IT Trends September 1, 2005

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In This Issue

OPINION

Katrina: What Can We Do to Help; This Time and the Next?

By Terry Calhoun

Well, this year it’s not digital viruses hitting higher ed hard, it’s a hurricane – right as the students returned or were about to. It’s nightmarish to imagine your server room under 30 feet of water; or with its interior exposed to wind and rain because a large tree fell on it. What IT staffers and others are experiencing at Tulane University and other places can only be imagined right now. But we’ll be hearing more, for sure.

It’s time for higher education IT folks to come up with a plan for an always-on Internet-based resource for assistance to institutions that have met with disasters. Nearly four years ago, immediately after 9/11, my employer, the Society for College and University Planning, had some success with an email list that connected lots of people on many campuses, including some on the affected campuses in New York City. Read more


IT NEWS

Purdue University Plans Academic Podcasts

The new program, called "Boilercast," is starting with podcasts of large lectures, but any professor can request to be set up with the same automated distribution of lectures. (Podcasting News) Read more

UC Merced Touting ‘Technology-Dense’ Campus

Each student's ID card has an RFID chip and is linked to debit accounts that can even be used in the laundry which, by the way, can be monitored via the Web so that you don't walk down with a load to find all the machines full. (The Modesto Bee, Modesto, CA) Read more

Colorado State University Implements 'Clean Access'

And, as usual, some students are annoyed at the extra work they have to do to gain and keep access to the network. (The Rocky Mountain Collegian) Read more

Vanderbilt Libraries to Charge for All Printing

The change was forced by many off-campus groups, even businesses, using library printers to print out huge documents. Now everyone pays 4 cents per page. (Vanderbilt Hustler) Read more

RESOURCES

Chief Architects Forum

The federal government's Wikki-based forum is the shared voice of the enterprise architecture community. It shares its findings, including working definitions and best practices on this useful website. (Chief Architects Forum) Read more


DEALS, CONTRACTS, AWARDS

There's a Ruckus at Syracuse University

Syracuse has become the fourth university in New York to select Ruckus as its students official digital entertainment provider. (BusinessWire) Read more


Intelliworks Signs Up University of Oklahoma

Intelliworks (www.intelliworks.com), a Customer Resource Management (CRM) software vendor in the higher education market, announced this week that the University of Oklahoma (OU), signed a multi-year agreement to license the Intelliworks Relationship Manager for its CRM solution. The Intelliworks Relationship Manager will be used to manage student profiles, class size and diversity goals.

Jenzabar Inks University of St. Augustine

Jenzabar (www.jenzabar.net) announced this week that the University of St. Augustine selected Jenzabar's Internet Campus Solution (JICS) to provide Web-based services to its students.

Thursday, September 1, 2005

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Events Calendar


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See and hear the keynotes and general sessions from Syllabus2005, featuring Tracy Futhey, Diana Oblinger, Lev Gonick, and other higher ed visionaries and leaders. It's the next best thing to being able to attend.

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NEW TECHNOLOGY

Picking Up the iPhone Buzz

Apple Computer's cryptic announcement that it's holding an "invitation-only event" in San Francisco on Sept. 7 has rekindled media buzz around the computer maker's planned release of a music-playing mobile phone, developed in conjunction with Motorola. (BusinessWeek) Read more


Online Resources :

More Resources


Current Topics in Our forums include:
Networking

Collaboration in the Education Space

Mobile Computing

Campus IT Security

Tablet PCs

Discuss with us

Featured

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    Report: Cloud Certifications Bring Biggest Salary Payoff

    It pays to be conversant in cloud, according to a new study from Skillsoft The company's annual IT skills and salary survey report found that the top three certifications resulting in the highest payoffs salarywise are for skills in the cloud, specifically related to Amazon Web Services (AWS), Google Cloud, and Nutanix.

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    IBM Releases Granite 3.0 Family of Advanced AI Models

    IBM has introduced its most advanced family of AI models to date, Granite 3.0, at its annual TechXchange event. The new models were developed to provide a combination of performance, flexibility, and autonomy that outperforms or matches similarly sized models from leading providers on a range of benchmarks.

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    California AI Watermarking Bill Garners OpenAI Support

    ChatGPT creator OpenAI is backing a California bill that would require tech companies to label AI-generated content in the form of a digital "watermark." The proposed legislation, known as the "California Digital Content Provenance Standards" (AB 3211), aims to ensure transparency in digital media by identifying content created through artificial intelligence. This requirement would apply to a broad range of AI-generated material, from harmless memes to deepfakes that could be used to spread misinformation about political candidates.

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    Delightful Progress: Kuali's Legacy of Community and Leadership

    CEO Joel Dehlin updates us on Kuali today, and how it has thrived as a software company that succeeds in the tech marketplace while maintaining the community values envisioned in higher education years ago.