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January
6, 2005
One Course, Many Classrooms: West Coast Universities
Team
With Microsoft To Test Peer-To-Peer Remote Learning Technology
ConferenceXP and
Internet2 Link Students at UCSD, UC Berkeley, UW, Microsoft
By Doug Ramsey
In December,
84 students enrolled in a graduate course on Information Technology
& Public Policy sat down for their final class – but
not in the same classroom. Instead, the students were scattered
among four separate locations, thousands of miles apart. Eighteen
students took the class for credit at the University of California,
San Diego (together with another dozen students auditing the
course), with roughly 20 students each at the University of
Washington (UW), UC Berkeley, and Microsoft Research.
“It didn’t
feel like ‘being there,’ but that did not necessarily
detract from the experience,” said Jonathan Weinberg,
a second-year Master’s candidate in Computer Science and
Engineering (CSE) at UCSD. “The goal of this technology
should not be to imitate the in-person experience, which it
cannot, but rather to achieve something that is qualitatively
comparable, which I think it did.” (For more student reaction
to the course, go to http://www.jacobsschool.ucsd.edu/news_events/release.sfe?id=326.)
The far-flung course
introduced grad students to various information technology (IT)
policy issues, including intellectual property law and economics,
technology transfer, workforce issues such as outsourcing, privacy
and encryption, and more.
"A distributed
classroom offers enormous advantages -- diverse faculty perspectives,
diverse student perspectives, the ability to attract phenomenal
guest speakers," said Ed Lazowska, a professor of computer
science at UW. "The technology is not perfect, but it's
much better than 'good enough,' and this course, while also
not perfect, was far richer than any one institution could have
provided on its own."
Lazowska was the principal
instructor for the IT & Public Policy course, along with
Steve Maurer of UC Berkeley’s Goldman School of Public
Policy. In addition, guest speakers included Dave Dill (Stanford)
on electronic voting; Rich Newton (Berkeley) on technology transfer;
Bob Gomulkiewicz (UW Law School) on open source contracts; Ed
Felten (Princeton) on spam, DMCA/DRM, and P2P/copyright; Brad
DeLong (Berkeley) on the economics of global sourcing (outsourcing);
and Tap Parikh (UW) and Eric Brewer (UC Berkeley) on ICT and
rural development.
Computer Science and
Engineering professors William Griswold and Geoff Voelker organized
the course at UCSD. “Our students were able to benefit
from the equivalent of a distinguished lecture series without
the university having to budget $15,000 to fly everyone in,”
said Voelker. “Students also benefited because much of
the material was recent and timely, so having the experts teach
it via distance learning ‘fast-forwards’ the percolation
process.” He also noted the broader perspective that came
from working with faculty and students from other universities
as well as Microsoft engineers enrolled at UW.
The university classrooms
were linked to each other and to Microsoft in Redmond, WA, via
Internet2 networking, with support from Microsoft's ConferenceXP
software platform, which is the result of a collaborative research
effort between Microsoft Research and a number of universities.
It uses a peer-to-peer (P2P) architecture and IP Multicast network
topology to ensure scalability. “A single peer can join
a ConferenceXP session without affecting the remaining clients,”
said Bryan Barnett, group manager for university relations at
Microsoft Research. “Each client machine communicates
directly with each of the other three. It’s no longer
a hub-and-spoke model.” ConferenceXP also allows each
location to transmit and receive at various bandwidths.
“Traditional
distance learning has been delivered by disseminating a lecture
from a single site, where the professor resides, to a number
of remote locations,” noted Griswold. “In this course,
each site could see each of the other three sites and talk to
them freely without worrying about any technological limitations.”
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UW's
Ed Lazowska on screen at UCSD |
The distributed course
also used Classroom Presenter, a ConferenceXP-based application
developed by UW Computer Science & Engineering Professor
Richard Anderson, first while on sabbatical at Microsoft Research
and subsequently at UW. Classroom Presenter is a distributed
presentation system for Tablet PCs that provides "virtual
mylar" -- the ability to "mark up" (and archive)
PowerPoint transparencies. “Classroom Presenter breathes
the life back into PowerPoint presentations,” explained
Lazowska. “It also provides great features for student
interaction that we didn't utilize in this course, since only
the instructors used Tablet PCs -- that's for next year!”
Apart from scalability,
Microsoft’s Barnett says the main goal of ConferenceXP
is to close what he calls “the fidelity gap.” “Most
applications now deliver something that is roughly 75% faithful
to the in-person experience,” he said. “With Internet2
bandwidth, we can close the gap further in terms of very low
latency, high-quality video with very good resolution, and multiple
video and data streams being delivered simultaneously and independently.”
That goal is shared
by researchers on a number of high-speed networking projects
underway at UCSD and the California Institute for Telecommunications
and Information Technology [Cal-(IT)²], with which both
Griswold and Voelker are affiliated. The National Science Foundation
is investing nearly $19 million on three such projects: the
OptIPuter; the Fast Wired and Wireless Grid (FWGrid); and the
Laboratory for the Ocean Observatory Knowledge Integration Grid
(LOOKING). LOOKING itself is a joint venture of UW, UCSD and
other institutions, and is led by UW’s Lazowska, with
co-PI [and Cal-(IT)² director] Larry Smarr, a computer
science professor at UCSD. The OptIPuter and LOOKING both involve
distributed scientific collaboration among researchers at UCSD,
UW and other sites, over dedicated lightpaths that will outstrip
the bandwidth now available over Internet2 connections. “All
of these projects are exploring the opportunities offered by
fat-pipe networking,” said Griswold. “We’ve
been used to 1MB per second of bandwidth between any pair of
computers, and now we’re starting to ask what we can do
if we go to 1GB or 10GB and beyond.”
Microsoft's Barnett
is the first to admit that current technology is not yet perfect.
“We're pushing the envelope. IP Multicast is not widely
supported by universities connected to Internet2,” he
said. “It also requires a great deal of care at each site
to ensure that the best equipment is available and that the
technology is working properly, in order for the feed coming
from the classroom to be consistent and dependable.” Technology
support during the IT & Public Policy course came from staffers
at Microsoft and all three campuses, including Steve Hopper
and Marvin McNett at UCSD, Rod Prieto and Fred Videon at UW,
as well as UC Berkeley’s Marvin Motley and Arthur Yeap,
and Tim Chow at Microsoft.
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UC
Berkeley's Brad DeLong on outsourcing |
“ConferenceXP
is a research platform designed to facilitate various kinds
of research,” said Microsoft’s Barnett. “This
course was one of several demonstrations we are undertaking
with various partners to gauge how close we are to fulfilling
our early objectives.” The software giant’s research
arm will support future distance-learning projects, including
a joint winter course that began on January 4 on transaction
processing for e-commerce. The principal instructor is Microsoft’s
Phil Bernstein, a pioneer in the field. Enrolled students are
located at UW, Microsoft Research, and UCSD, where the faculty
coordinator is CSE professor Yannis Papakonstantinou. Also scheduled:
an international collaboration linking the Eisenberg School
of Business at the University of Massachusetts with Ireland’s
National University in Galway. Noted Barnett: “Without
pre-judging the results of these demos, we do appear to be approaching
the point where this type of distance learning becomes feasible.”
Microsoft is also looking
to adapt its software for tele-medicine and remote control of
lab equipment – areas where UCSD researchers are already
active, notably as part of the Cal-(IT)²-funded Smart Vivarium
project.
“Our job is to
answer the question: What are the benefits to users if we can
provide them with this quality of experience,” concluded
Barnett. “It may not be sufficient, but our job is to
create those experiences and ask how the dynamics of education
will change, and if so, whether we can close that fidelity gap
[between remote and in-person classroom experiences] to within
5%.”
“What makes this
particular experiment valuable is that it points the way to
a fundamental change in distance learning to a multi-point,
peer-to-peer model,” added Griswold. “These new
fat pipes of bandwidth will change not only the equipment we
use, but also the way we teach and learn.”
“This course
allowed us to take the classic classroom environment and then
augment it with advantages that distance learning can provide
over traditional techniques,” summed up UCSD’s Geoff
Voelker. “We still need to address the difficulty of getting
students to interact more easily and more often with students
and instructors at other locations. But the bottom line is whether
the benefits outweigh the shortcomings. For this course, the
answer was yes, without a doubt.”
Media Contact: Doug
Ramsey (858) 822-5825
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