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The need to support
failure
By Scott Bradner
Network World, 10/05/98
This column is being
written on a Saturday afternoon in San
Francisco while I'm
waiting for the University Corporation for
Advanced Internet
Development (UCAID) member meeting to start.
UCAID, better known
by the name of one of its projects, Internet 2,
is meeting here to
bring its members up to date on the many projects
that are now under
way.
UCAID's basic
mission is to help facilitate the development of the
next generation of
Internet applications (www.ucaid.edu). In
addition, using
Project Abilene - a nationwide, high-speed network
that will soon
interconnect many U.S. higher education institutions -
UCAID will create a
proof-of-concept network that will support
emerging
quality-of-service and multicast technologies.
UCAID and projects
such as Project Abilene are funded by UCAID
member institutions
and many major high-tech firms. In particular,
Qwest, Cisco and
Nortel are providing a lot of support for Project
Abilene. There is no
direct U.S. governmental funding going into any
of these activities.
Instead, government activities in this general area
include projects
such as the Very High-Speed Backbone Network
Service and the High
Performance Connections Program, both funded
by the National
Science Foundation (www.nsf.gov).
UCAID represents
exactly the kind of private support for continuing
technology
development the U.S. government hopes to achieve when
it provides support
for basic research.
Governments invested
a few hundred million dollars into the Internet.
That investment,
plus a few billion from universities and
corporations, has
produced an infrastructure that is worth hundreds of
billions of dollars
per year and is doubling every few months.
Success stories such
as the Internet are a good thing, but we should
remember to remember
all the history.
Corporations around
the world provide significant support to
university
researchers to help them develop technologies that could be
of use to
corporations in the future. UCAID's Project Abilene is only
one of the more
visible of the current projects - things tend to be
somewhat visible
when the vice president of the U.S. is on hand to
announce the start
of the project. But this sort of corporate support
tends to be late in
the game. By that I mean that corporations tend to
support technologies
that are getting close to mature. They cannot
generally afford to
provide support early on for new technologies that
may fail.
Supporting failure,
which I admit sounds funny, is a good role for
government. Venture
capitalists assume a significant failure rate
among the start-ups
they fund, but venture capitalists generally only
fund ideas well past
the research stage. Someone needs to be ready to
fund ideas that may
fail. The lesson of history is that we very much
need the government
to keep funding early research, so the
government cannot
back off just because the private sector is funding
projects such as
Abilene.
Disclaimer: Failure
and Harvard does not parse as a concept, and the
above are my own
ramblings.