NTC Tech Roundtable, July 8,
University Club, 6 p.m., "Open Source
technologies" panel discusses, 'who uses
this stuff and how can they bet their businesses
on something that's free?', with Moderator Tim
Choate, President, Bondware; and panelists Mathew
Binkley, Scalable Computing Systems Assistant
Director, VU (VAMPIRE) research engine; Luke
Kanies, President of Reductive; Ted Murphy, Online
Computing; Howard White of VCCH; Gregory Jones,
Owl Interactive Community Learning Centers; Mike
Upchurch, Partner2Partner. Details,
registration here.
Bulldog IT client says Bulldog's
hospital-ops background gives firm an
edge, City Paper, July
7.
Juris
Inc. Chairman
Tom Collins announced appointment of Stephen
Collins,
formerly Juris' COO, to the post of president of
the 20-year-old Brentwood-based firm. Juris
provides law-office business software and related
services to more than 2,000 clients nationwide.
June 24 release here.
Nashville's First Data Systems
names Dillingham CEO, June
23, Nash.
Bus. Journal. July 7, Tennessean. back to top
Deck stacked against would-be engineers in
Tennessee?
Dr. William L. (Bill) Sanders, a nationally
recognized analyst of student
achievement, told NTC June 21 he
believes relatively few of Tennessee's most
capable students emerge from high school truly
prepared to win admission to the state's strongest
engineering, science and medical schools -- and,
will frequently be doomed to failure if they do
get in such schools, because of inadequate middle-
and high-school preparation for college studies,
particularly in rural and urban
districts.
Sanders says Tennessee achievement data he
has studied for years make clear that
higher-achieving students in rural and urban
settings "are not getting the academic growth
opportunities necessary to be prepared to be
competitive in the more technical college majors.
In too many cases, these early higher-achieving
students are actually losing ground and fall off
the cliff, beginning in grades 6 and 7." Sanders
said he believes that, among other factors, urban
and rural schools in Tennessee often end up with
fewer veteran teachers and fewer teachers who have
had the essential math education in their own
college careers. Sanders said his and other
research supports this belief.
Sanders noted that while Metro Nashville
Public Schools seems to have averted this trend to
some degree, he believes students in the
Nashville's two academic magnet high schools
typically emerge better prepared for college than
comparably prepared students elsewhere in the
district.
Sanders conclusions are based on years of
analyses of Tennessee's longitudinal K-12 data.
Tennessee's student-assessment data has been the
envy of most other states, since 1992, when the
state adopted Sanders' Tennessee Valued Added
Assessment System (TVAAS). Sanders also draws on
findings from studies of ACT testing data in
Tennessee and nationally. TVAAS and ACT data have
enabled Sanders to track the achievement of all
students, individually, and to correlate
achievement findings with specific schools,
districts, grade levels and teachers. Sanders says
that Tennessee's assessments and achievement data
enable teachers and principals to determine the
probability of a given individual 4th-grade
student eventually earning a high-school diploma
and passing Gateway examinations; and, whether or
not that student is likely to learn and test well
enough to surmount college admission hurdles,
succeed in first-semester college algebra; and,
then, to cope with first-semester engineering
calculus "at the average university" in the United
States. He notes that these projections are
updated annually, "so that the progress of each
individual student can be carefully
monitored."
Reached for comment on Sanders' work, Metro
Schools' Director-Department of Research and
Evaluation Bob Crouch said, June 22, that he
believes Sanders has created an analytical
resource that, "in my view, is one of the most
powerful, yet underused tools available to
principals and teachers."
Earlier this month, Sanders addressed
related issues during the Governors Education
Symposium, during the James B.
Hunt Institute for
Education Leadership. Sanders is a senior research
fellow with the University of North Carolina
system and is manager of value-added assessment
and research for SAS
Institute Inc.in Cary, N.C.
He assumed the SAS position in June of 2000, upon
retiring after more than 34 years as professor and
director of the University of Tennessee's
Value-Added Research and Assessment Center.
Report by Milt
Capps. back to top
Technology 2020
is no longer accepting apps from VC-seeking
companies for Tenn. Valley
Venture Forum, Sept. 23-24, Chattanooga,
but you should register asap to attend.
Details www.tvvf.biz.
Commercializing
technology: Vanderbilt
School of EngineeringProfessor
Doug Schmidtsays the ADAPTIVE
Communications Environment (ACE) and
other open-source middleware software developed at
VUSE's Institute for Software Integrated Systems
(ISIS) is
used in technology platforms employed by
Department of Defense, NASA (including the
current Cassini probe of
Saturn and the aircraft carrier USS Ronald
Reagan); and,
by many major systems integrators, including
Raytheon, Lockheed Martin and Boeing. ISIS
middleware is oriented toward needs of
distributed, real-time and embedded systems that
control equipment, plans, ships and combat systems
on such platforms. "We build the middleware that
helps glue together the different pieces of
hardware, networks, operating systems, CPUs,
chips, etc., and makes them easier to program, so
that people can develop these complicated systems
more quickly, with less effort, less cost, more
reliably." Schmidt notes that ISIS-generated
middleware at VU is often used as the core of new
commercial offerings by such vendors as Object
Computing Inc., Prism Technologies, Hewlett
Packard and others. ACE, TAO, CIAO success
stories here. ISIS
Distributed Object Computing projects here.
BusinessTN reporter
Alexei Smirnov sees complacency in First Data
Systems' absorption by parent Stewart
Information Services and
First Data's role in selling Stewart's software,
citing missed opportunities to become the dominant
independent titling-software player. BusinessTN
July 2004, p. 12, not on web. Related: Dillingham
promoted to CEO of First
Data Systems Inc., p.
6, Nash. Bus. Journal, June 25, not on
web.
Harpeth Capital's Turney Stevens
sees plenty of investment capital around,
but venture-capital investments in Nashville,
particularly in healthcare services, lag national
trends, p. 29, Nash. Bus. Journal,
June
25.
Dell introduces
intelligent-classroom package,
release June
21. Dell
aims to dominate school sales, Nash. Bus.
Journal, June
24.
Snappy
Auctions announced SnappySales v. 2 independent web-based software
program that
enables eBay drop-off businesses to manage
consignment sales on eBay and other online auction
media. Release
here. SnappyAuctions
announces Savannah franchisee,
release July
6.Tradebank of Nashville one of
state's strongest barter franchisees, TSN
Davidson AM, p. 7, June 30. Site
here.
Mobius Tech Group aligns with iNet
Strategy, July
1, Nash. Bus. Journ.
Kyzen Corp. requests delisting on
Boston exchange, Nash. Bus. Journal, July
2.
Salix invests in robotics
firm, Nash. Bus Journal, June
18; NashvillePost.com, June
18.
Investment arm of Kaplan, which
recently acquired Nashville's
Transcender, is a player in Blackboard,
whose IPO has yielded capital for software that
lets instructors post lessons on Web, Washington
Post, June
19.
Sys-Logic LLC founded by former
Data Processing Equipment execs Wall and
Beasley, p. 5, Nash. Bus. Journal. June
25, not on web.
TennesseeMenus LLC places
restaurant menus on the web, p. 4, Nash.
Bus. Journal, June 25, not on
web. NashvillePost.com, June
24.
XS Voice supports NASCAR
fans, Nash. Bus Journal, June
24 and 25.
XS Voice offers wireless access into NASCAR,
Tennessean, June
26, 1E.
Chafin and McGee formed
Hermitage-based Tech Concepts LLC, with
Chafin director, Computer and Infrastructure
Division, McGee director-audiovisual services.
Tennessean, June 6.
Dot Edu vencap firm leverages
professor's network on Stanford campus to
get in early on deals, San Jose Mercury
News, July
2.
ORNL CEG nurturing new
companies, Knox. News Sentinel, June
21.
New Shoes Media launches into
digital cable network and programming
space, under former Gaylord exec Carl
Kornmeyer, Tennessean, June
24. back
to top
Zortec and eTransX announce partnership for systems
integration, Nash. Bus. Journal, p. 5,
July 2, not on web.
Centresource
Inc. names Wage and Bruns to key
posts, Tennessean, July
4, 5E.
Carnes Group selected Dell
partner, July 2 release
here. Nash.
Bus. Journal, July
2.
TechOptions nails Fall
School Business
Center (Nashville) and SRW Associates PR (Knoxville) as IT clients,
releases June
20.
Valor
Security subsidiary of Nashville-based SMS
Holdings sees
rise in mall security demand, June 18
release.
Volunteers:
Tennessee Tech Talent (T3) -- In
informal check with organizers of the June 20-24
Technology Student Association competition at
Opryland Hotel indicates 20 or more NTC members
volunteered their time as judges, including men
and women from AT&T, Palmer Solutions,
Vanderbilt, Decision Source, Cigna, Smartvue,
Ensafe, Passport Health, Digital Connections,
Pathgroup. Event agenda here.
EDS: Jim Duffey to lead government
sales, June 24, release
here.
Caterpillar Insurance exec Lavona
Russell profiled, mentions importance of
technology in supporting CAT growth, Nash. Bus.
Journal, p. 13, June 25, not on
web.
Manchester Tank and Equipment's
information-services now led by EVP/CFO
Joey Harwell, Tennessean, June
27,
5E.
Cricket's local strategy is now in
the hands of vp Miles Johnson,
Tennessean, 5E, June
27.
(further) CIBER becomes Nashville
Technology Council sustaining sponsor, p.
9, Nash. Bus. Journal, June 25, not on web.
Earlier story, June
10.
Passport Health hired Mark
Gardner, Jennifer Murphy, Alan Gosart,
Bill Ott and Doug Plueger, as software developers,
and Phillip Ratliff as CRM administrator. Grace
Boksa is tech support specialist,
Tennessean, June
27.
LiveVault and American Technology
Group announce storage alliance, p. 4,
Nash. Bus. Journal, June 25, not on web.
Release, June
21.
LBMC unit is
SAP Business One Partner for small- and
medium-sized business, Nash.
Bus. Journal, June 18, not on web. LBMC March
04 release.
Equinox IS licenses Collector
Deluxe to Wood County Telephone Co., p.
16, Nash. Bus. Journal, June
8.
Equinox signs Utah's Buyers United, June
22.
Direct General signs with Ceridian
for payroll/hr web-enabled services, p.
16, Nash. Bus. Journal, not on web, June
18. Release, June
1.
Asurion adding Cricket as
client, June 28, Nash.
Bus. Journal.
Tristate broadband enters
Tennessee's rural markets with Private
Capital boost, June
8,
NashvillePost.com
NashvillePost.com reports clients
defect from BellSouth, June
25, NashvillePost.com.
CoStar/Peermark names Rizzo
regional sales exec,
NashvillePost.com, June
29.
Evolved Digital adds sales
exec, July
2, Nash.
Bus. Journal. Release, July
2.
NationsLink launches Blackberry
initiative as RIM technology and cellular
service, p. 7, June 18, Nash. Bus. Journal. not on
web.
US LEC ices deal with
Predators, Nash. Bus. Journal
online, June
24.
Nashville's First Data Systems
names Dillingham CEO, June
23, Nash.
Bus. Journal. July 7, Tennessean.
Converged Solutions Group Pres/CEO
Brian Jones announced Mike Pomeranz to
vp-service operations, Tom Burnet to
vp-engineering. 5E, Tennessean, June
20.
Memphis Commercial Appeal, July
1.
George Acker to regional
director-southeast, Cybera Inc., 5E,
Tennessean, June
20.
LifeWay
opts for WORDsearch Corp.
Bible software, Nash.
Bus. Journal, p. 10, June
4, not on
web.
Cumberland Bank (Civitas) offers
Identity Theft Shield from No. American
Benefits Corp. of Brentwood, Nash. Bus.
Journal, June
4.
Kevin Post is now director of
computer services for Nashville State
Community College, Tennessean, June
13, scroll
here.
Linda Schulthise is now controller
at IRIS Networks, Tennessean, June 13,
scroll here.
Verizon Wireless' Murfreesboro call
center named Lisa VanParys assoc.
director and Constance Barbary training manager.
Tennessean, June 13, scroll here.
TN Center for Performance
Excellence names Kathryn Rawls
president/CEO. Tennessean, 1E, June
8.
Kerry L. Butler, quality and
medication safety officer at St. Thomas
Hospital appointed to Baldrige Examiners,
Tennessean, June
6.
Jack Fleischer, president of
Hermitage Lighting Gallery, received
Amer. Lighting Assn service award; Fleischer
established ALA's e-tech committee.
Tennessean. back to top
During Healthcare Finance
conference in Nashville, Peoplesoft
announces top rankings accorded the software by
Modern Healthcare and Healthcare
Informatics, June
28.
Deadline July
16: Healthcare 100 nominations are sought
by Nashville Business Journal for Sept.
10 ranking-supplement, nominations
link here.
Leadership Traits of hospital executives,
Cejka Search sponsored white paper via
HealthLeaders (free
regis).
FCC Commissioner Powell at
Vanderbilt to discuss technologies, VU
release, June
30. Also:
The City Paper, p. 11, June
30. Tech
presentations included VUMC's Star Panel and Star
Tracker systems; Wizorder for inpatient data
aggregation; Nashville Public Television for
digital bandwidth; Lighting Source for EMR, and
others. Also: Powell discusses economic
development and other tech ramifications.
Tennessean, 1E, June
30. And,
Powell rumored preparing to depart FCC, LA Times
via Knox News Sentinel, July
2. Powell
visits Knoxville to see how technology can help
rural areas, Knox. News Sentinel, July
1.
ConduIT
Corporation announces MedChartPrevention
partnership with National
Association of Senior
Friends,
Tennessean, July
1, 3E,
Tennessean. Nash. Bus. Journal, June
30.
NashvillePost.com, June
30.
Earlier, ConduIT adds section to
MedChartPrevention online service, Tennessean,
3E, June
26.
East Tennessee Healthcare Network
established, Knox. News
Sentinel, June
30.
Grimaud hopes investors will boost
Premier Micronutrient, Nash. Bus.
Journal, p. 22, June
25. Angels
among us: Grimaud launches Premier Micronutrient
Corp. to formulate nutrients for specific sets of
needs, see Nashville as epicenter of his
healthcare network, prepares to launch consumer
advertising; investors sink $1.5 million in
prospects, Tennessean, 1E, June
21.
Matt Hall to VU Medical Center
Assistant Vice Chancellor for Information
technology services, 5E,
Tennessean, June
20.
Vanderbilt informatics in Forbes of
June
11,
2004.
Tennessee Tech plans Center for
Rural Health, Tennessean,
5B, June
16.
Murray hospital hires Nebo Systems
for e-health transactions,
Tennessean, June
15.
The
Healthcare Informatics 100,
Healthcare Informatics Online, June 2004.
Also, M&A in
healthcare. back to top
Link to key
in-state government bid-tracking
resources, here.
Proposals are due July 15 on State
RFP
335.03.522 for
E-911 Tech consulting and wireless E-911
standards.
RFP
343-49-450 for integrated information and
communications support for Tennessee Health Alert
System, proposals are due July
12.
Tenn. OIR RFP
317.03-115 Time Accounting & Request for
Service, due July 30.
State of
TN in RFP 316.20-8100 for
Section 8 Housing Choice software support drew
proposals from Yardi and Emphasys Systems, with a
decision scheduled for July
14.
Metro Nashville RFP 04-27 for
Peoplesoft: consensus meeting was July 2
and letter to award recipient is "pending."Bidders
included Born, Datasoft Technology, Dell
Marketing, Eisener Technology, MDC Consulting,
Systime Computer.
RFP 04-36 for
content-management services for Metro
Schools: four bidders will present demonstrations
during sessions between July
16-20.
Metro RFP 04-33 VOIP
services for Nashville Convention Center:
committee met July 2 and letter to winner is
"pending."
Metro Government is
now in contract negotiations with US
Bank, after reviewing four offers
received in response to its E-Lockbox for
E-payments RFP
04-31.
State RFP
345.30-980 seeks proposals for Electronic
Benefits Transfer Services and childcare
time and attendance services, due Friday
(7/9).
Nashville Electric Service (NES)
decisions on recent RFPs for onsite information
technology services (bidders: Acro Services,
CIBER, CTG, Compuware, Epitec
Group, Indus, Mincom, Northrop-Grumann,
Pomeroy, Zycron) and for Data Center Processing
Services [bidders: Affiliated Computer Services
(incumbent), InfoCrossing, Atos Origin] are
anticipated between now and Aug. 26.
TN Economic Council on Women
credits database with more female
appointments to State boards and commissions,
Nash. Bus. Journal, July
6.
Tennessee Homeland Security
contract to Maryland-based General Physics
Corp., July 1, Nash. Bus
Journal, July
1.
Metro Nashville Information Systems
signs Strohl Systems (Pa.) for disaster
recovery; Metro IS also sorting anti-virus, -spam
software. NashvillePost.com, June
29.
Metro Nashville Police scrutinize
surveillance options,
Tennessean, June
20,
1A.
New head of TBI, Nash.
Bus. Journal, June
17.
NashvillePost.com, June
17.
Tennessean, June
18. City
Paper, June
18. AP via
Knox. News Sentinel, June
18.
Technologies for use in fighting
illegal methamphetamine production in
Tennessee, June 15, Knox. News
Sentinel, June
15. Knox.
News Sentinel, June
20.
More than $500 million in Tennessee
taxes paid via online first year, Knox.
News Sentinel, July
5.
In praise of Congressman Zach
Wamp's push for Tennessee technology
corridor, June 7, Times
Free Press.
Murfreesboro restricts City
employees' personal use of Internet,
Tennessean/Rutherford, June
27.
Update on call-center presence in
Tennessee, and influence of recent state
law giving preference to call-centers that employ
workers in U.S., BusinessTN magazine, p. 52, July 2004, not on
web.
Univ. of Memphis prof's DUI
tracking database helps state officials
analyze DUI patterns, Times
Free Press, June
22.
Fed lobbyist database too fragile
for public access? AP via
SiliconValley.com, June
29.
Court says ISPs may monitor
messages, limits e-mail privacy for
originators, Washington Post, July
1.
Cops on the beat are now akin to
walking databases, CNN, July
1.
Tennessee economic-development
agency restructures, Nash. Bus.
Journal, June
28.
Cisco announces Intelligent Roadway
Solutions, notes Tennessee TDOT as Cisco
user, release June
8.
Metro Nashville uses Transect
planning tool, Nashville City
Paper, June
4.
Earlier story, June
26/03.
Baker Donelson's Robert Divine, a
Chattanoogan, joins Homeland Security and
US Citizenship and Immigration Service efforts,
Chattanoogan, June
9.
RFID will be a factor in new
border-security contract via Accenture,
Washington Post, June
5. How
Accenture won huge government visitor-screening
contract, Washington Post, June
4. U.S.
Visitor databases set for huge explosion,
Washington Post, June
2.
Accenture and America's digital welcome mat,
Washington Post, June
3. back to top
FedEx chooses Intermec for
GPRS-Dispatch logistics solution,
Commercial Appeal, July 7. Release
July
6.
Memphians encouraged to consider a
role in supporting commercial space
travel, as they did fledgling FedEx,
Commercial Appeal, July
6.
IPIX mideast deal for surveillance
technology opens doors to Turkey, Iraq,
other markets, Knox. News Sentinel, July
1.
Memphis-area IT firms recognized by
Computerworld as top employers, July
1, Commercial Appeal. Regions ranks in IT workplace
list, Memphis Bus Journal, June
25.
e-CTMS rolls out
transportation-management system that helps small
businesses ship, Memphis Bus. Journal, July
2.
Online Development Inc. (Knox.) announces
broad development and marketing alliance with ILS
Technology for process controllers, July
1.
Memphis-based National Commerce
Financial sees customer-retention boost
as result of Synapse Technology adoption, June
24.
Diversified
Thermal banks on power of its website
redesign, release June
24.
Memphis Networx LLC deploys Cisco's
optical nets solution, June
24.
Tech-driven Recovery Network is
making a mint in Hernando selling used
gear, Commercial Appeal, June
27.
Memphis pioneer in knowledge
manaagement, Bob Buckman, says trust is at the
core of success, Commercial Appeal, June
27. Related, Buckman Lab achievements.
Jon Bascom, VP-IT,
AutoZone, named to board of Children's
Museum of Memphis. Commercial
Appeal.
Chattanooga plans online permitting
system for contractors, paid for with user
fees; forecast fully operational March
2005, Times Free Press, June
23.
Chattanooga retailers resorting to
"clicks and bricks" strategy for online
retail, Times Free Press, June
27.
Stadium Click Effects enhances
sports venue experience, June
24, Tennessean.
Internet pioneers meet at Oak
Ridge, June
30, Knox News Sentinel.
Krystal wi-fi access in 50
restaurants - NashvillePost.com, June
30
Pomeroy IT announces 5-year, $14
million outsourcing contract with Fifth
Third Bank, June
17. Pomeroy-to-Pomeroy CEO change, June 10, here.
Internet contributes to killing
Memphis newsstand, Commercial Appeal, June
19.
Employment changes in IRS Memphis
computing center, Commercial Appeal, June
19.
Chattanooga's Prize Corporation
plans expansion due success of its
database-management software for auto
dealers, Times Free Press, June
19.
Chattanooga Intelligent Systems
& Networking executive counsels small
business on security, Nash. Bus. Journal, p. 27,
June
18.
Choicepoint buys
ragsheets, Memphis Bus. Journal, June
22. Commercial Appeal, June
23.
Remotec Inc. decision to outsource
costs jobs at robot-maker, Knox News
Sentinel, June
22.
Oak Ridge NL team worked to protect
spacecraft Cassini's fuel cells, Knox.
News Sentinel, July
2.
ORNL wins R&D Magazine tech
innovations awards, Knox News Sentinel,
July
3.
ORNL chief, others debate
supercomputer costs in DC testimony,
Knox. News Sentinel, June
23.
Knoxville Oak
Ridge Regional Network installs new board
members, including President
Dennis Corley of Digital Crossing. Knox News
Sentinel, June
28.
Cingular installs COW to overcome
Oak Ridge connection problem, Knox. News
Sentinel, June
28.
Covista Communications
(Chattanooga) release 1Q results, citing
decline in retail commercial sector, June 11, release
(About/Press Releases).
Touchpoint callcenter consulting
play, Memphis Bus Journal, June
28.
NuMarkets adds Carolinas
operations, Times Free Press, July 6, 1C.
Release
here. back
to top
Vanderbilt engineers will work on
Defense's advance carbon nanotechnology
project, Nash. Bus.
Journal, June
24.
Release June
28.
Microsoft and e-College announce
collaboration for campus and online
e-learning, June
15 release.
Tennessee State University gains
Dell Inc. grant for supply-chain
education, June
17.
Tennessean, June
15.
Science education may be
'bumped-aside' in mid-Tennessee,
Tennessean, July
5.
Science teachers see crisis in classrooms, AP via
Knox. News Sentinel, July
4.
Group studies merging college and
technical career tracks for high schools,
Tennessean, 1B, June
8.
Metro's vocational programs getting
cutting-edge makeover, Tennessean,
4B, June
8.
Tenn. State University named Maria
Thompson director of division of research
and sponsored programs, Tennessean, June 13,
scroll here.
Release here.
Using GIS to find Tennessee's most
remote location, Knox. News
Sentinel, June
13.
Methods, here.
UT Battelle gives $150K for science
education in Knoxville, June
11, Knox.
News Sentinel.
TN k-12 education spending lags
nation, Commercial Appeal,
June
11.
Educators learn biotech skills at
Nashville State Community College, The
City Paper, p. 4, June
9.
Fraud, Waste said to mar FCC E-rate
funding for wiring schools to Net, USA
Today, June
9.
America's K-12 schools said near
achieving near-universal Net access, USA
Today, June
9. back to top
Electronic
Frontier Foundation seeks to overturn key
patents, NY Times, July
5.
RSS zealots were driving me
nuts...'til I read this
article, PC
Magazine,
(3/04). Using RSS to fine-tune your webstream
information, NY Times, June
3.
MUSIC: Sacred
music providers' sites compete like the
devil, Tennessean, July
6, here.
Nashville website links
veteran and novice songwriters, Nash. Bus.
Journal, June
25.
Songwriter's chore made easier by software that
anticipates what pleases music critics, NY
Times, July
1.
Asurion among companies helping
foster-care 'grads' with employment,
Tennessean, June
6. Other
employment: Asurion hiring, Nash. Bus.
Journal, June
3.
Tennessean, June
4. Nash.
Bus. Journal, June
3.
Nashville area businesses can help
schools easily via Business-2-Education
(B2E) database, City Paper, p. 4, June
8.
IT volunteers, interns needed for
Nashville Rape & Sexual Abuse Cntr.,
Tennessean, June 13, scroll
here.
Business liability goes up as
spamming and viruses get worse, Bob Evans
column, InformationWeek, June
7.
Information-security spending will rise from 3 to
4 percent annually to 12 percent by 2006, says
META Group, Internet.news, June
7.
Previously overlooked Boston
Consulting Group report encourages more
offshoring to avoid calamity, Washington
Post, July
2.
Scientists takes step toward
quantum computers, CNN, June
17.
Intel's marketing strategy for
home-entertainment computers may reflect
diminishing returns on increasing
processor speeds, Washington Post,
June
18. New
York Times, June
18.
Businesses take more advantage of
information management staff as
librarians reinvent their profession, Tennessean,
1E, June
9.
Sustainable
business models for Wi-Fi seem hard to come
by, NY Times, June
7. Five
short-range wireless standards seen converging,
Reuters via NY Times, June
11.
German Zeppelin technology finally makes comeback with
Japanese purchase of Zeppelin
NT,
June
12.
and, More.
Diverse approaches to innovation
within operations and
business, H. Lee
Martin column,
Knox. News Sentinel, June
7.
Iraq seeks 'IQ' domain name to make
its mark on the Net, USA
Today, June
4.
Exploration: Online
Research Journal at
Vanderbilt University. back
to top
And,
visit Tennessee's technology councils'
sites:
_____________
CALENDAR
(July 8) NTC Tech Roundtable, Open
Source technologies, details in
Upfront, above, or here.
(July 8) AITP Nashville - IT
Strategies at Thomas Nelson, Rick
Proctor, CIO, Sheraton Music City, 5:30
p.m., details
here.
(July 13) JAVA Users
Group, Nashville, Billy Hollis, MSDN
Regional Director and author. 4:30 p.m. at RHI,
3100 West End, Suite 400, rsvp here.
(July 13) NE TN Tech. Council
Membership Meeting, 8 a.m., presentation
by Mtn. States Health Alliance, Johnson City
Medical Center. Contact vcrymble@netntech.org or
(423) 279.9000.
(July 20) East TN Tech After Hours
at Digital Crossing, RSVP@tech2020.org.
For more information on sponsorships or corporate
tables at Tech After Hours, contact marlow@tech2020.org.
(July 21) Chattanooga
Technology Council luncheon, RFID
topic, Tom Wengler, CGW Inc., (423) 755-7481 for
info and RSVP.
(July 22) Mid-TN InfraGard chapter,
Jim Basham, TN Emergency Management
Agency. Belmont Univ. Massey Bldg., 4th
Flr. 2 p.m., rsvp
here.
(July 26) Dr. David Pond, Managing
Director, USC Nano Center, "Nano
Strategies. A Look Into The Future With
Possibilies In The Present". 5:30 p.m. at
MeadowView Marriott, Kingsport. Register
via vcrymble@netntech.org.
(July 27) WiTT program:
Radio Frequency Identification Devices (RFID),
present. by Paul Reed of BRS, 11:30 a.m.,
BellSouth Tower Conference Center, 333 Commerce
Street, rsvp here.
(July 28) Tech Council Monthly
Meeting at Tech2020, Speaker: Amy Bunton,
TVA Economic Development Manager for Existing
Business and Industry, RSVP by July 26 to
RSVP@tech2020.org or call (865)
220-2020.
(July 28) East TN Tech
Council, 11:30 a.m., Amy Bunton, TVA
Economic Development Manager for Existing Business
and Industry, pre-pay online at tech2020.org or
rsvp by July 26 to RSVP@tech2020.org or (865)
220-2020.
(July 29) Chatta. Tech. Council
breakfast briefing, (423) 755-7481 for
info and RSVP.
(Aug.
2-5) Synergy 2004: IT education-program
reform conference in Nashville, led by
Center for IT Education at Nashville State
Community College, covering improvement of
teaching and learning, and alignment of IT
education with changing workforce and workplace
demands. For more information, write David
McNeel,
director, CITE.
(Aug. 4)
Genetic Town Hall, Renaissance
Hotel, Nashville, 9 a.m., convened by Johns
Hopkins Genetics and Public Policy Center, details
and registration here.
(Aug. 5) NTC Tech
Roundtable, Tim Stafford, CIO, EdgeNet,
University Club, Vanderbilt.
(Aug.
12) AITP Nashville - IT at Direct General
Corporation, Suzanne Lattimore, CIO,
Sheraton Music City, 5:30 p.m., details here.
(Aug. 18) Chattanooga
Tech Council luncheon, details (423)
755-7481.
(Aug. 24) 3rd Annual Nashville
Technology Council - ISSA "Information Security
Conference," Nashville Convention Center.
Details here.
(Sept. 2) NTC Tech
Roundtable, Steve Bass, Pres./CEO,
Nashville Public Television, re:
datacasting and digital era.
(Sept. 23-24) 8th
Annual Tenn. Venture
Forum - hosts: Tech2020, City of
Chattanooga.
(Sept. 24) Annual Economic Outlook
Conference,
sponsored by the Jennings A. Jones College of
Business at Middle Tennessee University. Details
not yet available.
(Sept. 28-30) 2004
Governor's Economic-Development
Conference, Nashville Convention
Center.
(Sept. 28) Music City Future 50
recognition at Franklin Marriott Cool
Springs. Nominations open in June for
this annual recognition, with nominations deadline
of July 2. Event
site, criteria here.
(Sept. 29) Healthcare
IT conference, details to be announced.
Save the date.
(Sept. 30) Nanotechnology
enterprise will be the topic of a program convened
in Nashville by faculty with Vanderbilt's
owen Graduate School of Management and VU School
of Engineering. 10 a.m.-3:30 p.m. Details to be
announced.
(Oct. 4) NTC Tech
Roundtable - Mike Dunne, President, Quanta
Nashville.
(Oct.
5-7) Memphis Musculoskeletal New Ventures
Conference, Memphis Biotech. Fdn,
here.
(Oct. 14-16) AITP Region 7
STUCON student IT professionals event,
details here. http://www.aitpnashville.org/stucon16.htm
(Oct. 22) NE TN Tech Council
TechStar Awards Luncheon, 11:30 a.m.,
MeadowView Conf. Ctr. Program with Anne Pope, Alex
Fischer, Eric Cromwell, others. Info:
vcrymble@netntech.org or calling
423.279.9000
(Nov. 4) NTC Tech
Roundtable, representatives of ConduIT
Corporation and Digiscript discuss
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