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OPINION
New Buzzword, Same Mess?
By Terry Calhoun, IT Trends Commentator,
Society for College and University Planning (SCUP),
University of Michigan
THOUGH SO INCREASINGLY COMPLEX IT'S NOW A "MESS OF
SPAGHETTI," MIDDLEWARE IS ALSO RAPIDLY BECOMING INVISIBLE
Middleware is spaghetti that just keeps looping and
layering new approaches over old. The industry keeps
ladling more sauce over the mess, in terms of such
nebulous nomenclature as enterprise application
integration, enterprise information integration,
business process management and message-oriented
middleware. New buzzword, same mess.” —James Kobielus,
NetworkWorld
Remember the days when auto enthusiasts could open the
hood of a car and actually do things more significant
than adding windshield-washer fluid or coolant mix?
Back in those days, knowing what a carburetor was
mattered to parts manufacturers, suppliers, and
mechanics. And it actually mattered to quite a few
consumers. Carburetors were not invisible to consumers,
they were something that humans could reach out and touch,
attempt to understand, clean, and possibly even replace.
But open the hood of a car nowadays, and all you’ll see
is an unidentifiable mass of bulky plastic and metal
occupying the entire engine compartment.
To those readers who write code for middleware, my
carburetor analogy may not hit home, but to consumers
and the rest of us, it just may. Consumers, for instance,
don’t care about middleware. They don’t want to hear
about it and they don’t want to think about it. As in
my auto analogy, they only want to know how it performs
for them. With today’s cutting-edge automobiles,
technology, sufficiently advanced, now seems to be
indistinguishable from magic. That’s true with software,
too: Application-to-application software is even more
in demand as we (in business and in higher education)
all move to larger, more integrated, and more complex
systems.
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IT NEWS
Digital Thieves Thrive as Few Legal Tools Thwart Them
There are lots of bad guys, and lots more laws than
there used to be. But it takes follow-through to
stop 'em or slow ‘em down. (USA Today)
Read more
However
One Spammer Gets Nine Years in Jail
Suspended while he appeals, but a good start to the
first felony prosecution for sending junk emails. (USA Today)
Read more
Meanwhile
Record Companies Go After Students in Copyright Suit
Acting to stop what it claims is "an emerging epidemic of music theft on a
specialized, high-speed university computer network known as Internet2," the
Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), representing the major
record companies, announced it is filing copyright infringement lawsuits against
405 students at 18 different colleges across the country.
Read more
And
Ole Miss Web Server Mistakenly Used to Store Students'
Social Security Numbers
Oh, that legacy stuff--it's all over the place. "It was buried
in an obscure part of our file server, but it was there and it
was accessible to anyone." (The Picayune Item)
Read more
Finally
Students Want to Trim 'Spim'
Since our students rely on cell phones and text messaging
a lot more than we do, their problems may be a harbinger
of what's to come. (The Star Press)
Read more
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RESOURCES
Testing Students’ Tech Smarts: The Information and
Communication Technology Literacy Assessment
From the folks who brought you the ACT, now there is
the ICT - will it catch on in admissions programs? (ETS)
Find out more
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DEALS, CONTRACTS, AWARDS
Venerated Kurzweil Assistive Tech Firm Acquired by Cambrium
Cambium Learning, Inc., which focuses on at-risk, minority
and special student populations, signed an agreement to
acquire Kurzweil Educational Systems, Inc., a firm that
has pioneered reading technology for people with learning
or visual disabilities.
Kurzweil 3000, the company's flagship product, is an
integrated reading, writing and learning software for
assisting students with learning and language difficulties
such as dyslexia and Attention Deficit Disorder. Another
company product, Kurzweil 1000, fosters greater independence
in students who are blind or visually impaired, enabling
them to read, write and study along side their sighted peers.
The Kurzweill purchase is Cambrium's third acquisition
in the last 16 months.
Find out more
MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory,
Quanta Computer Partner on Next Major Computing Platform
Working on the theory that users should not have to worry
about backing data up, making sure data flows seamlessly
from one device to another, and all those non-transparent
things, a partnership is born.
Find out more
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NEW TECHNOLOGY
Rube Goldberg Machine Contest Won by Purdue
The team's winning machine used 125 steps to remove two
batteries from a flashlight, replace them and turn it on.
(USA Today)
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more
Wireless Isn't Really . . . But You Already Knew That?
The latest thing is 'mesh networks' which run from node to
node without any behind-the-scenes wiring and, thus, are
less expensive. (Forbes)
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more
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