Covers campus IT governance and planning. Audience includes IT planners, managers, and developers.
The Technology Program Office (TPO) has recently created a set of project management documents to help all staff define and manage campus projects. The templates are designed to fit the needs of both technical and non-technical projects, and are simple and flexible enough to use for small and complex projects alike. April 16, 2008.
This is an abstract of a paper by Rosio Alvarez, CIO of the Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, that explores how to develop, deploy, and extend cyberinfrastructure assets within higher education -- both within and across institutions. Instructions for accessing the paper are included. March 10, 2008.
CIO Shel Waggener reflects on the challenges a diverse and complex major research university faces in delivering high-quality IT services in a constantly evolving environment, and provides an overview of the changes Berkelely has undertaken to meet these challenges. March 5, 2008.
This is the fourth installment of an ongoing series of updates about the 2012 project, a project which calls for new governance structures, systematic planning of the next generation of student systems, and immediate steps to consolidate and safeguard student data. February 25, 2008.
The Office of the CIO and the campus Information Technology Architecture Committee (ITAC) are pleased to announce the availability of three research and advisory services from Burton Group, an organization that provides in-depth, vendor-independent research and advisory services focused on enterprise IT infrastructure technologies: Application Platform Strategies, Collaboration and Content Strategies, and Identity and Privacy Strategies. These services are available to all UC Berkeley employees. January 24, 2008.
For the 2007-08 fiscal year, the campus took a major step forward in information technology (IT) activity-based budgeting. Integrated into the annual campus budget call, a new process was used to evaluate IT funding requests. The requests chosen for investment this year reflect a range of integrated technology projects in support of research, teaching and learning, student experience, and administration, that ultimately benefit the campus as a whole September 20, 2007.
Earlier this year, a diverse committee of campus leaders met with representatives from Google and Microsoft to explore the Google Apps for Education and Microsoft Live@EDU service offerings, and to determine if these vendors' offerings in the areas of mail, calendaring, and web-based file sharing are a reasonable alternative to UC Berkeley running these services locally (via the current CalMail, WebFiles, and CalAgenda services). This article gives a summary of the committee's findings. August 21, 2007.