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La Universidad Javeriana de Cali presentará mañana el libro “Objetos de Aprendizaje: prácticas y perspectivas educativas”. El evento será transmitido en directo por la Red Nacional Académica de Tecnología Avanzada (RENATA).

RedCLARA provides a free virtual collaboration environment for all research communities in Latin America; this environment is called Colaboratorio, a web platform in which each member community has its own space for interaction. Through the tools and services offered in Colaboratorio you will be able to participate in discussions, forums and events with your own community and all the others which are part of RedCLARA, organise and participate in web conferences (VC Espresso), book multipoint rooms for H.323 conferences, transfer files of up to 10GB (eNVIO), receive information on funding sources for the implementation of projects and consolidate your network of contacts and professional partners.

Remember that in order to make use of the tools made available for you in Colaboratorio you have to register in the portal!

Advanced networks allow scientists, researchers, academics, professors and students to collaborate by sharing information and tools through a series of network interconnections. These networks represent an area that is different from commercial (or public) internet; an area that exists in a dedicated parallel space across the globe exclusively for research and education communities; this is what we call advanced networks. Latin America’s advanced network is RedCLARA, which interconnects the national academic networks from Latin American countries, and every continent and/or subcontinent in the globe has its own regional network. All these networks are in turn interconnected to each other.

 

By making use of advanced networks, academics and researchers can collaborate across different countries and continents, regardless of distances and borders.

 

Advanced networks serve two fundamental purposes:

  • To support the work of researchers and academics through the provision of an large-capacity infrastructure for data communication, which enables the fast transfer of large amounts of data.
  • To act as a powerful research tool, by providing a platform over which researchers and innovators can develop and test new network services and technologies.

 

Many of the advances in telecommunications and networks were developed thanks to advanced networks and many of the technologies that will be used in the future are currently being developed in them.

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La ópera Andrea Chenier de Umberto Giordano será transmitida por RENATA, como la tercera sesión del Curso de Iniciación a la Ópera del Gran Teatre del Liceu de Barcelona. El evento es el jueves 18 de febrero a partir de las 13 horas de Colombia (-5 GMT).

RedCLARA is a non-profit organisation, and an advanced network; it is a human network and a physical one.

 

Human network: RedCLARA -Cooperación Latino Americana de Redes Avanzadas (Latin American Cooperation of Advanced Networks)- is a non-profit International Law Organisation, whose legal existence is dated on 23 December 2003, when it was acknowledged as such by the legislation of Uruguay. RedCLARA is constituted by 13 Latin American countries and its Assembly –where each country has representation- meets every six months to define courses of action and the policies to be implemented.

 

Physical network: RedCLARA is the only regional Advanced Internet network in Latin America. 

 

The backbone of RedCLARA is comprised of ten main routing nodes connected in a point-to-point topology. Each main node (IP - Internet Protocol) characterizes a PoP (Point of Presence) for RedCLARA; nine of them are located in a different Latin American country -Sao Paulo (SAO - Brazil), Buenos Aires (BUE - Argentina), Santiago (SCL - Chile), Lima (LIM - Peru), Guayaquil (GYE - Ecuador), Bogota (BOG - Colombia), Panama (PTY - Panama), San Salvador (SSV - El Salvador) and Tijuana (TIJ - Mexico)-, while the tenth is placed in Miami (MIA - United States).

 

All LA-NREN connections to the RedCLARA network, are ending at one of the nine Latin American nodes. Thanks to the ALICE (ended in March 2008) and ALICE2 (running from December 2008 to August 2012) projects, the RedCLARA backbone is interconnected with a multi-gigabit pan-European data communications network named GÉANT through the RedCLARA SAO PoP to the GÉANT2 entry point in Madrid (Spain - ES). RedCLARA is also connected to USA trough the links established in RedCLARA's PoP in MIA and SAO, the first one connected to the Atlantic Wave exchange point and the second to the MAN LAN in New York. Some important links have been gave to RedCLARA by RNP and WHREN-LILA. RNOP has contributed with two links of 1 Gbps between Panama and Miami, and a 10 Gbps stretch between Santiago (Chile) and Miami.

 

In terms of capacity, RedCLARA is developing a new infrastructure between the Latin American nodes; this infrastructure is based in IRUs (Irrestrictible Right of Use) at 10 or 15 years. Thanks to this, RedCLARA already has dark fibre in Central America going from Panama to Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Honduras, El Salvador, Guatemala and Mexico, a 10 Gbps backbone between Santiago (Chile) and Buenos Aires (Argentina), and a lambda of 10 Gbps between Buenos Aires (Argentina) and Porto Alegre (Brazil).

 

On June 10th, 2003, in Valle de Bravo, Mexico, the Memorandum of Association of the Latin American Cooperation of Advanced Networks, CLARA, was signed. CLARA is a non profit civil association which develops, administrates and runs a regional network of Advanced Internet called RedCLARA. With the passing of time, the name RedCLARA was used to refer both to the institution and the network; in response to this habit made popular among CLARA’s members, peer networks at a global level and researchers, since March 2011 CLARA and the network it operates are both known as RedCLARA.

Rambla República de México 6125.
Montevideo 11400. Uruguay.

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