AI Fame Rush Review – Virtual Influencer Creation In Just Minutes
Smart Services CRC participant meeting talk
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Editor's Notes
Coming in to our Strategic Planning cycle, we were already ‘tracking’ 8 major forces at work affecting our environment
Put simply cloud computing is about using software applications, content and services that are located in specialised facilities (off campus) and optimised for global delivery to many different customers. If you have done a Google search today then you have used a cloud computing service. The most well known University service to go into the cloud is student, and in some cases, staff email. 83% of Australian Universities now have their e-mail in the cloud. However if extracting value from the cloud is going to be an important strategy for ICT in Universities then having the right network to access these facilities, which are by definition offsite and frequently overseas is also going to be important.
Coming in to our Strategic Planning cycle, we were already ‘tracking’ 8 major forces at work affecting our environment
Quick update on Telepresence, Polycom and Huawei using existing MCUs, mention recent news on Polycom support for Cisco’s TIP for Telepresence, seeking details on how thay may work in practice and will request access to early trials between Cisco and Polycom
EVO because it does not require dedicated client software of servers to join an EVO communityViVu/AARNet Anywhere because it does not require dedicated client software of servers to join a Skype or ViVu community, recent SIP support developments will enable integrationCisco IME because it is not based on additional vendor connection and vendor network equipment to connect with other IME only call manager systems and their users. Our solution does not self-learn peer-to-peer function but manages connections centrally
Coming in to our Strategic Planning cycle, we were already ‘tracking’ 8 major forces at work affecting our environment
Many students will come to universities with their own mobile devices (laptop, pads, phones), expecting wireless support, issues of security, scale and manageability existVisiting scholars, researchers can be bound by complex different access policies at institutions adding time to local IT staff at both the visited campus (to join) and home campus (to rejoin after the visit).Some universities have different wireless policies and network on campus = duplication, waste, security gapsOverseas campuses can provide access but it may be in another language or require commercial access at expensive roaming rates stifling collaboration opportunities.More regulations and complexity is harming opportunities for secure easy to connect network access harming collaboration and wasting resources