The conference kicked off with a great opening keynote by Jim Collins talking about Leadership in High Ed IT. Here were my based on his research in comparing the Good to the Great. Here are my take aways from the keynote:
Six things to check for people in the right seats
Recommended things to do (more at http://jimcolins.com):
There were several themes that emerged from the sessions I attended as well as the sessions that were being offered. I group them as follows:
I attended numerous sessions that address all of these in various overlapping ways. Of particular note was the growing number of schools providing students and researchers with access to there own internal cloud computing environment on an On Demand basis. The Virtual Computing Lab (VCL) project out of NC State, which Pat Dreher (former MITer) presented about, was particularly exciting. They hace created a open source project that provides an internal cloud to students and researcher that can be leveraged to load balance with unused cycles for HPC isntallations as well. I think there is a lot of potential in this area to consider what MIT should be looking at in terms of service to students and researchers. We have been leveraging Amazon services for a while through various grants, but those resources will start to cost more eventually. The VCL provides a web frontend that enables its users to request an n-node cluster of machines and chose which image of operating system and applications should be installed. They then use that for the requested timeframe and then it is returned to the pool. Financial comparisons of this done in Virginia show the VCL configuration to be much more cost effective than other options they considered.
To be continued...