Open Menu Close Menu

IT Trends for Thursday, January 15, 2004

Thursday, January 15, 2004

In This Issue

OPINION

Terry Calhoun, IT Trends Commentator
Society for College and University Planning (SCUP)
University of Michigan


Note to Self: Find Ways to Share What You Learn from Unintended Consequences

When you bring the students something that's state of the art, you also have to think about (a) what's being left behind, (b) how what you bring them is going to change their expectations and behavior, and (c) what's going to happen when they can't use what you created for them.

Wolverine Access is the name University of Michigan students know for the interface where they go to register for classes, check their schedule, drop and add, and so forth. It's a slick system, and replaces a series of systems that go back (for old-timers) to when students waited - in all sorts of weather - to get inside Waterman Gym, in lines that sometimes stretched across the Diag onto State Street, and down past Angel Hall all the way to the Michigan Union.

Wolverine Access is a better system. But problems with it a week ago, on and before the first day of classes, impacted the student body in ways that seem not to have been anticipated. You can read about them here. I hope that the problems and possible solutions are being shared widely.

Read more


IT NEWS

Laramie County CC Offers Off-campus Access w/ Single Sign-on

Using EZproxy, students, faculty, and staff can access secure universityresources from wherever they are, rather than just from campus. )...
Read more

"Webster" down--Causing problems at U. Northern Colorado

Webster is UNC's online class registration system. Upgraded last fall,it could not be tested ahead of time for its ability to handle large numbers of users and has been failing under heavy use early in the current semester...
Read more

Ohio State and IBM Teaming Up for Cheap Student Computers

Not just Ohio State, but a statewide consortium of 38 schools have joined what IBM says is it's biggest deal with colleges ever, resulting in 35 percent discounts for students instead of the ordinary 10 percent available many other places....
Read more

Idaho State Investing in Web Services for Alums

The new service is available even to those with only 24 credit hours at the school, and for "guests." Among its features is privacy protection via a "blind messaging" system....
Read more

Schools Seeking Out Napster-like Models for Student Downloads

The Rhode Island Institute of Technology and University of Rochester areamong those looking to find ways to facilitate legal student music downloads....
Read more

Balancing Family and Work with eGraduate School

More than 1.6M students in the US took online classes last year, and mature students are a fast-growing percentage of those....
Read more

Streaming Video -- a Hot Item in K-12

Taking virtual field trips is bringing up a cohort of students who are going to expect more and better in college....
Read more

Issues with Indiana University PeopleSoft Implementation

Nothing's perfect, while most think the implementation is going very well, there are still issues like . . . transferring student loans over to a new academic year!...
Read more

New Sam Houston U. Web Site a Big Hit

The discussion over what to put where, and who decides, seems to have been pretty typical...
Read more

Universities Rushing at Online Class Dollars

The report is a single case study, so its results are open to interpretation, but it shows at least the existence of perceptions that institutions are grabbing at dollars without investing appropriate resources into curriculum and technology....
Read more

What Are the Campus Implications of Skype?

The folks who created KaAaA have come up with Skype, are after the phone companies. "Anyone with access to large numbers of desktops . . . could in theory become a phone company."...
Read more


RESOURCES


Accessibility-Checking Bookmarklet

A large collection of bookmarklets to assist Web developers to ensure more accessible sites. Many are useful as design tools. ...
Learn more

Dictionary of Learning Technology Terms

A reference provided by the Centre for Educational Technology Interoperability Standards to help people find out about terms used in the field of learning technology standards. This resource d'es not claim to hold the ‘official’ usage of terms, but a way for practitioners to see how others in the education IT are using a term...
Learn more

AskERIC -- the Educator's Reference Desk

The D'E has killed much of ERIC, including AskERIC, but much of it is now available in another spot, including the excellent section on educational technology...
Learn more

DEALS, CONTRACTS, AWARDS

African Virtual U. Extends Deal with Satellite Provider

African Virtual University (AVU) has extended its contract with Globecomm Systems Inc., a provider of end-to-end satellite communications systems, with a deal worth $1.5 million plus options. The new multi-year contract expands the number of sites in the AVU network and includes options for future expansion. Globecomm has been providing AVU with its SkyBorne content delivery platform, which uses Internet Protocol multicast technology to deliver video over IP networks.
Read more

Stanford Deploys Campuswide Management Software

Stanford University is using a service management platform from Paetec Inc. to help manage its campus computing infrastructure. The company’s Pinnacle Communications Management software offers, manages, and bills over 40 IT services, including facilities space, equipment, course fees, software sales, campus card badging, circuits, use of the data center and the Stanford University Network, SUNet DSL, and all traditional telecommunications services.

"Stanford was looking for an industrial-strength application that would allow us to manage and bill for all of our different technology services in the most efficient manner," according to Stanford ITSS director of finance Bill Clebsch.
Read more

New York University Chooses Disaster Recovery System

New York University is installing Backup Express, an enterprise backup and restore product from Syncsort Inc., to provide disaster recovery protection throughout its campus. The university’s LAN service manager, Sherif Samaan, said the system works with both Novell and Windows machines on a storage area network, but is also stable and reliable for enterprise-wide coverage.
Read more

Sponsored by:
Captus Networks
Hands-On, Online Technology Demonstration. The Captus IPS 4000 series solutions prevent network attacks including DDoS, port scans, and worm exploits. They control unwanted network behavior, such as instant messaging, P2P traffic, and file swapping applications while optimizing performance and management of valid traffic. You get only the traffic you want, when you want it.

Click here for details

Events


The Anti-Spam Summit in San Francisco, March 17-19, 2004

TechMentor Conference in New Orleans, April 4-8, 2004

Events Calendar


Sponsored by:
Mitsubishi Projector for your Classroom!
It’s never been a better time to buy a Projector! With Savings Up to $595.... Have a Mitsubishi Representative help find the right projector for you and receive a FREE "Slide that Win" CD! Why choose Mitsubishi? Mitsubishi Projectors are quiet, and classroom, campus, and auditorium safe with anti-theft and password protected. They include toll free technical support, and a 3-year overnight express Replacement Assistance program. Click here for details.

Click here for details

POLL

Dell

Did your institution experience any significant problems at the beginning of this term with online registration?
Yes
No


Sponsored by:

101TechStrategies: The Anti-Spam Summit.
The only industry conference addressing the issue of unsolicited e-mail from both a technical and business perspective takes place March 17-19 in San Francisco. Hear from top experts working on curtailing e-mail abuse including unsolicited e-mail, worms and viruses. Review the best tools, hear about current and upcoming technologies and the latest legislation.


Click here for details


NEW PRODUCTS

Apple G5, HP Tablet, Head PC Mag’s ‘Best of 2003’ List

PC Magazine’s annual hardware review of best personal computers has come out, with the new Apple Power Mac G5 heading the list. “Think Macs are slow?” the magazine asks. “The Apple Power Mac G5 has the horsepower to hang with any of the leading Windows PCs. During testing at PC Magazine Labs this fall, it even outperformed the competition in many cases.” HP’s Compaq Tablet PC TC1100 was also featured on the list. The editors said the tablet solves the riddle of how to choose between a key-board equipped convertible tablet and the thinner, lighter, “slate” machines....

Other machines on the best-of list included HP’s Pavillion zd7000, Velocity Micro ProMagix DX-W, HP Media Center PC m370n, Apple’s PowerBook G4 17-inch; IBM’s ThinkPad x31, and IBM’s ThinkPad T41.
Learn more

NEC Introduces High Performance Lightweight Projector

NEC Solutions (America), Inc. introduced the VT770, which the company claims is the first projector in its class to attain 3000 ANSI lumens at under eight pounds. The new projector is NEC's first to combine the characteristics of an installation projector with the light weight, ease of use and affordability of its VT Series projectors....

The unit features one-touch setup and operation, automatic vertical keystone correction for instantly square images, color-coded inputs and built-in wall color correction presets for easy setup on non-white surfaces. The new projector also includes both PC card and USB storage device slots, giving presenters the ability to download presentations to the projector without a laptop.
Learn more



Sponsored By

Increasing Quality in Online Instruction
This week's interview features David Starrett Director, Center for Scholarship in Teaching and Learning, Southeast Missouri State University.



Since 1997, technology institutes at Southeast Missouri State University have helped faculty to use technology effectively. Starrett discusses roles and rewards, assessment, and other issues regarding faculty development.

Click Here to Listen

New! Digital Tweed Blog

What do Mohammad Ali, Penny Marshall, and John Wooden have in common? They are among the small cast of luminaries who make prominent (if brief) appearances in a new IBM television ad promoting Linux...

Read the Blog Now!

Casey Green offers his latest observations about technology in higher education along with relevant examples from the widely known Campus Computing Survey.



Subscribe to Syllabus


comments powered by Disqus