News 02-11-2003
        
        
        
        
		
				Sponsor: With strained IT resources, this university reduced its backup 
  time by 50 percent! 
Pace University (New York) experienced a sudden increase in projects that heightened 
  IT support and resource demands - doubling its server capacity in just a few 
  months. Backups became too time consuming. Solution: Pace chose Computer Associates 
  International, Inc.'s BrightStor(tm) Enterprise Backup. Now the school can effectively 
  back up its servers in less time and with less effort. Visit http://info.101com.com/default.asp?id=258 
  to read more. Register and win a Palm Pilot... FREE!!! Go to http://info.101com.com/default.asp?id=259 
  and become eligible for our Higher Education Palm Pilot promotion. 
Stanford Studies Online Help for Chronically Ill 
Stanford University Medical Center is hosting a six-week online workshop to 
  teach self-management skills for people with heart disease, diabetes, or lung 
  disease. Called Self Management @ Stanford, the online workshop helps participants 
  learn skills to manage their chronic disease and to maintain or increase their 
  level of activity. The workshops will feed a two-year study on how effective 
  the Internet can be in helping people with chronic medical conditions live better, 
  more active lives. Over the course of a year, workshop groups will complete 
  three online questionnaires about their health status. The results will be compared 
  against a control group composed of non-workshop participants. 
For more information visit: http://healthyliving.stanford.edu 
Sponsor: William Taylor Interviewed on Syllabus Radio 
  http://info.101com.com/default.asp?id=266 
Syllabus Radio offers topical interviews with leading educators and creative 
  thinkers in higher education on the hot issues of the day. This week, log on 
  to http://info.101com.com/default.asp?id=266 
  and listen to host Judith Boettcher and William "Punch" Taylor, consultant to 
  the Internet2 PKI Laboratory at Dartmouth College, as they discuss the implementation 
  of wireless technology on campus. 
Clemson Financial System to Chart Grant Growth 
Clemson University has finished installing PeopleSoft accounts receivable and 
  billing modules, a project that will enable the school to standardize its billing 
  and receivables processes campuswide. The project was completed in less than 
  four months with the help of Ciber Inc., which specializes in PeopleSoft installations. 
  The software was first picked to bring campus administrative systems into Y2Kcompliance, 
  but then expanded to include the financial modules. At the time, Clemson wanted 
  to increase its research and sponsored programs to exceed $100 million as part 
  of a goal to become one of the nation's top 20 universities. With the new system, 
  Clemson can perform invoicing and management of receivables for the non-student 
  university and foundation receivables, as well as all sponsored research. 
eCollege Says Revenues, Earnings Rising 
Course management system provider eCollege said revenues for the fourth quarter 
  of 2002 were $6.3 million, up from $5.6 million for the fourth quarter of 2001. 
  With that, the company reported that revenue for the year increased 19 percent 
  to $23.7 million, from $19.8 million in 2001. For 2002, the Company's pre-tax 
  earnings improved to a negative $251 thousand compared to a negative $7.7 million 
  for 2001. The company also reported that for the 2002 fall term, the total number 
  of student enrollments was 157,000 compared to 96,000 for the 2001 fall term. 
  About 80,000 of the enrollments represented distance students, up from 58,000 
  distance students in the fall term last year. The number of distance courses 
  rose to 4,900, a 27 percent increase over fall 2001. 
Cal State Campus to Offer TV Tech Curriculum 
California State University-Dominguez Hills is offering a live Internet class 
  covering technologies used in the entertainment industry. Those who pass the 
  course, which will include online lectures and discussions, will earn a "certificate 
  of completion in entertainment technology." The first course, on the Technology 
  of Television, will cover the basics of television technology, and move into 
  digital and high definition TV, interactive TV, broadcast, cable, satellite, 
  and video, as well as Hollywood's TV business. Follow-up courses include the 
  Technology of Movies, to be offered in March, and the Technology of New Media, 
  in April. The school said the target students are business professionals in 
  the entertainment industry. 
For more information visit: www.csudh.edu/extendeded 
Kurzweil to Offer Teacher Assistive Tech Training 
Kurzweil Educational Systems, which makes reading technology systems for people 
  with learning and visual disabilities, has launched a "professional development 
  program" to train educators in integrating its latest platform, the Kurzweil 
  3000, into classrooms. The company is offering hands-on basic and advanced workshops 
  in both half-day and full-day formats for groups of 20. The basic workshop is 
  designed to introduce teachers to Kurzweil's reading features, writing supports, 
  study skills tools, test taking, and scanning. The advanced workshop is designed 
  to take educators who are familiar with the techno