- Billing.
- Automation of administrative tasks.
- Dynamic scaling.
- Desktop virtualization.
- Policy-based services.
- Internet connectivity.
Monday, March 10, 2014
Cloud Computing Closer Look - Infrastructure as a Service (Iaas)
Posted by Gordon F Snyder Jr at 10:24 AM 0 comments
Labels: Business, commerce, communications, Education, Information, technician, Technology
Tuesday, April 19, 2011
What I Read (And How I Like to Read It)
I've kept those two subscriptions over the years with Wired keeping me up to date and entertained with new and emerging technologies and Businessweek keeping me posted on where business is going. If I'm on the road you can bet the latest issues of each are in my bag.
Which of the two do I prefer? I've always believed business drives technology so Businessweek has been incredibly valuable to me. Some will argue it is the other way around but I've seen enough technically superior products that have flopped because the market was just not ready for them.
Last year Bloomberg purchased Businessweek from McGraw Hill and now the magazine is called Bloomberg Businessweek. It's changed some since the purchase - there is a little more fun stuff (a la Wired) - but the business content is still really good.
Just last week Bloomberg launched a very nice iPad app called Bloomberg Businessweek+. Since I subscribe to the print version of the magazine, I get app version issues for free. Non-subscribers pay $2.99 a month - not bad since the print version is $4.99 on the newsstands. New editions come out on Thursday evenings at 10 PM and are approximately 30 megabytes each (relatively small for fast download). The app itself is the best "magazine" app I've seen so far - you can search for content across issues, clip articles and post to Twitter and Facebook. Even the "media-rich" ads are interesting to take a look at.
Will I keep my print subscription to Businessweek? Yes - for now.
If you have an iPad, be sure to check out the Businessweek+ app.
Posted by Gordon F Snyder Jr at 8:34 AM 0 comments
Labels: Business, Education, Media, mobile, technician, Technology
Tuesday, January 19, 2010
Social Media in Western Mass - Online Impact 2010
LinkedIn 101: Getting Started & Avoiding Mistakes Tom Lewis, NeedleMine
Integrating Social Media into Your Website Jason Turcotte, Turcotte Design
LinkedIn 201: LinkedIn for Busy Professionals - Getting Results in 10 Minutes/Day Christine Pilch, Grow My Company
Market like the big brands do: How to build a Facebook Fan Page for your local business Mary Fallon and Amanda Gauthier, Garvey Communication Associates, Inc.
Twitter: Where's the ROI? Morriss Partee, Everything CU
The YouTube Effect: What you need to know about online video and the future of the Internet Dave Sweeney, The Communications Department
If We Can Do It, So Can You: Using Social Media in Organizations of All Shapes and Sizes Brad Blake, Director of New Media and Online Strategy, Massachusetts Office of the Governor and David Cavell, Communications and Speechwriter, Massachusetts Office of the Governor
Social Media in Education: An Education Essential Kelly Galanis, Westfield State College
Becoming A Digital Bigfoot: Five quick moves to enhance your digital footprint and gain a competitive advantage! John Garvey, Garvey Communication Associates, Inc.
We also ran a couple of great panels, both moderated by Dave Sweeney from The Communications Department:
Craig Swimm – WMAS 94.7
Kelly Galanis – Westfield State College
Gordon Snyder – National Center for Information and Communications Technologies (ICT Center) at STCC
Tom Lewis – NeedleMine
Morriss Partee – Everything CU
Christine Pilch – Grow My Company
We had 90 attendees with over 25 people on the waiting list. The event - presenters, attendees, facilities - all excellent. Kelly Galanis (aka RedHeadedDivaK on Twitter) has put up a nice video shot by WGGB on YouTube:
Special thanks to Dave Sweeney from The Communications Department and John Garvey from Garvey Communications for their efforts in setting this up and also special thanks to STCC President (and blogger) Ira Rubenzahl for allowing us to host this event at the College.
With my work I get around the country fairly frequently and have to say - there is some of the strongest excitement, knowledge, experience, dedication and commitment I’ve experienced right here in Western Massachusetts. This event certainly strengthened these impressions. A great day with great people - Western Massachusetts is a very special place to live and work.
We're looking forward to the next Online Impact event!!
Posted by Gordon F Snyder Jr at 12:18 PM 0 comments
Labels: Business, Entrepreneurship, Innovation, Social Media, Technology, Web 2.0, Western Massachusetts
Wednesday, November 18, 2009
Technology Trends for Small to Medium Businesses
The New Media Consortium (NMC) has a new report out called the Horizon Report: 2009 Economic Development Edition that is a short, consise and very imformative read. The report explores the landscape of emerging technologies as it pertains to small to medium-sized businesses which account for a large part of the private-sector employment and revenue growth in our economy.
For the report, the NMC Advisory Board reviewed key trends, examining current articles, papers, interviews, and published research for the report and discovered some interesting patterns that are affecting business and industry. The five trends listed (in priority order) here as those the board believes will have a significant impact on small to medium businesses over the next five years.
- Employees increasingly expect to be able to work flexible hours and to work from locations other than an office building.
- Modern consumers expect that the content in which they are interested will be available in a variety of different forms.
- Gaming is an increasingly universal phenomenon among those entering the workforce.
- Increasing globalization continues to affect the way we work, collaborate, and communicate.
- Technology is increasingly a means for empowering employees, a method for communication and socializing, and a ubiquitous, transparent part of their lives.
Posted by Gordon F Snyder Jr at 1:00 PM 0 comments
Labels: Business, economy, Education, employment, Technology
Monday, September 10, 2007
Join Us in California at the NCTT Winter Conference
Our 2008 Winter Conference Call for Presentations and Demonstrations is out and we welcome your presentations! Below is the program announcement. Contact myself (gsnyder@stcc.edu ) or Scott St Onge (StOnge@stcc.edu ) or call (413) 755-6550 with any questions. Special thanks to our host - Ann Beheler and Orange Coast College!
The National Center for Telecommunications Technologies (NCTT) will conduct its ICT / Convergence Winter Conference at Orange Coast College, Costa Mesa, CA, January 4 - 5, 2008. In awarding grants to the National Center for Telecommunications Technologies (NCTT) and its national network of regional partners, the National Science Foundation has recognized the importance of ICT* (Information and Communications Technologies) and Convergence Technologies to the U.S. economy and its critical role in maintaining global competitiveness. NCTT is leading this national effort to build a pool of knowledgeable and competent technicians to implement, manage and maintain state-of-the-art ICT* systems.
This call for presentations and demonstrations is an effort to showcase best practices, innovation and exemplary work in ICT* and Convergence Technology education, as well as new and emerging technologies. This solicitation seeks to bring together the best and brightest ICT and Convergence Technology educators from around the country to share their educational and technical expertise with like-minded educators and professionals.
We encourage submission of presentations and demonstrations from all facets of ICT*, including enterprise ICT, hands-on ICT labs, classroom application of ICT* in another discipline (biology, business, astronomy), an ICT* enabled industry (biotech, nanotech, supercomputing), emerging or converging technologies, classroom instruction issues and innovations in recruitment and retention. All ideas are welcome! Please take this opportunity to share your ICT* expertise with peers from around the country.
Proposed presentations should be one or two 45-minute segments and include required laboratory, classroom space and audio/visual support. Presentations may be informational/lecture-based, however presenters are strongly encouraged to include interactive, hands-on or lab elements. Hands-on presentations should be 2 segments (90 minutes) to maximize participation.
To submit a presentation proposal, please complete the form at http://www.nctt.org/pages/events/2008_ww_cfp.php by November 25, 2007. Presenters selected will be notified by December 10, 2007. If you have any questions about appropriate topics or technical content, please email NCTT (StOnge@stcc.edu ) or call (413) 755-6550. There is no fee for registering for this workshop.
* INFORMATION & COMMUNICATIONS TECHNOLOGIES (ICT) is a recognized international term for converging voice, video, data, & computer networking communications technologies.
- Participate in hands-on sessions.
- Learn the technology your students need.
- Get materials you can use in the classroom now.
- Network with faculty from around the United States.
We look forward to seeing you there!
****
Read Show Notes and listen to Mike Q and my latest Podcast titled iPod touch Overview and Impressions linked here.
Podcasts also free on iTunes.
****
Posted by Gordon F Snyder Jr at 6:37 PM 0 comments
Labels: Business, Faculty, Industry, Information and Communications Technology, National Center for Telecommunications Technologies, National Science Foundation, Orange Coast College
Tuesday, September 4, 2007
Getting Ourselves in Sync
A couple of days ago eWeek.com put up an interesting piece titled Programming Grads Meet a Skills Gap in the Real World. Here's a summary quote from the piece written by Darryl K. Taft:
Ari Zilka, chief technology officer at Terracotta, in San Francisco, is also quoted in the piece, saying he understands the skills gap after having worked his way in the high-tech industry, while attending the University of California, Berkeley. According to Zilka:
"I found that UC Berkeley had an excellent curriculum but not only was my schooling lagging behind work, it became very hard to even go to school because work had me learning the concepts and their applicability and nuances that teachers didn't even seem to know."
The eWeek piece goes on:"Zilka noted that many of the new hires he's seen during his career continue to echo the same sentiments as he did".
"Some of the things the school didn't teach Zilka and many who are now entering the work force include issues around communication, development skills, and business and product design.
On the communication front, Zilka said, "Presentation skills are critical, and selling and influencing peers is critical."
"Some of the development skills that schools might emphasize more include design patterns, coding style and practices, scalability and performance tuning, and a focus on the entire software development lifecycle, Zilka said. He noted that things like quality assurance, unit testing, and stage and release are not usually taught".
The piece continues with more comments on the skills gap from faculty at Texas A&M, Carnegie Mellon and Monroe College. Most are in agreement and generally comment that programs are changing to close the gap.Chris Stephenson, executive director of the Computer Science Teachers Association, in New York, has an excellent quote:
".....but what is really exciting is that I have seen more and more educators (both at the K-12 level and the university level) willing to make these skills part of their curriculum."
Stephenson goes on, believing that subjects like Computer Science should no longer be taught as an "isolated discipline":
"There is little effort made to address issues such as effective team work, project planning and time management, and conflict resolution let alone helping students gain the cultural competencies and effective communication skills that are the key to success in a global economy,"
"Also, not enough effort has been made to show students how computing connects to problem solving in the real world,"
"The good news, however, is that an increasing number of educators are building these skills into the classroom experience. Teachers now have students work in teams on real world projects where the failure to plan together, work together, and communicate effectively are a big part of the evaluation that the students receive."
I'll finish the quotes with one that I feel really hits the need/gap on the head from Rawn Shah, IBM developerWorks Community Programs Manager:If you are an academic - are your students working in teams? Can they communicate effectively with their teams? Are they learning relevant information? Are they ready when they graduate for work? Are there things that you are teaching that are out of date? Are there other courses in your curriculum that could be replaced with more relevant ones? How often do you make revisions to your curriculum? How do you know what you should be teaching?
If you are a business person - how can you help? What can you do to make a difference - to assure graduates you are hiring are properly prepared?
We ask ourselves these kinds of questions daily at our National Science Foundation funded National Center for Telecommunications Technologies - if you would like to learn more feel free to drop me an email at gsnyder@stcc.edu
****
Read Show Notes and listen to Mike Q and my latest Podcast titled Enterprise 2.0 linked here.
Podcasts also free on iTunes.
****
Posted by Gordon F Snyder Jr at 6:15 PM 0 comments
Labels: Business, Collaboration, Computer Science, Information and Communications Technology, Information Technology, Skills Gap, Workforce