear in the current Internet. These are major issues. Have a look at Jerome Saltzer's work on naming and addressing. If you want the short version, have a look here.