Intel to help establish PlanetLab in India
By Our Corporate Bureau | 15 May 2004
Mumbai: Intel India today announced that it is working with the Indian Institute of Information Technology, Bangalore (IIIT — B) and Indian Institute of Technology, Roorkee (IIT — R) to establish the first PlanetLab test bed in India. PlanetLab is a globally distributed test bed for developing, deploying and accessing planetary-scale network services.
The PlanetLab test bed will be used to implement and test the performance of various protocols for networking and distributed computing and to develop location independent information systems. Intel and the research institutes will investigate the performance of the protocols that provide different levels of consistency ranging from strong to weak.
"PlanetLab is an excellent example of the new open, collaborative research model that allows academic and industry researchers to work together to architect new emerging technologies," says Frank Spindler, vice president, corporate technology group, Intel Corporation.
He explains, "PlanetLab creates a virtual laboratory that researchers around the world can use to develop novel internet services, while at the same time exploring how to evolve the internet to better support continued innovation. With today's announcement, India will play a role in developing a new class of services and applications that are distributed over much of the Web and will affect the design of intelligent servers, network storage and network processors."
Researchers from IIT — R, IIIT — B and Intel India will work together to define and deploy new services in PlanetLab. Intel expects a majority of implementation and evaluation to take place in India on nodes participating in PlanetLab and that many services will eventually migrate into the global PlanetLab infrastructure.
Researchers will regularly report their progress to other PlanetLab participants, in the form of written reports, presentations at PlanetLab meetings, and visits to Intel research sites in India and abroad. PlanetLab participants from India and abroad will regularly communicate amongst themselves as a community in order to provide guidance, facilitate resource allocation and assist with the solving of other technical and non-technical problems.
According to Prof. Sadagopan, Director of IIIT-Bangalore,. IIIT-B has long term research interests in several areas of computing & communications. "Our USP is to look at cutting edge technology use in an innovative manner. Planet Labs fits our vision admirably well."
Prof Srinath Srinivasa of IIIT — B explains the evolution of internet services as the next generation of services where software applications can be built with embedded services that are available over the internet, much the same way that documents embed hyperlinks to other documents. This changes the paradigm of marketing software products and helps in making software products cost effective and less prone to piracy. The PLAN project at IIIT-B under the PlanetLab initiative, addresses a crucial issue towards this end: coordination. Whenever services are composed together to form applications, coordination becomes a very tricky issue. The job of coordination entails maintaining the system's 'dynamic integrity' in the face of multiple service instances running simultaneously. As an analogy, consider a road network that provides 'services' to automobiles. In doing so, the road network should establish and impose a set of traffic rules to maintain the overall system integrity. PLAN is a framework that enables one to define and impose such coordination constraints,.
About PlanetLab
Planet Lab is an open, globally distributed test bed for developing, deploying and accessing planetary-scale network services. There are currently 370 + machines at 156 sites worldwide available to support both short-term experiments and long-running network services. To date, more than 200 research projects at top academic institutions including MIT, Stanford, UC Berkeley, Princeton and the University of Washington have used Planet Lab to experiment with such diverse topics as distributed storage, network mapping, peer-to-peer systems, distributed hash tables, and distributed query processing.
Planet Lab creates a unique environment in which to conduct experiments at Internet Scale. The most obvious is that network services deployed on Planet Lab experience all of the behaviors of the real Internet where the only thing predictable is unpredictability (latency, bandwidth, paths taken). A second advantage is that Planet Lab provides a diverse perspective on the Internet in terms of connection properties, network presence, and geographical location. The broad perspective on the Internet enables development and deployment of a new class of services that see the network from many different angles.
Latest articles
Featured articles
The analog antidote: perception, reality, and the "Windows crisis" narrative
By Cygnus | 17 Feb 2026
Viral claims of a Windows collapse contrast with market data showing a slower shift as enterprises weigh AI, hardware costs, and legacy systems.
The analog antidote: why Americans are trading algorithms for physical media
By Cygnus | 16 Feb 2026
Vinyl, books, and DVDs are seeing renewed interest as Americans seek ownership, focus, and a break from screen fatigue in an increasingly digital world.
China opens market to 53 African nations in zero-tariff pivot
By Cygnus | 16 Feb 2026
China will grant zero-tariff access to 53 African nations from May 2026, reshaping global trade ties and deepening economic links across the Global South.
The deregulation “holy grail”: Trump EPA dismantles the legal bedrock of climate policy
By Cygnus | 13 Feb 2026
The Trump EPA moves to rescind the 2009 Endangerment Finding, reshaping federal climate authority and business risk.
Tokenising the gilt: what the UK’s digital bond pilot could mean for sovereign debt
By Cygnus | 12 Feb 2026
HM Treasury selects HSBC Orion and Ashurst LLP for its Digital Gilt Instrument (DIGIT) pilot. A deep dive into the architecture, legal framework, and the shift toward near real-time settlement.
The silicon-rich AI race: how Cisco’s G300 puts networking at the center of compute
By Cygnus | 11 Feb 2026
Cisco's new Silicon One G300 targets AI data center bottlenecks as networking becomes central to compute performance.
Server CPU Shortages Grip China as AI Boom Strains Intel and AMD Supply Chains
By Cygnus | 06 Feb 2026
Intel and AMD server CPU shortages are hitting China as AI data center demand surges, pushing lead times to six months and driving prices higher.
Budget 2026-27 Seeks Fiscal Balance Amid Rupee Volatility and Industrial Stagnation
By Cygnus | 02 Feb 2026
India's Budget 2026-27 targets fiscal discipline with record capex as markets tumble, the rupee weakens and manufacturing struggles to regain momentum.
The Thirsty Cloud: Why 2026 Is the Year AI Bottlenecks Shift From Chips to Water
By Axel Miller | 28 Jan 2026
As AI server density surges in 2026, data centers face a new bottleneck deeper than chips — the massive water demand required for cooling next-generation infrastructure.

