Archive for October, 2004



[Educause 2004] Open source is all the rage

It seems like the theme, intentional or otherwise, of this conference is the increased visibility and progress on open source projects in higher ed.

Brad Wheeler from Indiana gave a heavily attended talk where he spoke about the process by which Indiana came to the conclusion that it’s better in many (though not all) instances to collaborate with other like-minded institutions on developing software than to either purchase it from major vendors or build it themselves.

Dave Lambert from Georgetown spoke about the general software dilemma faced by higher ed institutions – where we can’t afford to build all of our own applications but the vendors don’t meet all our requirements so force us to either heavily modify code or build workarounds. He emerging consolidations and the depressed investment climate are causing new uncertainties in the commercial vendor space. He contrasted that with the strengths of open source projects. He did suggest that it’s possible that higher ed needs a new organization to coordinate and provide a locus for fostering and sustaining the many open source projects in progress. He painted a nice picture of topics which clump together into something he calls Scholarly Information Systems, where he said that it makes sense for campuses to collaborate on projects.

I met in the afternoon with Brad Wheeler and Rob Lownden and some other folks to talk about the new Kuali project to build an open source Financial Information System. The core partners in this project at present are Indiana and the University of Hawaii. This project sounds like it’s taking off, and it’s one I predict we’ll be hearing lots more about.

This morning I participated with Mitch Kapor, Jack McCredie and Lisa Dusseault on a panel about the Chandler Project. The significant news here is that Mitch actually gave a demo of the 0.4 release of the software! Huzzah! He managed to create a collection of calendar items, upload them to a WebDAV server, tell the client to share them with another user, communicate the sharing invitation by email, and (on the other client) receive the invitation and accept the items into the second client’s calendar. That’s progress! 0.4 is scheduled for public release next week.

[Educause 2004] Keith Hazelton on leveraging campus directories

I was lucky enough to be the convener for Keith Hazelton’s talk on leveraging campus directories for authorization and group management. Keith did a terrific job of setting the background for the use of directories for group management – this is extremely important work and I think a lot of people could benefit from a look at Keith’s slides.

[Educause 2004] Duderstadt’s keynote

James Duderstadt, former President of the University of Michigan, opened the conference on Wednesday with a talk about the impacts of social transformation and technology on higher education. He spoke mainly about the National Academies Forum on Information Technology and Research Universities, and their activities to engage the executive leadership of universities in discussions about how technology is changing the way students and researchers work, and the social relations of researchers and educators.

The National Academies have issued a report on the topic, titled Preparing for the Revolution: Information Technology and the Future of the Research University, available here.

[Educause 2004] Opening reception and dinner with Meeting Maker folks

Tonight was the opening reception for the Educause 2004 conference in the Exhibit Hall. Educause has gotten huge – something in the neighborhood of 6-8,000 people!

Is it just me, or do the exhibits at these trade shows seem completely off the mark? I wander around, wondering if there’s anybody who can really talk to me about the things I want to know about product lines. I went by the Novell booth to see if I could talk to somebody about their upcoming desktop Linux product, but nobody at the booth knows anything about it. Then I went by Apple to see if anyone can talk to me about whether the WebDAV client in Tiger will be able to work over SSL and to find out more details about authentication in the Jabber server in Tiger server – but again, nobody at the booth knows details about that kind of stuff. Oh, well.

I had a nice time chatting calendaring with Debby Umbach, Ed Karish and Michael Harris from Meeting Maker. They are trying to understand the lay of the standards landscape. One thing we’re all wondering is what’s the state of RSS event standards. I talked up the CalDAV and Calsify efforts, and it sounds like they’ll participate in future interop and CalSched consortium meetings.

And now to sleep, in order to make it to the 7 am speaker’s breakfast tomorrow (ugh).

Sheryl and company get a grant to study automatic conversion of graphs and charts to tactile forms. Way to go!

I wrote a couple of months ago about my colleague Sheryl Burgstahler and her DO-IT projects to help students with all kinds of disabilities work with computing.

Now Sheryl, along with Richard Ladner and Rajesh Rao of the Computer Science department and Melody Ivory-Ndiaye or the Information School have won a big new grant from National Science Foundation to find the best ways to represent in tactile form the graphical images found in scientific, engineering, and mathematical books and papers, as well as in digital formats, and to automate as much of this work as possible.

The project web site is here. Nice work!

California high-schoolers not ready for college-level work

Hoo-boy – this is depressing. I doubt whether the other states are doing any better.

From an article in the Sacramento Bee:

Nearly six months after giving the first statewide exam to identify students who aren’t prepared for university-level course work, California State University officials found that nearly 80 percent of high school juniors they tested are not ready for college English.

The same test – called the Early Assessment Program – dealt better results in math, with 45 percent of participating juniors posting scores too low to prove they are ready for college-level math.

Going to Educause next week

I’ll be in Denver most of next week for Educause 2004.

I’m on a panel Thursday morning at 8:10 (ugh) with Mitch Kapor from OSAF and Jack McCredie from UC Berkeley talking about the collaboration between the Common Solutions Group and OSAF on the Westwood version of Chandler. Mitch is supposedly going to actually demonstrate the 0.4 version of Chandler (you read it here first), so come on Ballroom 4 by if you’re at the conference and up that early.

Wednesday morning I’m the convener at a program on using LDAP directories for Authorization and Group Management featuring Keith Hazelton from the other UW – the University of Wisconsin, Madison. I think being a convener means I’m supposed to introduce the speaker and remind everyone to fill out the evaluation forms, which I myself rarely do. Keith is a smart guy, so this should be an interesting session. 10:30 in Room 201.

As usual at a conference with thousands of people, most of the interesting activity will be in hallway and private conversations with interesting folks. I’ll try to blog from the conference as much as possible. If you’re going to be there and want to get together, drop me an email or IM (on iChat or AIM as oren dot sreebny at mac.com) !

Now this is what I call strong authentication

From today’s NY Times:

The Food and Drug Administration has cleared the way for a Florida company to market implantable chips that would provide easy access to individual medical records.

The article is here.

Continue reading ‘Now this is what I call strong authentication’

Halley Suitt on B&Bs

I’d just like to point out this great rant by Halley Suitt about bed and breakfasts. Great fun reading.

The entertainment industry outsources its dirty work to the US Government

In between fighting the war on terror and subpoenaing your library records, the good folks in the Justice Department are focusing on that hardened band of criminals – folks who trade files on the Internet.

From Declan McCullagh’s CNET News.com coverage:

The U.S. Justice Department recommended a sweeping transformation of the nation’s intellectual-property laws, saying peer-to-peer piracy is a “widespread” problem that can be addressed only through more spending, more FBI agents and more power for prosecutors.

In an extensive report released Tuesday, senior department officials endorsed a pair of controversial copyright bills strongly favored by the entertainment industry that would criminalize “passive sharing” on file-swapping networks and permit lawsuits against companies that sell products that “induce” copyright infringement.

“The department is prepared to build the strongest, most aggressive legal assault against intellectual-property crime in our nation’s history,” Attorney General John Ashcroft, who created the task force in March, said at a press conference in Los Angeles on Tuesday afternoon.

And the same friendly people in the entertainment industries are now asking for the Supreme Court to overturn the Grokster case – from Fred von Lohmann’s absolutely essential article:

The entertainment industry today filed its petition for certiorari asking the Supreme Court to overturn the Ninth Circuit’s ruling in MGM v. Grokster.

The brief makes two things clear.

First, the entertainment industry is plainly mounting a frontal attack on the Betamax doctrine, seeking a radical rewrite of secondary liability principles…

Second, the entertainment industry appears to think that it can treat the Supreme Court and Congress interchangeably in pushing for its preferred re-write of copyright law.

Doesn’t our government have anything better to do? Shouldn’t the entertainment industry spend more of its time working on quality artistic product or actually taking advantage of new distribution mechanisms to bring down prices? This is getting completely out of hand, in my opinion.

Continue reading ‘The entertainment industry outsources its dirty work to the US Government’

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