Click here to receive your FREE subscription to Campus Technology
8/1/2008
BRYANT'S IPICS network connects first responders throughout a tri-state region, and helps streamline communications between public safety agencies and the campus community.
Through community partnerships and a sleek IP interoperability and collaboration system, a university protects its own campus and communities across and outside the state.
Today, anyone involved in higher education knows that campus safety and security is of paramount importance. Yet, at Bryant University (RI), technologists have taken current safety and security measures to another level, leveraging their campus's new IP Interoperability and Collaboration System (IPICS) to enhance interoperability with local first responders, making it possible to better respond to normal day-to-day events on campus, as well as to more serious life-safety issues on campus and in surrounding communities.
These advancements are the culmination of years of work. In 2005, Bryant tech leaders turned to Cisco Systems to upgrade the campus LAN, to enable campuswide IP telephony and other voice, video, and data applications. Then, starting in 2006, the school deployed the IPICS system to improve campus operations and increase security by enabling direct radio communication between Bryant's Public Safety, Campus Management, and Residence Life departments.
One of the initial goals was to use the new IPICS network to improve public safety response time and tighten the integration between Rhode Island's public safety agencies and the campus community. But according to project lead Richard Siedzik, the university's director of computer and telecommunications services, administrators found that while the state had made progress toward first responder interoperability, lack of countywide dispatch capabilities meant that each fire dispatch center throughout the state operated its own independent radio frequency, making interoperability challenging at best.
In 2007, Bryant began working with regional agencies in several towns throughout Rhode Island, as well as with regional dispatch centers in Connecticut and Massachusetts, to demonstrate how a virtual public safety network enabled by the university's own IPICS network could connect regional dispatch centers throughout the tri-state region and help shrink the interoperability gap. Since that initial effort, the plan has expanded throughout the Northeast. Currently, working closely with the fire departments in Smithfield and Harmony, RI, Bryant has extended IPICS to a number of public safety agencies in the Rhode Island towns of North Smithfield, Cumberland, Glocester, Foster, Woonsocket, and the Quinebaug Valley Regional Dispatch Center in Connecticut. The school also has connected with Rhode Island's statewide E-911 system and the state's chapter of the American Red Cross.
Knowing what to spend on data protection and where to focus the effort isn't easy. Security assessments help eliminate the guesswork by identifying where your most critical risks lurk.
Who says classroom learning has to culminate with a formal degree? Tech-enabled lifelong learning programs are utilizing videoconferencing, vodcasting, and more to reach out to the 50-plus nontraditional student.
As sustainability efforts ramp up on campuses, educators share eco-friendly dorm practices-- the ideal way to educate students about environmental issues.
Sure, cellular and handheld devices are quintessential communication tools, but savvy institutions are getting extra bang for their mobile tech bucks.
Colleges and universities worldwide are turning to the hosted SaaS model and saying goodbye to issues like patch management and server optimization.
Have you given up trying to bring faculty into the world of emerging technology for teaching and learning?