IT NEWS
Is PeopleSoft "Clearing the Decks" for an Oracle Takeover?
CEO Craig Conway, who has been leading PeopleSoft's intense resistance to
a takeover by Oracle was fired last week in what many people see as an acceptance
that the takeover is now inevitable. (SFGate.com)
Read more
Landlines Disappearing on Campus?
As fewer students sign up for landline phones, the inherent costs of
running the systems get passed on through student fees even to those
who are now entirely mobile. (The Stanford Daily)
Read
more
No Official Snooping at UCLA
UCLA has decided not to look into the content of student downloads
and communications. It's using education to work to keep students'
behavior legal, and has a new, automated system of notification to
students when the RIAA comes after them, but no snooping. (CNET News.com)
Read
more
Will Blackboards Bite the Dust?
While some University of Minnesota faculty like the dust, classroom managers
do not. Some say the battle between whiteboards and blackboards will be eclipsed
by even newer technologies. (DuluthNewsTribune.com)
Read more
UC-Santa Cruz Presence in Silicon Valley
Building on NASA funding, the University Affiliated Research Center (UARC)
at Moffet Field has 100 employees and an annual budget of $18M with research
projects in aerospace systems, information technology and computer science,
and nanotechnology. (UC-Santa Cruz Currents Online)
Read more
Grand Valley State: Keeping Networks Clean
New routers and switches, stricter firewalls (one specifically for student
housing), an intrusion detection system, and student education--"The Great Grand
Valley Computer Cleanup"--have given GVSU IT staff a handle on things this fall.
(Grand Valley Landthorn)
Read more
University of the South Pacific's Video Surveillance
Catching Students in the act of trying to use other students' identities to
access unauthorized information is the purpose. USP has 13 surveillance cameras
in computer labs around campus. (Fiji Times Online)
Read more
Video Streaming for the Deaf
Educators are increasing the use of video streaming for the deaf. Until recently,
libraries of archived video instruction using sign language for deaf people
have been geographically isolated from many potential users. But the advent
of high-speed Internet (Internet2) is causing a boom in the use of those videos.
(Ohio News Network)
Read more
|