EVO wins 2009 I2 IDEA Award!
ARLINGTON, VA -
April 28, 2009
- Today at its annual Spring Member Meeting,
Internet2 announced that the "Enabling Virtual
Organizations" or EVO application has been awarded
the 2009 Internet2 Driving Exemplary Applications
(IDEA) Award. The annual Internet2 IDEA award seeks
to recognize leading innovators who have created and
deployed advanced network applications that have
enabled transformational progress in research,
teaching and learning.

EVO, developed by researchers at the California
Institute of Technology (Caltech) is a
videoconferencing and desktop sharing system designed
to provide a seamless real-time collaboration
platform for bridging remotely located collaborators
and resources in support of science and research.
Originally designed to meet the unique and demanding
needs of the High Energy Physics (HEP) community, EVO
is today in wide and continual use by thousands of
collaborators in many disciplines, as well as by many
groups of educators and students worldwide.
"Researchers involved in major global science
projects rely on remote access to both collaborators
and data on a daily basis throughout all phases of
their project, from the original conception and
design, to construction and commissioning, to the
delivery of results and eventually their scientific
discoveries," said Philippe Galvez, EVO's chief
architect and senior research scientist at Caltech.
Harvey Newman, the Professor of Physics and head of
US LHCNet who leads the Caltech team and a member of
Internet2's Strategic Planning Executive Committee
and Architecture and Operations Council said:
Developing the EVO system was absolutely critical to
support the work in the HEP community, and it has
since provided a pathway for many other disciplines
to rethink how they can leverage remote resources to
achieve breakthroughs in their respective fields. We
look forward to future developments by the EVO team
to meet the rapidly evolving needs of scientific
communities worldwide.
Chosen from many distinguished nominations, the
winning submissions were judged on the depth of their
positive impact on primary users, their technical
merit, and the likelihood that the application would
be more broadly adopted.

The EVO architecture emerged from over ten years of
development and large-scale operation of
collaborative tools, and Caltech's unique
communications fabric for high-performance messaging,
pervasive monitoring and autonomous control of
global-scale systems called MonALISA
(monalisa.caltech.edu). EVO allows users
throughout a worldwide scientific collaboration to
integrate standards-based collaboration into all
phases of their daily work, whether working on
desktops or laptops with any of the major operating
systems, in conference rooms using standard
videoconferencing equipment, in experimental control
rooms or auditoriums.
Through the use of intelligent agents, EVO
automatically directs the data streams, optimally
interlinks the sites participating in a conference,
and moderates the flows and their quality to
accommodate a wide range of network conditions. This
provides round the clock non-stop system operations
supporting many thousands of users, with a minimum of
human intervention. On the client side, EVO supports
a wide range of audio, video and display devices,
including support for HD (1080i) sessions on mass
market PC systems with large single or multiple
screens at low cost. EVO's OpenGL-based 3D VIEVO
interface has the unique capability of handling a
wide variety of real-time high-resolution video,
audio and other content in the form of "objects" for
state-of-the-art scientific collaborative sessions.
"It is clear that the EVO project has had a
significant impact on its primary user base within
the high energy physics field and has already shown
great potential for supporting many other communities
within the research and education space," said Jack
Suess, chair of the IDEA award judging committee,
vice president for Information Technology and CIO of
the University of Maryland, Baltimore County. "We
applaud EVO and its developers for this breakthrough
work which we believe serves as a model for the
entire community."
The IDEA Award was presented at Internet2's 2009
Spring Member Meeting held in Arlington, Virginia on
April 28, 2009. Also to be recognized at the awards
ceremony are two honorable mentions:
* The NSF-funded DRAGON (Dynamic Resource Allocation
via GMPLS Optical Networks) project, with development
collaborators from University of Maryland,
Mid-Atlantic Crossroads, University of Southern
California (USC) Information Sciences Institute (ISI)
East, and George Mason University. For more
information, visit
http://dragon.maxgigapop.net/twiki/bin/view/DRAGON/WebHome.
*
The Muse project, with development collaborators from
MAGPI, MCNC, the University of Pennsylvania, and the
University of Washington. For more information,
visit
http://k20.internet2.edu/.
Additional
information about the Internet2 IDEA Awards can be
found at http://www.internet2.edu/idea/.
For additional information on EVO,
visit: http://evo.caltech.edu
About
Internet2
Internet2 is the foremost U.S. advanced networking
consortium. Led by the research and education
community since 1996, Internet2 promotes the missions
of its members by p roviding both leading-edge
network capabilities and unique partnership
opportunities that together facilitate the
development, deployment and use of revolutionary
Internet technologies. Internet2 brings the U.S.
research and academic community together with
technology leaders from industry, government and the
international community to undertake collaborative
efforts that have a fundamental impact on tomorrow's
Internet. For more information,
visit http://www.internet2.edu.