Click here to receive your FREE subscription to Campus Technology
4/15/2008
Schmidt emphasized a need to figure out a business model for cloud computing to make it work.
At least one observer sees cloud computing -- and the Google-Salesforce.com announcement -- as being a disruptive technology factor for Microsoft.
"We continue to believe that the transition to 'cloud computing' represents classic technology disruption and that Microsoft and other PC- and enterprise software companies will ultimately be in a challenging spot," stated blogger Henry Blodget.
Blodget is the one-time Wall Street analyst who gained infamy for his too favorable predictions about .com Internet companies in the 1990s. The term "disruptive technology" is attributed to Clayton Christensen in the book, "The Innovator's Dilemma," and refers to technology that destroys the business models of entrenched industries.
Kurt Mackie is online news editor, Enterprise Group, at 1105 Media Inc. You can contact Kurt at kmackie@1105media.com.
copy text (above) for proper citation
The Foundation for California Community Colleges (FCCC) has awarded a statewide emergency alert notification contract to Waterfall Mobile. The contract establishes Waterfall's AlertU as an approved technology through the official non-profit foundation for the California Community College (CCC) system office. Through this partnership, individual colleges may directly implement emergency communication services, eliminating lengthy technology evaluation and RFP processes.
King's College and Arizona State University have switched to Omnilert's e2Campus for emergency notification. Omnilert also has introduced a new program called the ENS Conversion Service that allows schools to bulk upload data from their previous emergency notification system into e2Campus at no charge.
Saint Joseph's University has begun deploying a Meru Networks wireless local area network across its Philadelphia campus as part of a multi-year effort to bring wireless coverage to every building on campus.
Organizations may have been slow to adopt Microsoft Windows Vista, but expect that to change by late 2008 to 2009, according to a Forrester Research report by Benjamin Gray et al., published last week.
Talisma Corp. announced version 8.0 of its constituent relationship management (CRM) application for higher education. The new release includes application management, a revamped user interface, two-way text messaging, personalized Web portals, and an ADA-compliant Web client, among other enhancements.
Two Pennsylvania teaching colleagues with an interest in music and technology are bringing remote experts into classrooms at almost no cost, using Skype's free videoconferencing technology.