NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Showing all 5 results Save | Export
Zeltser, Lenny – Campus Technology, 2011
Too often, organizations make the mistake of treating malware infections as a series of independent occurrences. Each time a malicious program is discovered, IT simply cleans up or rebuilds the affected host, and then moves on with routine operational tasks. Yet, this approach doesn't allow the institution to keep up with the increasingly…
Descriptors: Computer Security, Computer Software, Workstations, Campuses
Raths, David – Campus Technology, 2011
In this era of political rancor when everything is a zero-sum game, it is refreshing to think that two parties could actually come together to create a win-win situation. That is exactly what is happening, though, as a number of universities take on the role of application service provider (ASP) for smaller schools. It is not all confetti and…
Descriptors: Intercollegiate Cooperation, Partnerships in Education, Information Networks, Computer Networks
Demski, Jennifer – Campus Technology, 2010
As higher education budgets tighten in the ongoing recession, colleges and universities have found themselves questioning, lengthening, and even eliminating tech refresh cycles. Yet how deep an institution cuts into its refresh program can compromise its ability to provide an up-to-date and competitive computing environment for students and a…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Cost Effectiveness, Information Networks, Technology Planning
Diaz, Russell – Campus Technology, 2009
In 2006, when the author joined the staff at Dominican College (New York), he discovered that the network, computers, and IT contracts were in sorry shape. He also found that this kind of condition is common in small colleges. Such a state of affairs is usually brought about by the unrelenting demands placed on small IT staffs. IT staffers at…
Descriptors: School Business Relationship, Small Colleges, Information Technology, Computer Networks
O'Hanlon, Charlene – Campus Technology, 2007
Traditionally, the high-performance computing (HPC) systems used to conduct research at universities have amounted to silos of technology scattered across the campus and falling under the purview of the researchers themselves. This article reports that a growing number of universities are now taking over the management of those systems and…
Descriptors: Computers, Researchers, Information Management, Research Universities