High-speed link to aid research, state's economic development
BATON ROUGE - Imagine a doctor at the LSU hospital in Shreveport training an imaging device on a patient's damaged eye and the image being transmitted at the speed of light to a new imaging center being constructed at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette, where a doctor steps into a multi-sided room, in effect inside the eye, to determine what is wrong.
With a high-speed computer link that next year will tie six universities (ULL, Louisiana Tech, LSU-Baton Rouge, Southern University-Baton Rouge, University of New Orleans and Tulane) and the LSU medical schools in Shreveport and New Orleans to the National Lambda Rail, science fiction will become practical science in Louisiana.
The Louisiana Optical Network Initiative (LONI), scheduled to be active by May 2005, should lead to remarkable research and economical development opportunities, state officials say. Universities could work with businesses to develop new products or ways to improve production.
"LONI is a very serious economic development platform," Dan Henderson of the Louisiana Department of Economic Development told a legislative panel reviewing technology developments Tuesday.
Mike Abbiatti, associate commissioner of higher education for information and learning technology, said LONI would be a "major change agent" that could reshape Louisiana by generating economic development in all parts of the state. He said that like the Mississippi River generated a delta and carved out islands, LONI's "river of facts and figures" will be "carving out islands of opportunity."
"The geographic Mississippi Delta was transformed by low tech and hand power," he said of man's efforts to control the river. "The economic Mississippi Delta is being transformed by high tech and mind power."
Although companies cannot tie directly into the fiber optic loop that runs around the state, they can benefit from associating with the universities that are tied into it, Henderson said.
The loop runs from Baton Rouge, which will be the state's tie to the National Lambda Rail, the information super highway, through Lafayette, Alexandria, Shreveport, Ruston, Monroe, Jackson and Tylertown, Miss., and back to Baton Rouge. A separate loop links Baton Rouge and New Orleans.
To maintain quality, "booster stations" are located about every 50 miles on the loop in such places as Port Barre and St. Landry in St. Landry Parish, in Derry and Coushatta along I-49 and in Arcadia, Monroe and Tallulah along I-20.
Small "super computers" are to be installed at ULL, Tech, Southern, UNO and Tulane to tie into LSU's "SuperMike," one of the world's fastest computers, said Charles McMahon of LSU's office of
telecommunications.
Abbiatti said after the original loops prove effective and begin generating revenue through grants to universities for research and state revenues through business development, other extensions are planned, especially to the University of Louisiana at Monroe since the fiber optic loop passes through the city. He said the first focus is on the state's six research universities.
"This is an investments and investments must pay off," Abbiatti said.
Completing the LONI network will cost about $25 million and in her address to the Legislature at the beginning of this year's session, Gov. Kathleen Blanco said she's budgeting $40 million over the next 10 years.