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OPINION
No More Clear Skies? No More Privacy?
IS YOUR CAMPUS IT DEPARTMENT "RAINING ON" OR
PROTECTING THE SECURITY OF STUDENT IDENTITIES?
Terry Calhoun, IT Trends Commentator
Society for College and University Planning (SCUP)
University of Michigan
Thinking about the growing problem of data aggregation
abuse and cyberspace pollution, which impacts our daily
lives on campus and off, brings to mind comparisons
with other assaults on our world.
Eight days before September 11, 2001, my family moved
our oldest daughter into her college dormitory in
Manhattan. In the days following 9/11 the skies over
North America were a constant reminder of how much
things had, at least temporarily, changed. We had
clear blue skies, we had partly cloudy and partly
sunny skies, we had cloudy skies – but there was
something missing from those skies.
It was something that drew my attention constantly,
especially on any clear day with blue skies. On
September 3, we had stood atop the twin towers on a
bright, clear day, and watched as a team of a six
computer-controlled skywriting planes puffed
commercials onto the sky above New York. Then, a
little more than a week later, there were no contrails
anywhere. Everything we saw in the skies during those
days was natural – puffy clouds, solid clouds, but no
contrails. No straight or jagged lines across the sky
degrading into the usual modern art canvas that once
again covers the skies every time we look up.
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IT NEWS
B-School Applicants Axed for Sneaking Around Servers
If it's really not all that secure, can you get into
trouble for looking around? Several business schools
in the past few weeks have answered that question
with a resounding "Yes." (USA Today)
Read more
The Technology of Tracking
The University of Maryland College Park is doing some
interesting work with tracking individuals and items
throughout campus using GPS. (Washington Times)
Read more
Is Supercomputing Dead?
More importantly, are the dollars drying up? Maybe,
but a lot are going to what the NSF calls its "shared
cyberinfrastructure" initiative. Also, a lot of
today's biggest problems don't "need" supercomputers.
(InformationWeek)
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more
Fly “AirRowdy” at U Texas San Antonio
The many new AirRowdy hot spots on the UTSA campus
are marked by colorful, visible stickers; but don't
look for the transmitters as every attempt is made to
keep them from being visible. (UTSA Today)
Read more
U Iowa Ending Student Computer Loan Program in April
The once very popular program's usage has declined by
40 percent as the cost of computers has gone down.
Last year UI loaned just under $1M to 541 students.
(I-Newswire.com)
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RESOURCES
The Future of the Digital Library: An Interview with Tom Peters
LibraryCity is a new project, in the planning stages,
that hopes to avoid a number of issues that plague
some digital libraries: Little things like copyright
protection and stuff like that.
(Journal of Online Education)
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DEALS, CONTRACTS, AWARDS
Texas-size Deal for Vignette
Texas State University-San Marcos, the largest campus
in the Texas State University System, and the sixth-largest
campus in the state, is implementing Vignette content
management products. (dBusinessNews Austin)
Read more
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NEW TECHNOLOGY
Cell Phones Add TV, Radio to Repertoire
And you can bet that our schools are going to want to be feeding content into
those cell phones: Gear up for more change! (USA Today)
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