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OPINION
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The Cost of Doing Business Differently
Terry Calhoun, Commentator
Society for College and University Planning (SCUP)
University of Michigan
PeopleSoft Inc., which has focused most on the higher education niche of the
enterprise software market, and has hundreds of college and university customers,
recently made a $1.75 billion offer for J.D. Edwards. PeopleSoft's mainstay
is high-end, enterprise human resources software. J.D. Edwards' expertise is
in mid-size, manufacturing-integration software. PeopleSoft rival Oracle Corp.,
then made a $6.3 billion hostile takeover bid for PeopleSoft. Many in higher
education are alarmed.
PeopleSoft users are legitimately worried and will certainly suffer in the
short term. We think that regardless of who merges with whom, the net result
may be a diminishment of the importance of the higher education segment of the
enterprise software business—to PeopleSoft, Oracle, SAP, Microsoft, SCT—
and whatever other players end up in that competition. More institutions will
modify their business practices to be more like software users in other industries.
Some will reconsider homegrown—especially with regard to areas without
parallel in other industries, such as student services.
Read more
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IT NEWS |
Oracle's PeopleSoft Plans Alarm Higher Ed User Group
The Higher Education User Group (HEUG) decried Oracle Corp.'s plans to acquire
PeopleSoft. "As part of Oracle Corp.'s hostile takeover attempt of PeopleSoft,
[its] threat to terminate development of our higher education applications is
appalling," said HUEG president Ola Faucher. "The offer to help us
migrate our applications onto a different suite is unacceptable
A migration
to an ERP suite we purposely did not choose
would force our institutions
to expend vast amounts of money, precious staff time and talent, and place our
core business processes at risk."
Read more
Watch Out Google, Here Comes Vivisimo
A commercial spin-off from Carnegie Mellon University's computer science program—Vivisimo
Inc.— has reached nearly $1 million in federal research grants, the latest
a $350,000 homeland security contract. Vivisimo's search engine clusters search
results topically. For example, results for a search for the word "cell"
might be broken down into cellular biology and cellular telephone categories
in a way that users might find more useful. It has been named the "Best
Meta-search Engine" two years in a row.
(Pittsburgh Post-Gazette)
Read more
Supreme Court Upholds Internet Filters
In a decision that affects staff and users of thousands of public libraries—and
delighted owners of filtering software companies—the U.S. Supreme Court
decided this week that public libraries must operate anti-pornography Internet
filters on their computer networks or lose federal funding. (The Washington
Post)
Read more
Minnesota Launches First Statewide ePortfolio Program
"eFolio Minnesota" is the country's first statewide electronic portfolio
system. Now all Minnesotans can record and display their accomplishments, educational
and otherwise, using photos, video, audio and graphics, according to Linda Baer,
senior vice chancellor for academic and student affairs for the Minnesota State
Colleges and Universities. (Distance-Educator.com)
Read more
Hate Mail: Anti-Spam Act Gains Ground in Congress
Some say it d'esn't go far enough, but the "Can Spam Act of 2003"
is moving forward on Capitol Hill. The legislation would penalize bulk e-mailers
that promote scams, conduct fraud, sell pornography, and won't remove recipients
upon request. It also bars the use of certain types of e-mail harvesting software.
(The Washington Post)
Read more
IUPUI Tracks Campus Printing Costs; Budget Scythe to Swing
Like most schools, Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis faces
technology budget cuts. To help trim waste, IUPDUI has started a trial printing
tracking system which will likely be implemented in the fall. "During the
trial, the university will determine printing trends and actual costs of materials.
The information will then be reviewed by student and faculty groups who will
then help decide how to use the system in place." It's either that or cut
the technology budget elsewhere. (The Sagamore)
Read more
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RESOURCES |
Primer on Integrating Handheld Computing on Campus
Don't know where to start in managing the new wave of handheld computing on your campus? Check out "Administrative Solutions for Handheld Technology in Schools," a new book published by the International Society for Technology in Education (ISTE), which provides a blueprint for integrating handhelds into curricula, classrooms, and administrative tasks.
Read an excerpt and/or order the book.
Roll Your Own: Templates for Building a Course Web Site
If your college or university has yet to centralize its approach to course management systems, or worse, has no approach whats'ever, you might consider using templates from the higher education group at the National Education Association. Links are set up for syllabus, assignment, and announcement pages.
Learn more
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DEALS, CONTRACTS, AWARDS |
U. Washington Deal to Provide Media Bandwidth in 'Petabytes'
The University of Washington has a deal with switched computing systems developer
Topspin Communications to use the company's InfiniBand-based Switched Computing
Systems for the university's digital video media library. The system is being
used to provide high-bandwidth connectivity for the university's streaming media
servers to enhance its digital video archives and connectivity to clients. "The
University of Washington plans to scale its Digital Well archive out to include
petabytes of high-quality video content for distance learning," said Nate McQueen,
system architect in the Advanced Systems Technology Group at the University
of Washington.
Boise State Picks Solution to Secure Wired and Wireless Nets
Boise State University has picked SecureSmart, a network security package from
Perfigo Inc., to secure and manage its wired and wireless local area networks.
Brian McDevitt, the school's manager of telephone and network services, said
the software, "is able to handle wireless, which we expected, but also the wired
traffic, which is significantly heavier. Even streaming media passes through
without causing a bottleneck. When we were looking for a new solution, our biggest
requirements were scalability and ease of management—one solution, one
management console."
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POLL
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Do major technology companies pay enough attention to the needs of the higher education market, from the point of view of customizing their products for higher education environments?
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NEW PRODUCTS
Research Universities, IT Firms Form
Global App Test Bed
Researchers from the University of California-Berkeley, Hewlett-Packard Co.,
Intel Corp., Princeton, the University of Washington, and more than 60 other
universities have joined to form PlanetLab, a global test bed for inventing
and testing prototype Internet applications and services. The researchers aim
to spark a new era of innovation by using "overlay" networks to upgrade
and expand the Internet's capabilities. The partners say PlanetLab may lead
to new ways of protecting the Internet from viruses and worms, and could also
enable new capabilities, such as persistent storage, the idea of giving the
Internet a "memory."
Learn more
CyberScrub Sanitizes Systems to Government,
Standards
CyberScrub LLC last week released CyberScrub 3.0, designed to perform secure
file deletion and erase sensitive data from computers beyond recovery. The company
says the software complies with commercial and government file retention policies,
including the HIPAA Security Final Rule, federal directives ensuring the privacy
of protected health information, as well as Gramm-Leach-Bliley, which protects
financial data. The new release boasts non-retrievable erasure of selected files
and folders, removes all evidence of Web surfing, destroys e-mail, wipes "locked"
files, and functions as a cleanup utility to enhance system performance.
Learn more
Firm Introduces Web-Based Maintenance, Capital
Planning System
VFA Inc. introduced AssetFusion, a Web-based interface its says will manage
the seamless exchange of information between daily facility maintenance systems
and capital asset planning software. Using Web services architecture, the application
integrates the company's capital planning software with facility management
applications such as Computerized Maintenance Management Systems (CMMS). VFA
says the integration of these applications eliminates inconsistent data entry
and "[provides] a more streamlined approach to managing facility assets
and generating tasks such as work orders."
Learn more
ESL Software Claims Language Mastery in 38
Hours
EyeHear Learning Inc. unveiled EyeHear English1, a CD-ROM-based language learning
method that it claims will enable students to master one year of language study
in 38 hours. The product is designed for beginning, intermediate, and advanced
language learners. Duffy Galda, department chair of language at Pima Community
College, called the software "ingenious" in that it introduces syntax,
grammar, as well as the English sound system. "We are already moving toward
open-entrance, open-exit individualized instructional uses with this software,"
Galda said.
Learn more
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Wireless Handheld Computers to Increase Interactivity and
Collaborative Learning
This week's interview features Betty L. Black
Click
Here to Listen
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