In today's news we look at Ohio's growing data center, Hudson launching its high-speed Internet, the University of Akron offering a new associate degree for people in health care simulation training, Suffolk University selecting LexisNexis digital library and the National Science Foundation researching ways to improve supercomputer reliability...
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In today's news we look at the Ohio Department of Higher Education working to create career pathways into manufactoring, AT&T commiting to bring broadband to Tennesse, a supercomputer that can predict when you are going to die, the pew research center report on libraries and General Mills using virtual technology to attract millennials...
In today's news we look at Ohio State University's partnership with the state of Ohio in data center costs, Ohio legislators introducing a bill for tax-free textbooks, a new California supercomputer to advance research, the state of Ohio and NineSigma collaborating to drive job creation and IMLS announcing 276 grants to libraries in the United States...
In today's news we look at grants being given to students for STEM education, Indiana planning statewide broadband access, Columbus landing the international gathering for library dignitaries from around the world, high school students in Gahanna using the latest techology and the Gordon supercomputer operating for an additional year...
In today's news we look at Ohio colleges partnering to diversify the STEM workplace, NSF enabling a professor to engineer noses, jaws and ears, DataQ launching online, a traffice-management website for drones being unveiled by Wright State Research Institute, and Wisconsin giving millions to state broadband providers...

Last Saturday (Aug. 8, 2015), I got on my bike with 7,980 other cyclists (including at least one unicyclist) and took to the road to raise funds for cancer research at The Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center—Arthur G. James Cancer Hospital and Richard J. Solove Research Institute.
In a small, intimate setting at the restaurant 9 Tables in The Plains near Athens, I spoke to Ohio University’s Institute for Chinese Academic Leaders about shared collections and services and the challenges and opportunities for academic library consortia. After giving a brief overview of OhioLINK to a group of about 15 people, including leaders from Beijing Normal University and Northeast Normal University, I spoke about the practicalities of building and sustaining a consortium model. Consortia models exist in all shapes and sizes, and I enjoyed the opportunity to speak about OhioLINK and to give a brief overview of several other models here in the United States. Academic library consortia have many different membership models, resources and services
Earlier this month, I traveled to Bari, Italy, to deliver a pair of presentations, including the keynote address, at Progetto “RIESCO” Challenge GPU4EO 2015. The event showcased solutions to improve the performance of software used to process remotely sensed data through the use of GPUs (graphics processing units). In this article, I summarize my talk, “GPU applications for scientific computation, training and visualization.” I focus on several examples of how we’ve leveraged GPU computing in the Interface Laboratory at the Ohio Supercomputer Center (OSC).
In today's news we look at Gov. Kasich joining the GOP race, three Dayton colleges sharing $900K to bolster graduation rates, three Columbus education focused groups merging together, Amazon using North Carolina wind power to meet the energy needs of Ohio data centers, and Hudson launching a city-owned fiber-optic broadband plan...
In today's news we look at John Kasich's preparations for his presidential run, Akron getting a broadband upgrade, an editorial on the benefits of STEM school in Ohio, OSU engineering students helping to pursure street luger speed record, and Illinois State University starting a human "book" project...
In today's news we look at Wayne Struble, Kasich's director of policy, taking over as the administration's chief of staff, UC joining other Ohio universities in the I-Corps@Ohio initiative, Obama announcing a pilot program to expand broadband, two national labs working with IBM and Nvidia on supercomputing excellence, and CHORUS signing a memorandum of understanding with ORCID to support discoverability in scholarly communications...
In today's news we look at Ohio State University research creating new companies, senators asking FCC to investigate cable and broadband prices, University of Akron cutting jobs and baseball program, West Virginia University library creating the first Wikipedian-in-Residence to focus on gender gap and five reasons colleges should invest more in career services...
In today's news we look at Ohio being the first state with 1 gigabit commercial Internet accessible statewide, the Ohio Supercomputer Center's Summer Institute providing a unique STEM experience, the benefits for Ohio college students under the new two-year budget, library maker movements, and a new data-managent tool that will be used to meet the big-data challenge...
On Thursday and Friday, June 11-12, the Ohio Technology Consortium (OH-TECH) welcomed 45 technologists representing colleges and universities from Ohio and other states who arrived here to study an important emerging security technology. These systems administrators, identity managers and developers packed the BALE Theater and Conference Room to take part in the InCommon Shibboleth Workshop [https://www.incommon.org/shibtraining/] and learn how to implement federated identity management software.
Over the past five years, I have had the privilege of working with the Summer Institute program at the Ohio Supercomputer Center. Summer Institute, SI for short, is “a two-week residential program that gives gifted Ohio high school students project-based, hands-on learning,” and each year is a unique experience for both myself and the students who participate in this program.
In today's news we look at Ohio's $71 billion spending plan, Ohio State University rolling out BYOD engagement tool, Ed Seidel presenting on supercomputing in an era of big data and big collaboration, Yale's library saving old chipotle cups and Gov. Kasich's proposal possibly eliminating landlines...
Over the weekend of June 12-13, 2015, staff members of the Ohio Technology Consortium’s (OH-TECH) Shared Infrastructure (SI) unit moved systems and storage from the Kinnear Road Data center (KRC) at The Ohio State University to the State of Ohio Computer Center (SOCC). While not a common event, this was not the first time that I have been responsible for moving equipment from KRC to the SOCC.
In today's news we look at the Tiny Titan parallel computer becoming an interactive display at the American Museum of Science and Energy at Oak Ridge, programs that are aiming to boost minorities in STEM, Ohio Wesleyan's OWjL camp receiving a $3,000 grant from Timer Warner Cable, a Wright State Alumus winning the prestigious national aerospace award and Allied Fiber bringing massive broadband to the Southeast...
In today's news we look at the FCC giving $23 million to Frontier Communications to expand Ohio's broadband, girls experiencing the life of an engineer at the University of Akron, Youngstown State University ranking amoung the best online MS degrees in engineering, the best Ohio counties for technology and Facebook joining with Google and Twitter to offer a click-to-call function on their ads...
In today's news we look at Ohio State's new budget plan, a former P&G exec consulting for the Ohio Supercomputer Center, Ohio utility provider providing learning environment for students, Ohio students competing in the OhioFIRST Robotics Competition and Ohio State University winning the EcoCAR 3 challenge...
In today's news we look at Dayton being named the best Ohio metro for STEM jobs, Nationwide Children's buying a faster genome sequencer, an opinion piece on why Ohio should have a strategic partnership with Cuba, Ohio State University finding need-based aid for 12,400, and ODILO and Findaway announcing a new partnership...
In today's news we look at OSU's College of Veterinary Medicine being the first in the country to use 3-D printers, Wendy's opening 90 Degrees Labs in Columbus, Ohio receiving funds to align workforce programs with industry needs, Consolidated Electric Cooperative beginning to roll out broadband capabilities in Ohio, and an AI supercomputer assembled by tapping data warehouses for their idle computing power...
In today's news we look at employers offering college degrees for their employees, Ohio colleges among the top-ranked for online programs for veterans, Ohio's new supercomputer three times faster than the previous system, schools and libraries receiving their full request in E-Rate funding, and Cleveland searching for a way to collaborate technology and the community...
In today's news we look at Columbus State Community College offering courses to help put workers back on the job, a robotics championship to make STEM exciting, cable powers used to transform healthcare, University of Minnesota and CUNY lauching a new platform in their publications, and a $10 hedge fund supercomputer that's taking over Wall Street..
In today's news we look at companies in northeastern Ohio gathering at Youngstown State to get a sample of the latest tech trends, Ohio State is facing a $10 million budget gap, researchers are making strides with the Cheyenne supercomputer, IT and library services are working together at Smith College, and Frontier Communications' four-year investment in Ohio has exceeded $199 million...
In today's news we look at the University of Rio Grande and Rio Grande Community College work with OARnet in making an identity blueprint for higher education institutions in Ohio, two Ohio community colleges who are merging their administration offices, Dublin being approved for a 100 gigabit broadband plan, Penn State having a tech expo to show off the future of education, and the University of Chicago being chosen to house the Obama presidential library...
John Burke, library director of the Gardner-Harvey Library at Miami University Middletown, began his career just as online catalogs and periodical databases were becoming widespread and the nascent Internet was gaining interest.
His interest in this technology drew him to the field – as well as led him to help others keep up with the ever-changing field as the author of a technology textbook.
OhioLINK recently talked with Burke about working at a regional campus, changes in technology and their impact on librarianship over the past two decades
In today's news we look at researchers using the supercomputers at the Ohio Supercomputer Center for help in the Nepal earthquake, Clark State getting approved to offer a 10-percent discount for students, an editorial on getting broadband for Stark County, a nonprofit that aims to prep 11,000 community college students for STEM jobs, and ProQuest acquiring MyiLibrary and OASIS...
In today's news we look at Upper Arlington beginning plans for a fiber-optic network, Ohio public and private universities sparring over how the state should divide grant money, Kent State University professors teaching at Akron high schools so students can earn college credit, Huntington being among the 50 cities competing for a new broadband project, and President Obama announcing new initiatives for libraries...
In today's news we look at fifteen high school students who won scholarships during Goodyears annual STEM Career Day, Central State University being placed on fiscal watch, Ohio colleges planning to launch a drone summit this summer, connecting higher education trends to academic libraries, and the reality of an affordable domestic supercomputer...
In today's news we look at the Choose Ohio First Scholar Showcase hosted at Columbus State, Ohio State students participating in a hardware-focused hackathon, Ohio politcians working on lowering college costs, Louisville libraries helping to train local talent for tech jobs, and the University of Maryland releasing the results of their broadband quality in public libraries survey...
In today's news we look at Ohio finding its niche in the world of high-performance computing, Zane State College and Ohio University allowing students to transfer associate degree credits towards a bachelor's degree, a new lab offering a blended learning classroom, University of Akron lowering prices on some courses, and Intel and Cray being selected for a $200 million supercomputer project...
In today's news we look at the unveiling of the Ohio Supercomputer Center's newest supercomputer Ruby Cluster, Clark State planning to have tuition rebates to encourage retention, the University of Cincinnati School of Information Technology partners with Sinclair Community College, NetObjex announced the launch of SmartLibrary, a system that enables libraries to send messages to their patrons' mobile devices, and an increase in broadband equipment as fibre subscribers boom...
It was exciting to visit the remarkable State of Ohio Computer Center yesterday to help Ohio Supercomputer Center officials dedicate the state’s latest investment in state-of-the-art, shared, statewide technology resources — the HP/Intel Ruby Cluster supercomputer.
This new system is a boon for Ohio for many reasons – it promotes continued collaboration and efficiency around the state, it supports and strengthens our commercialization efforts, it helps to train a high-tech workforce, and its availability will increase the quality of the education and research here.
In today's news we look at municipalities in Ohio being connected via fiber-optics network, Kent State University planning to double their research spending, the OSU-OU venture capital fund preparing to launch, a Major League Baseball team using a supercomputer to help win more games, and the U.S. Department of Education releasing a guide for ed-tech developers...
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