Documents Contributed by ECAR, Advanced Networking, Presentations, and Presentations/Speeches

IT Governance: Solid Structures and Practical Politics

Added by the EDUCAUSE Librarian
Title:IT Governance: Solid Structures and Practical Politics (ID: ECR0711)
Author(s):Ronald Yanosky (EDUCAUSE) and John W. McCredie (University of California, Berkeley)
Origin:Documents Contributed by ECAR, Presentations (12/06/2007)
Type:Presentations/Speeches
Abstract:

Presentation at the Sixth Annual ECAR Symposium, December 5-7, 2007, in Boca Raton, Florida. Higher education IT organizations have become increasingly aware of the need for governance processes that sit above day-to-day management and address strategic alignment and the political realities of satisfying IT's many constituencies. But how should -and do- higher education institutions govern IT? This presentation uses the results of an ECAR study of IT governance to frame an interactive session on how to mix good structural governance practices with practical politics.

How to Cite This Work: Yanosky, Ronald, and John W. McCredie. "IT Governance: Solid Structures and Practical Politics." Presentation at the ECAR Symposium, Boca Raton, FL, December 5-7, 2007, available from http://www.educause.edu/ecar.

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Providing Your Faculty Global Access to the Instruments of Scientific Discovery

Added by the EDUCAUSE Librarian
Title:Providing Your Faculty Global Access to the Instruments of Scientific Discovery (ID: ECR0406)
Author(s):Larry Smarr (University of California, San Diego)
Origin:Documents Contributed by ECAR, Presentations (11/16/2004)
Type:Presentations/Speeches
Abstract:

Presentation at the November 2004 ECAR Symposium. In the past 20 years, we have seen the establishment of the global Internet and the Web. We are now seeing the emergence of universal grid infrastructure, providing researchers from many disciplines interactive visual access to remote scientific instruments and enormous distributed data archives. Smarr believes this will induce another transition in campus infrastructure, perhaps on a larger scale than previously, due to the creation of optical networking "clear channels" or "lambdas" across the campus, state, nation, and globe whose entire bandwidth can be dedicated to a single campus researcher. In the United States, the backbone is the recently live National LambdaRail, which is linked to the international Global Lambda Integrated Facility. Smarr discusses examples of applications that require "personal lambdas" and reviews some of the research on how to couple these enormous data pipes across campuses to link into the clusters of individual laboratories.

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