IT Trends :: Thursday, August 24, 2006

IT News

3,000 First-Years, All Searching for a Connection

Across the country, thousands of students are moving into dormitories. The first priority on move-in day: hooking up the computer. This article says that parents won’t even say goodbye “until their kid is connected.” At the University of Virginia (where 99.4% of last year’s freshman brought computers with them), more than 100 IT staffers in matching shirts roamed the chaotic dorms, helping students set up their computers…

Read Complete Article | Back to top

UC Students Get Crash Course in Internet Privacy

A survey of University of California, Berkeley undergrads found that 5% of students used Facebook.com daily and a mere 6% never used it. Instead of creating an official social networking policy, UC Berkeley is trying to inform students about the risks of posting private information online. For instance, this year’s freshman won’t be able to use their dorm room computers until they attend a mandatory social networking workshop…

Read Complete Article | Back to top

Can Blogging Boost Your Career?

About 12 million Americans are recent bloggers, according to a survey released recently by the Pew Internet and American Life Project. IT blogs are a great way to share tech innovations and ideas, but some employers are becoming concerned that bloggers may be sharing too much information. Some bloggers are playing it safe by simply writing about what they do, not who they do it for...

Read Complete Article | Back to top

Colleges Warn of Sites Devoted to Networking

More than 40% of Penn State Berks student belong to Facebook.com. The school’s IT trainer, Kenneth E. Green, recently spoke with incoming students’ parents about the risks of posting personal information online. He said college students have always done “silly things” but now they have “cell phone cameras taking pictures and making a permanent record of it…Some of these things can come back to haunt them. We're not going to stop the phenomenon, but we can teach them to use it more wisely."…

Read Complete Article | Back to top

Featured

  • interconnected cloud icons with glowing lines on a gradient blue backdrop

    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.

  • AI-inspired background pattern with geometric shapes and fine lines in muted blue and gray on a dark background

    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.

  • landscape photo with an AI rubber stamp on top

    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.

  • happy woman sitting in front of computer

    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.