Learn how you can use the CoSN SEND II Decision Tree for Education Technology to make sure that your K–12 technology initiatives create a more engaging learning experience that empowers students, teachers, and administrators alike.
View the Webcast: http://cs.co/9004B80G0
GTRI and Cisco discuss how using the internet to run branch network traffic provides a better user experience and reduces costs. You’ll learn the basics of Software-Defined WAN (SD-WAN) and the benefits, including:
- Reduced costs
- Reliability and security
- Flexibility to choose service providers
- Optimized traffic flows
Presented by Mani Ganesan of Cisco and Michael Edwards of GTRI (http://www.gtri.com) in a webinar on August 10, 2016. Webinar recording at https://youtu.be/08_QpBT07pU.
Tech Talk by Tim Van Herck: SDN & NFV for WANnvirters
Extending SDN & NFV to WAN
This session will walk through the evolution in branch networking and how SDN & NFV principles can be applied to the enterprise WAN to achieve increased reliability and flexibility. It will also cover how to lower the associated operational expense of running a classic enterprise WAN and what industry trends are pressuring changes on the design of such networks.When applying SDN & NFV principles to the WAN, there will be a natural reduction in complexity of managing services and guaranteeing uptime of network connectivity.
About Tim Van Herck
Tim is the Director of Technology and founding member at VeloCloud Networks.He is responsible for building out a global network of Points of Presence to deliver virtual last mile service to enterprise branches. Prior to joining VeloCloud, Tim was a founding member of Aryaka Networks, which offers WAN Optimization as a service. Tim has been passionately following the leading edge of network virtualization and security solutions for the past 15 years. He holds a master's degree in Industrial Engineering from the University of Antwerp, and is based in VeloCloud's headquarters in Los Altos, CA
More info @ http://meetup.com/openvswitch
Follow us on twitter @nvirters
This document discusses Verizon's managed SD WAN solution with Cisco IWAN. It outlines the business benefits of SD WAN such as centralized management, reduced complexity, and improved application performance. It then describes the technical challenges of adopting SD WAN including security, tunneling exceptions, QoS standards, and wireless requirements. The document provides deployment guidelines and examples use cases for SD WAN including a retail bank, cloud services company, and financial services franchise network. It positions Verizon as an IT partner that can help customers automate operations and focus on business results through its managed SD WAN service.
This document summarizes a webinar presented by Coevolve on building a roadmap for the next-generation WAN. The webinar covered limitations of traditional WAN solutions, how SD-WAN provides a new approach as the foundation for the next-generation WAN, addressing the vendor management challenge that SD-WAN creates, and how to build a roadmap to transition to an SD-WAN. Key points included the cost savings and network agility benefits of SD-WAN, the application visibility and performance monitoring it provides, and Coevolve's approach to managing the increased number of third-party vendors involved in an SD-WAN solution.
The document discusses a legacy MPLS/IP VPN WAN and the challenges enterprises now face in securely supporting an increasing number of services, sites, and devices. It proposes a hybrid WAN solution using MPLS, internet, and SD-WAN to provide scalability, cost efficiencies, high availability, and performance. Case studies show how Level 3 has implemented hybrid WAN solutions for large customers to connect thousands of retail locations and provide managed network services.
Build the SD-WAN business case for your whole company and identify the hidden benefits for everyone involved. Persona content and technical diagrams presented.
GTRI and Cisco discuss how using the internet to run branch network traffic provides a better user experience and reduces costs. You’ll learn the basics of Software-Defined WAN (SD-WAN) and the benefits, including:
- Reduced costs
- Reliability and security
- Flexibility to choose service providers
- Optimized traffic flows
Presented by Mani Ganesan of Cisco and Michael Edwards of GTRI (http://www.gtri.com) in a webinar on August 10, 2016. Webinar recording at https://youtu.be/08_QpBT07pU.
Tech Talk by Tim Van Herck: SDN & NFV for WANnvirters
Extending SDN & NFV to WAN
This session will walk through the evolution in branch networking and how SDN & NFV principles can be applied to the enterprise WAN to achieve increased reliability and flexibility. It will also cover how to lower the associated operational expense of running a classic enterprise WAN and what industry trends are pressuring changes on the design of such networks.When applying SDN & NFV principles to the WAN, there will be a natural reduction in complexity of managing services and guaranteeing uptime of network connectivity.
About Tim Van Herck
Tim is the Director of Technology and founding member at VeloCloud Networks.He is responsible for building out a global network of Points of Presence to deliver virtual last mile service to enterprise branches. Prior to joining VeloCloud, Tim was a founding member of Aryaka Networks, which offers WAN Optimization as a service. Tim has been passionately following the leading edge of network virtualization and security solutions for the past 15 years. He holds a master's degree in Industrial Engineering from the University of Antwerp, and is based in VeloCloud's headquarters in Los Altos, CA
More info @ http://meetup.com/openvswitch
Follow us on twitter @nvirters
This document discusses Verizon's managed SD WAN solution with Cisco IWAN. It outlines the business benefits of SD WAN such as centralized management, reduced complexity, and improved application performance. It then describes the technical challenges of adopting SD WAN including security, tunneling exceptions, QoS standards, and wireless requirements. The document provides deployment guidelines and examples use cases for SD WAN including a retail bank, cloud services company, and financial services franchise network. It positions Verizon as an IT partner that can help customers automate operations and focus on business results through its managed SD WAN service.
This document summarizes a webinar presented by Coevolve on building a roadmap for the next-generation WAN. The webinar covered limitations of traditional WAN solutions, how SD-WAN provides a new approach as the foundation for the next-generation WAN, addressing the vendor management challenge that SD-WAN creates, and how to build a roadmap to transition to an SD-WAN. Key points included the cost savings and network agility benefits of SD-WAN, the application visibility and performance monitoring it provides, and Coevolve's approach to managing the increased number of third-party vendors involved in an SD-WAN solution.
The document discusses a legacy MPLS/IP VPN WAN and the challenges enterprises now face in securely supporting an increasing number of services, sites, and devices. It proposes a hybrid WAN solution using MPLS, internet, and SD-WAN to provide scalability, cost efficiencies, high availability, and performance. Case studies show how Level 3 has implemented hybrid WAN solutions for large customers to connect thousands of retail locations and provide managed network services.
Build the SD-WAN business case for your whole company and identify the hidden benefits for everyone involved. Persona content and technical diagrams presented.
SD WAN simplifies branch office connectivity and management while improving application performance and network visibility. It uses software to direct traffic over multiple connection types, including broadband internet and private links. This allows traffic to automatically switch to the best available connection. SD WAN provides benefits like lower costs, easier management, and application-aware routing compared to traditional router-based WANs. Various vendors offer SD WAN solutions targeting enterprises, communication service providers, or as cloud-based offerings.
CloudGenix provides a software-defined wide-area network (SD-WAN) solution that can deliver 10x or more bandwidth at 50% or greater cost savings compared to traditional MPLS networks. The solution replaces proprietary hardware routers with software that runs on commercial off-the-shelf equipment and defines the network by applications rather than IP addresses. This allows customers to build secure, application-specific networks with simplified operations and visibility into application performance.
FatPipe Networks is an established provider of SD-WAN and hybrid-WAN solutions, having developed the concept over 15 years ago with numerous patents. Headquartered in Salt Lake City, it has offices worldwide and over 600 reseller partners. Its stable products are deployed in thousands of organizations across industries and can be implemented on-premises, in the cloud, or as a managed service. FatPipe offers centralized management and policy control, application-aware routing, security features like encryption, and sub-second failover of voice and video sessions. It provides a competitive advantage through experience, product maturity, and intellectual property protections over newer startups in the space.
Deploying new WAN services can take a long time and require a significant up-front capital investment. The software-defined nature of SD-WAN enables service agility, rapid rollout, and instant-on WAN that the Service Provider can immediately benefit from. This accelerates the time to market and time to revenue.
The greatest SDWAN sales slidedeck ever createdRonald Bartels
This document discusses the opportunity for service providers and operators to leverage SDWAN. It notes that legacy networks are facing challenges keeping up with business needs to migrate to the cloud. SDWAN provides a solution by enabling greater network agility and resilience while improving application performance across multiple connection types. The majority of businesses will convert to SDWAN in the next few years, making it crucial for operators to develop an SDWAN strategy. SDWAN provides incremental improvements through technologies as well as processes, people, and maximizing automation.
The document discusses SD-WAN and provides insights from industry experts on the benefits of SD-WAN including cost reductions, improved application performance, and increased security and agility. It outlines the growing SD-WAN market and common SD-WAN architectures. It also provides guidance from analysts on SD-WAN considerations for enterprises and recommendations on SD-WAN evaluation and adoption.
Silver Peak & Innovation Network Technologies (InNet)
Evolve IT: Why Performance Matters When Building Your New SD-WAN, Not all SD-WAN is Created Equal eBook
The Cisco IWAN Application simplifies WAN deployments by providing highly intuitive, policy-based automation. It enables you to realize the benefits of SD-WAN: lower costs, simplified IT, increased security, and optimized application performance.
View the Webcast: http://cs.co/9007BKlEc
The document discusses Cisco's Application Experience solution which aims to optimize application delivery, improve user experience, and simplify IT operations. It highlights challenges faced by organizations regarding application sprawl, mobility, and network readiness. Cisco's approach is to provide a unified network with services for routing, security, visibility, control and optimization. Key benefits include improved application performance, network-wide visibility and control, consistent security, and lower total cost of ownership.
Understanding Cisco’ Next Generation SD-WAN TechnologyCisco Canada
Cisco's SD-WAN solution aims to address challenges facing the modern WAN and branch networks by providing:
(1) Secure, flexible connectivity to applications and services across hybrid networks including broadband internet, cellular and MPLS.
(2) Application-aware policies and intelligent routing to optimize the user experience for priority applications.
(3) Agile operations through centralized, template-based management and zero-touch provisioning of edge routers.
Enterprises continue to implement or evaluate shifting services which were typically hosted in the branch into the cloud. The reasons include creating a leaner branch, taking advantage of increases in broadband Internet bandwidth and reduced complexity and cost.
This presentation takes a deep dive into the Cloud-Delivered SD-WAN architecture for service chaining. You’ll understanding the architectural differentiation and benefits of this approach and why it offers a superior model for delivering secure, reliable, and high performance service chaining.
SD-WAN is a newer technology that allows enterprises to access applications and data across various locations more effectively than traditional MPLS networks. It uses software to intelligently direct traffic over multiple internet connections based on priority, quality of service, and security requirements. There are several SD-WAN architectures including on-premises only, cloud-enabled, and cloud-enabled with a private backbone. Companies are switching to SD-WAN for benefits like improved security, centralized management, network visibility, scalability, and lower costs compared to MPLS.
Cisco's Intelligent WAN (IWAN) solution addresses the challenges of increasing application usage and cloud adoption. IWAN uses an IPsec overlay to provide secure connectivity across MPLS, internet, and cellular/LTE transports. It employs technologies like PfR and WAAS to intelligently direct applications to the optimal path based on performance and utilize all available bandwidth. IWAN's transport independence allows consistent operations across multiple providers at lower overall costs compared to traditional MPLS-only WANs.
Most enterprises deploy both private MPLS and public broadband Internet to some or all of their branch offices. The right SD-WAN solution will dramatically improve the utilization, performance and ease of management of the these hybrid deployments.
Review this presentation for a detailed understanding of the architectural details of Cloud-Delivered SD-WAN for hybrid WAN deployments. You’ll leave with a clear understanding of how hybrid deployments can be designed, implemented and maintained for a secure, optimal and high quality wide area network.
Packet-level multipathing and Forward Error Correction
Performance visibility, extensible security, intelligent path control, and business intent overlays
Typically sub-second failover
WAN optimization
IT organizations have long been challenged by the cost and complexity of managing the enterprise wide area network (WAN), and the demands keep growing. Software-defined WAN (SD-WAN) technology has emerged to reduce that cost and complexity, all while improving performance. With so many SD-WAN architectures to consider, how do you determine which is right for your organization?
Review this presentation and you will:
- Assess your organization's WAN growth requirements
- Understand the impact of various SD-WAN architecture on your WAN deployment
- Compare SD-WAN vendors to determine the best fit for your enterprise
- Learn how rethinking the WAN can deliver agility, simplicity, improved quality of experience, and better cloud performance
- Discover the different architectures on the market, along with their benefits and drawbacks
The document discusses Cisco's SD-WAN solution with Viptela. It provides an overview of the key components of Cisco's SD-WAN architecture including the management plane (vManage), control plane (vSmart), data plane (vEdge), and orchestration plane (vBond). It also summarizes capabilities like zero touch provisioning, VPN segmentation, application policies, and centralized management.
The document discusses a case study of MWH Global implementing a software-defined WAN with Cisco and Glue Networks. MWH Global had challenges with provisioning remote sites, operational complexity, and high WAN costs. Using Cisco's software-defined WAN technology and Glue Network's orchestration platform, MWH Global saw benefits like 10-15 times more bandwidth, significant cost savings, and faster deployment of remote sites. The solution provided flexibility, resiliency and automation to simplify their network while reducing costs.
Interpretation of scores and the grading system in public schoolsAirah Torres
This document discusses guidelines for assessing student performance and grading. It outlines how test scores should be converted to percentages and guidelines for test design, including allocation of item difficulty. Transitional guidelines are also presented, including adjustments to test design and passing marks to ease implementation of a new performance-based grading system. The overall purpose is to generate meaningful scores and ratings from test and non-test assessments to evaluate student achievement based on learning competencies.
This document discusses various instructional strategies and techniques for K-12 curriculum. It begins by explaining why teachers need to use different teaching methods to effectively reach all students, as students do not all learn in the same way. It then provides definitions and explanations of key concepts like techniques, strategies, tactics, and modules. The document also discusses specific strategies like mastery learning, discovery learning, the project method, and integrated or interdisciplinary teaching. It emphasizes that teaching methods should be selected and customized to fit the needs and advantages of each class.
SD WAN simplifies branch office connectivity and management while improving application performance and network visibility. It uses software to direct traffic over multiple connection types, including broadband internet and private links. This allows traffic to automatically switch to the best available connection. SD WAN provides benefits like lower costs, easier management, and application-aware routing compared to traditional router-based WANs. Various vendors offer SD WAN solutions targeting enterprises, communication service providers, or as cloud-based offerings.
CloudGenix provides a software-defined wide-area network (SD-WAN) solution that can deliver 10x or more bandwidth at 50% or greater cost savings compared to traditional MPLS networks. The solution replaces proprietary hardware routers with software that runs on commercial off-the-shelf equipment and defines the network by applications rather than IP addresses. This allows customers to build secure, application-specific networks with simplified operations and visibility into application performance.
FatPipe Networks is an established provider of SD-WAN and hybrid-WAN solutions, having developed the concept over 15 years ago with numerous patents. Headquartered in Salt Lake City, it has offices worldwide and over 600 reseller partners. Its stable products are deployed in thousands of organizations across industries and can be implemented on-premises, in the cloud, or as a managed service. FatPipe offers centralized management and policy control, application-aware routing, security features like encryption, and sub-second failover of voice and video sessions. It provides a competitive advantage through experience, product maturity, and intellectual property protections over newer startups in the space.
Deploying new WAN services can take a long time and require a significant up-front capital investment. The software-defined nature of SD-WAN enables service agility, rapid rollout, and instant-on WAN that the Service Provider can immediately benefit from. This accelerates the time to market and time to revenue.
The greatest SDWAN sales slidedeck ever createdRonald Bartels
This document discusses the opportunity for service providers and operators to leverage SDWAN. It notes that legacy networks are facing challenges keeping up with business needs to migrate to the cloud. SDWAN provides a solution by enabling greater network agility and resilience while improving application performance across multiple connection types. The majority of businesses will convert to SDWAN in the next few years, making it crucial for operators to develop an SDWAN strategy. SDWAN provides incremental improvements through technologies as well as processes, people, and maximizing automation.
The document discusses SD-WAN and provides insights from industry experts on the benefits of SD-WAN including cost reductions, improved application performance, and increased security and agility. It outlines the growing SD-WAN market and common SD-WAN architectures. It also provides guidance from analysts on SD-WAN considerations for enterprises and recommendations on SD-WAN evaluation and adoption.
Silver Peak & Innovation Network Technologies (InNet)
Evolve IT: Why Performance Matters When Building Your New SD-WAN, Not all SD-WAN is Created Equal eBook
The Cisco IWAN Application simplifies WAN deployments by providing highly intuitive, policy-based automation. It enables you to realize the benefits of SD-WAN: lower costs, simplified IT, increased security, and optimized application performance.
View the Webcast: http://cs.co/9007BKlEc
The document discusses Cisco's Application Experience solution which aims to optimize application delivery, improve user experience, and simplify IT operations. It highlights challenges faced by organizations regarding application sprawl, mobility, and network readiness. Cisco's approach is to provide a unified network with services for routing, security, visibility, control and optimization. Key benefits include improved application performance, network-wide visibility and control, consistent security, and lower total cost of ownership.
Understanding Cisco’ Next Generation SD-WAN TechnologyCisco Canada
Cisco's SD-WAN solution aims to address challenges facing the modern WAN and branch networks by providing:
(1) Secure, flexible connectivity to applications and services across hybrid networks including broadband internet, cellular and MPLS.
(2) Application-aware policies and intelligent routing to optimize the user experience for priority applications.
(3) Agile operations through centralized, template-based management and zero-touch provisioning of edge routers.
Enterprises continue to implement or evaluate shifting services which were typically hosted in the branch into the cloud. The reasons include creating a leaner branch, taking advantage of increases in broadband Internet bandwidth and reduced complexity and cost.
This presentation takes a deep dive into the Cloud-Delivered SD-WAN architecture for service chaining. You’ll understanding the architectural differentiation and benefits of this approach and why it offers a superior model for delivering secure, reliable, and high performance service chaining.
SD-WAN is a newer technology that allows enterprises to access applications and data across various locations more effectively than traditional MPLS networks. It uses software to intelligently direct traffic over multiple internet connections based on priority, quality of service, and security requirements. There are several SD-WAN architectures including on-premises only, cloud-enabled, and cloud-enabled with a private backbone. Companies are switching to SD-WAN for benefits like improved security, centralized management, network visibility, scalability, and lower costs compared to MPLS.
Cisco's Intelligent WAN (IWAN) solution addresses the challenges of increasing application usage and cloud adoption. IWAN uses an IPsec overlay to provide secure connectivity across MPLS, internet, and cellular/LTE transports. It employs technologies like PfR and WAAS to intelligently direct applications to the optimal path based on performance and utilize all available bandwidth. IWAN's transport independence allows consistent operations across multiple providers at lower overall costs compared to traditional MPLS-only WANs.
Most enterprises deploy both private MPLS and public broadband Internet to some or all of their branch offices. The right SD-WAN solution will dramatically improve the utilization, performance and ease of management of the these hybrid deployments.
Review this presentation for a detailed understanding of the architectural details of Cloud-Delivered SD-WAN for hybrid WAN deployments. You’ll leave with a clear understanding of how hybrid deployments can be designed, implemented and maintained for a secure, optimal and high quality wide area network.
Packet-level multipathing and Forward Error Correction
Performance visibility, extensible security, intelligent path control, and business intent overlays
Typically sub-second failover
WAN optimization
IT organizations have long been challenged by the cost and complexity of managing the enterprise wide area network (WAN), and the demands keep growing. Software-defined WAN (SD-WAN) technology has emerged to reduce that cost and complexity, all while improving performance. With so many SD-WAN architectures to consider, how do you determine which is right for your organization?
Review this presentation and you will:
- Assess your organization's WAN growth requirements
- Understand the impact of various SD-WAN architecture on your WAN deployment
- Compare SD-WAN vendors to determine the best fit for your enterprise
- Learn how rethinking the WAN can deliver agility, simplicity, improved quality of experience, and better cloud performance
- Discover the different architectures on the market, along with their benefits and drawbacks
The document discusses Cisco's SD-WAN solution with Viptela. It provides an overview of the key components of Cisco's SD-WAN architecture including the management plane (vManage), control plane (vSmart), data plane (vEdge), and orchestration plane (vBond). It also summarizes capabilities like zero touch provisioning, VPN segmentation, application policies, and centralized management.
The document discusses a case study of MWH Global implementing a software-defined WAN with Cisco and Glue Networks. MWH Global had challenges with provisioning remote sites, operational complexity, and high WAN costs. Using Cisco's software-defined WAN technology and Glue Network's orchestration platform, MWH Global saw benefits like 10-15 times more bandwidth, significant cost savings, and faster deployment of remote sites. The solution provided flexibility, resiliency and automation to simplify their network while reducing costs.
Interpretation of scores and the grading system in public schoolsAirah Torres
This document discusses guidelines for assessing student performance and grading. It outlines how test scores should be converted to percentages and guidelines for test design, including allocation of item difficulty. Transitional guidelines are also presented, including adjustments to test design and passing marks to ease implementation of a new performance-based grading system. The overall purpose is to generate meaningful scores and ratings from test and non-test assessments to evaluate student achievement based on learning competencies.
This document discusses various instructional strategies and techniques for K-12 curriculum. It begins by explaining why teachers need to use different teaching methods to effectively reach all students, as students do not all learn in the same way. It then provides definitions and explanations of key concepts like techniques, strategies, tactics, and modules. The document also discusses specific strategies like mastery learning, discovery learning, the project method, and integrated or interdisciplinary teaching. It emphasizes that teaching methods should be selected and customized to fit the needs and advantages of each class.
The document provides an overview of the main human body systems for 7th grade science students. It includes pages on the skeletal, muscular, digestive, circulatory, respiratory, excretory, nervous, endocrine and reproductive systems. Each page contains 2-3 sentences summarizing the key functions and components of that system. The pages also include buttons to navigate between them and try a review question at the end.
Approaches in teaching and learning k to 12 Charlyn David
This document outlines how literature should be taught in language arts classes. It recommends using literature to teach reading and language arts skills, as literature emphasizes their connections and engages students. It presents themes to explore like appreciating oneself and linking with the world. Literature should be taught based on Philippine works from different periods rather than by genre. Informative texts can complement literary works by expanding themes and teaching media literacy. A communicative grammar approach is advocated using elicitation, generalization, practice, and expansion. Culminating student performances should integrate study strategies and balance individual and group work.
Selection & use of teaching strategies & different approachesRuth Flores
The document discusses various teaching strategies and approaches. It begins by outlining 5 guiding principles for selecting strategies: 1) learning is active, 2) involving multiple senses enhances learning, 3) emotion increases retention, 4) meaningful learning connects to students' lives, and 5) teaching should go beyond recall to develop higher-order thinking. It then describes direct/expository approaches like lecture and demonstration methods. Indirect/guided approaches discussed include inquiry-based learning, problem-solving, and project-based learning. A variety of teaching methods are suitable depending on objectives, content, and learners. An integrated approach using multiple strategies is most effective.
Computerized grading system chapter 1-3Chriselle24
This document provides an introduction and overview of a proposed computerized grading system for Metropolitan Academy School. Currently, the school uses a manual grading system that is time-consuming for teachers and prone to errors. The proposed system aims to reduce teachers' workload, improve accuracy, and allow more timely submission of reports. It will cover recording and calculating student grades based on assessments. The document outlines the background, problems, objectives, scope, and methodology of the study to develop this system.
This document summarizes an educator's briefing on an online learning service framework called AralaNET. It discusses challenges in integrating ICT into educational organizations and rating the business readiness of ICT solutions. It then outlines ICT architecture and solutions for educational organizations, including performance areas like content creation and learning/business management systems. Open content and knowledge management are also discussed.
Cloud computing offers potential benefits for adult literacy programs by providing access to computing resources and services at lower costs. However, adult literacy in Canada currently faces challenges including a lack of coordinated policy and funding instability. While some programs utilize basic IT like websites and online courses, adoption of cloud computing has been limited due to issues like lack of access, trainer skills, and studies on effectiveness. For cloud computing to benefit adult literacy, strategies are needed to address concerns regarding security, infrastructure, and control by large companies.
Now Refer your #College or #University to #EMC Academic Alliance, a collaboration with colleges and universities worldwide to help prepare #students for successful #careers in a transforming #ITindustry via http://bit.ly/RefertoEMCAA
Katy Independent School District Makes a Difference with Cisco Mobility: Case...Cisco Mobility
Katy Independent School District launches
successful BYOD program and conquers the
digital divide.
Cisco Solutions:
- Installed Cisco® 802.11ac-based Wi-Fi access
points in classrooms and outdoor locations
- Managing wired and wireless networks centrally
with Cisco Prime™ Infrastructure
Transforming Education through Disruptive TechnologiesAspire Systems
IT budget cuts post-recession have forced education CIO’s to increase dependence on emerging cost-effective technologies like collaboration platforms, web based applications and the now buzzed Cloud Computing. However, the technology invasion in education is still nascent and various revolutionary concepts, like augmented reality and semantic web, are on the verge of becoming mainstream.
To penetrate beyond the inevitable hype and disruption, this webinar will be looking at the following:
- The best emerging technologies that education software providers should invest in
- Technologies recommended for classroom adoption among educational institutions
- Effects of adopting such disruptive technologies
- Obtaining the best out of established technologies
Steve Beswick, Director of Education Sector, discusses Microsoft's place in education. His presentation provide guidance and vision for headmasters, principals, IT managers, and administrators about a variety of technical topics related to education. Topics discussed in clude virtual learning gateways, SharePoint, data management, and organizational agility.
Mark Inglis has over 30 years of experience in educational technology and program development. He has a proven track record of implementing successful 1:1 laptop programs, developing learning management systems, and expanding the use of technology in educational institutions. He is skilled in strategic planning, budgeting, training, and developing partnerships. Throughout his career, he has advanced the use of technology to transform learning and build innovative educational programs.
Executive panel discussion at the 2010 BDPA Technology Conference on "Federal IT Initiatives".
Panel members: John James (US Navy), Bob Whitkp (US Navy), Tony McMahon (IRS) and Dr. Anthony Junior (US Navy)
The University of Malaya ICT Road Map for 2010-2012 outlines five strategies to enhance the use of ICT at the university, including developing a resilient network infrastructure, utilizing ICT to build a knowledge-based community, enhancing ICT products and services to support teaching, learning and research, developing ICT skills among the university community, and ensuring an informed approach to IT service delivery. The road map discusses implementing policies, improving infrastructure through initiatives like high-speed internet and wireless networks, developing new applications and services, and establishing a knowledge management system to support the university's goals.
Student Shelter In Computers Cisco Networking Regional Academy & ITC Lahore P...Abbas Shahid Baqir
Student Shelter In Computers provides technical education and training. It offers a variety of IT certification courses and exam preparation through partnerships with Microsoft, Cisco, EC-Council, and Juniper. The organization aims to promote IT education, especially for women and underserved groups in Pakistan. It provides hands-on training, career counseling, job placement assistance, and internship opportunities to help students build skills and find employment in the technology industry.
Cloud computing opportunity and challenge for european foundations and gran...TechSoup
The document discusses the opportunities and challenges of cloud computing for European foundations and their grantees. It notes that the economic crisis has increased needs but reduced resources, requiring foundations to leverage technology solutions. Cloud computing can enable increased collaboration, data sharing, and transparency. However, concerns around security, privacy, costs and reliability must be addressed. Case studies demonstrate how foundations have benefited from cloud-based tools for communications, data management and reporting.
Web Filtering Presentation to Student Senatejeremychobbs
Jeremy Hobbs, the Chief Information and Facilities Officer at UCDSB, presented an overview of the IT department and its strategic goals. The IT department supports over 10,000 computers across 100 locations with only 17 staff members. Some of its key responsibilities include supporting the student information system, email servers, websites, and a large private wide area network. Looking ahead, the department aims to increase personalization, mobility, and cloud services while standardizing infrastructure and automating non-essential tasks to improve efficiency with limited resources. The presentation also addressed the department's web filtering strategy and plans to differentiate policies based on user identity and age.
Gartner’s Top 10 Strategic Technologies Impacting Education in 2015Extreme Networks
This document discusses 10 important technologies that Gartner recommends higher education CIOs plan for in 2015: 1) adaptive learning 2) adaptive e-textbooks 3) customer relationship management 4) big data 5) sourcing strategies 6) open exo-structure 7) open microcredentials 8) digital assessment 9) mobility solutions and 10) social learning. For each technology, the document provides examples of how Extreme Networks solutions can help address them and links to related blog posts for further information.
Data foundations building success, at city scale – Imperial College LondonSplunk
Universities have more in common with modern cities than traditional places of learning. This mini city needs to empower its citizens to thrive and achieve their ambitions. Operationalising data is key to building critical services; from understanding complex IT estates for smarter decision-making to robust security and a more reliable, resilient student experience. Juan will share his experience in building data foundations for a resilient future whilst enabling digital transformation at Imperial College London.
The IT&R staff at UCF recognized several employees for excellence. Ryan Seilhamer received the Outstanding Service award for his leadership of the UCF Mobile initiative and emerging as a national leader in mobile learning. Jason Musick received the Outstanding Innovator award for saving the university $260,000 by implementing a new fiber optic technology. Several librarians and IT staff received the Outstanding Collaboration award for creating an online library research course that enrolled over 2,700 students.
This talk is about data-driven transformation and its contribution to Digital transformation. The first part shows the necessity to adopt the "software revolution" to adapt constantly to the customer’s environment. I then speak about " Exponential Information Systems" that the the foundation for the data-driven ambitions : Enterprise-wide flows, Customer-time data freshness, Future-proof unified semantics, etc.
The last part talks about Exponential Technologies, such as Artificial intelligence and machine learning, to drive more value from data
Westminster education forum isc digital crowd sourcing developing digital oct...InspirEdu
This document discusses developing digital strategies in schools. It introduces Ian Phillips who chairs the Independent Schools Council (ISC) Digital Strategy Group. The document outlines challenges schools face in using EdTech to improve education and attract international students. It discusses developing "digital intelligence" and collaborations on data privacy, analytics, and developing a "Schools' Guide" to digital strategies. The guide aims to help schools inspire innovation, improve teacher workload, encourage collaboration, ensure infrastructure supports learning, and integrate safeguarding. It provides examples of gathering best practices from other schools to share.
Building Successful API Programs in Higher Education3scale
In this webinar, hosted on August 27, 2015, Steven Willmott discusses the benefits of API development in higher education.
APIs are not exclusive to for-profit organizations. In higher education—from statewide university and college systems to smaller private institutions—schools like Notre Dame and Brigham Young University have built highly successful API programs.
Similar to Enabling the Digital Leap: Strategies for K–12 Schools (20)
Consider this ten-part “WAN Bill of Rights” a guide to evaluating your overall strategy and deciding which SD-WAN solutions will improve your digital business transformation and help you win against the competition.
Learn more by visiting http://www.cisco.com/go/sdwan
Deep dive into the new Cisco Catalyst 6840-X Series Switch and see how it delivers more for less with up to 40 high-density 10G ports plus 40G native uplinks in a compact 2-rack (2RU) form factor that fits both tight spaces and limited IT budgets.
Miss the webcast? View the replay>> http://cs.co/9002ByM1i
The document discusses preparing networks for the second wave of 802.11ac wireless technology. Key points include: 1) 802.11ac Wave 2 provides better performance, coverage, and support for more wireless devices and Internet of Things devices; 2) Networks need faster switching and mobility capabilities to support increasing wireless traffic and bandwidth-intensive applications; 3) Cisco's new 802.11ac Wave 2 access points, controllers, and switches help networks support the next generation of wireless and mobility demands.
Future Proofing Your Network with the New Cisco Catalyst 3850 10G Aggregation...Cisco Enterprise Networks
Learn how the newest members of the Cisco Catalyst 3850 Series switching family can future-proof your network with 10Gb performance in the aggregation layer.
Cisco Catalyst 2960-X, 2960-CX, and 3560-CX Platforms - The Greenest Catalyst...Cisco Enterprise Networks
Cisco Catalyst 2960-X, 2960-CX, and 3560-CX Series Switches reduce TOC in a unique way by lowering power
consumption by up to 82 percent, with power usage reduced to 6.3W from 33.1W in the Cisco Catalyst 2960X-
24TD-L Switch when in hibernation mode, for example. Other models in the Cisco Catalyst 2960-X, 2960-CX, and
3560-CX Series Switches show significant power savings with the use of Cisco EnergyWise hibernation mode and
Energy Efficient Ethernet (EEE). These are the greenest Cisco Catalyst switches ever.
Maximize Application Performance and Bandwidth Efficiency with WAN OptimizationCisco Enterprise Networks
Learn how a two-step strategy that reduces application bandwidth consumption and makes more efficient use of your remaining bandwidth can help you achieve seemingly conflicting business and IT goals.
Register to watch webcast: http://cs.co/9006CAY0.
Your network holds the key to defending your organization. The Cisco switches, routers, and wireless solutions you deploy can complement and empower your security systems. Cisco provides a broad portfolio of capabilities to improve your defenses across the entire attack continuum. This presentation outlines how you can use your network as a sensor to protect your data, your customers, and your reputation.
Register to Watch Webcast: http://cs.co/9003CRsH
Join the Conversation: http://cs.co/9008CRt6
Speed Hybrid WAN Deployment with the New Cisco Intelligent WAN Design Guide -...Cisco Enterprise Networks
Presentation from the April 22, 2015 Webcast: Speed Hybrid WAN Deployment with the New Cisco Intelligent WAN Design Guide.
Register to View Webcast: http://cs.co/9004CRn0
Unlocking Productivity: Leveraging the Potential of Copilot in Microsoft 365, a presentation by Christoforos Vlachos, Senior Solutions Manager – Modern Workplace, Uni Systems
A tale of scale & speed: How the US Navy is enabling software delivery from l...sonjaschweigert1
Rapid and secure feature delivery is a goal across every application team and every branch of the DoD. The Navy’s DevSecOps platform, Party Barge, has achieved:
- Reduction in onboarding time from 5 weeks to 1 day
- Improved developer experience and productivity through actionable findings and reduction of false positives
- Maintenance of superior security standards and inherent policy enforcement with Authorization to Operate (ATO)
Development teams can ship efficiently and ensure applications are cyber ready for Navy Authorizing Officials (AOs). In this webinar, Sigma Defense and Anchore will give attendees a look behind the scenes and demo secure pipeline automation and security artifacts that speed up application ATO and time to production.
We will cover:
- How to remove silos in DevSecOps
- How to build efficient development pipeline roles and component templates
- How to deliver security artifacts that matter for ATO’s (SBOMs, vulnerability reports, and policy evidence)
- How to streamline operations with automated policy checks on container images
Threats to mobile devices are more prevalent and increasing in scope and complexity. Users of mobile devices desire to take full advantage of the features
available on those devices, but many of the features provide convenience and capability but sacrifice security. This best practices guide outlines steps the users can take to better protect personal devices and information.
Observability Concepts EVERY Developer Should Know -- DeveloperWeek Europe.pdfPaige Cruz
Monitoring and observability aren’t traditionally found in software curriculums and many of us cobble this knowledge together from whatever vendor or ecosystem we were first introduced to and whatever is a part of your current company’s observability stack.
While the dev and ops silo continues to crumble….many organizations still relegate monitoring & observability as the purview of ops, infra and SRE teams. This is a mistake - achieving a highly observable system requires collaboration up and down the stack.
I, a former op, would like to extend an invitation to all application developers to join the observability party will share these foundational concepts to build on:
In the rapidly evolving landscape of technologies, XML continues to play a vital role in structuring, storing, and transporting data across diverse systems. The recent advancements in artificial intelligence (AI) present new methodologies for enhancing XML development workflows, introducing efficiency, automation, and intelligent capabilities. This presentation will outline the scope and perspective of utilizing AI in XML development. The potential benefits and the possible pitfalls will be highlighted, providing a balanced view of the subject.
We will explore the capabilities of AI in understanding XML markup languages and autonomously creating structured XML content. Additionally, we will examine the capacity of AI to enrich plain text with appropriate XML markup. Practical examples and methodological guidelines will be provided to elucidate how AI can be effectively prompted to interpret and generate accurate XML markup.
Further emphasis will be placed on the role of AI in developing XSLT, or schemas such as XSD and Schematron. We will address the techniques and strategies adopted to create prompts for generating code, explaining code, or refactoring the code, and the results achieved.
The discussion will extend to how AI can be used to transform XML content. In particular, the focus will be on the use of AI XPath extension functions in XSLT, Schematron, Schematron Quick Fixes, or for XML content refactoring.
The presentation aims to deliver a comprehensive overview of AI usage in XML development, providing attendees with the necessary knowledge to make informed decisions. Whether you’re at the early stages of adopting AI or considering integrating it in advanced XML development, this presentation will cover all levels of expertise.
By highlighting the potential advantages and challenges of integrating AI with XML development tools and languages, the presentation seeks to inspire thoughtful conversation around the future of XML development. We’ll not only delve into the technical aspects of AI-powered XML development but also discuss practical implications and possible future directions.
Let's Integrate MuleSoft RPA, COMPOSER, APM with AWS IDP along with Slackshyamraj55
Discover the seamless integration of RPA (Robotic Process Automation), COMPOSER, and APM with AWS IDP enhanced with Slack notifications. Explore how these technologies converge to streamline workflows, optimize performance, and ensure secure access, all while leveraging the power of AWS IDP and real-time communication via Slack notifications.
Cosa hanno in comune un mattoncino Lego e la backdoor XZ?Speck&Tech
ABSTRACT: A prima vista, un mattoncino Lego e la backdoor XZ potrebbero avere in comune il fatto di essere entrambi blocchi di costruzione, o dipendenze di progetti creativi e software. La realtà è che un mattoncino Lego e il caso della backdoor XZ hanno molto di più di tutto ciò in comune.
Partecipate alla presentazione per immergervi in una storia di interoperabilità, standard e formati aperti, per poi discutere del ruolo importante che i contributori hanno in una comunità open source sostenibile.
BIO: Sostenitrice del software libero e dei formati standard e aperti. È stata un membro attivo dei progetti Fedora e openSUSE e ha co-fondato l'Associazione LibreItalia dove è stata coinvolta in diversi eventi, migrazioni e formazione relativi a LibreOffice. In precedenza ha lavorato a migrazioni e corsi di formazione su LibreOffice per diverse amministrazioni pubbliche e privati. Da gennaio 2020 lavora in SUSE come Software Release Engineer per Uyuni e SUSE Manager e quando non segue la sua passione per i computer e per Geeko coltiva la sua curiosità per l'astronomia (da cui deriva il suo nickname deneb_alpha).
UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series, part 6DianaGray10
Welcome to UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series part 6. In this session, we will cover Test Automation with generative AI and Open AI.
UiPath Test Automation with generative AI and Open AI webinar offers an in-depth exploration of leveraging cutting-edge technologies for test automation within the UiPath platform. Attendees will delve into the integration of generative AI, a test automation solution, with Open AI advanced natural language processing capabilities.
Throughout the session, participants will discover how this synergy empowers testers to automate repetitive tasks, enhance testing accuracy, and expedite the software testing life cycle. Topics covered include the seamless integration process, practical use cases, and the benefits of harnessing AI-driven automation for UiPath testing initiatives. By attending this webinar, testers, and automation professionals can gain valuable insights into harnessing the power of AI to optimize their test automation workflows within the UiPath ecosystem, ultimately driving efficiency and quality in software development processes.
What will you get from this session?
1. Insights into integrating generative AI.
2. Understanding how this integration enhances test automation within the UiPath platform
3. Practical demonstrations
4. Exploration of real-world use cases illustrating the benefits of AI-driven test automation for UiPath
Topics covered:
What is generative AI
Test Automation with generative AI and Open AI.
UiPath integration with generative AI
Speaker:
Deepak Rai, Automation Practice Lead, Boundaryless Group and UiPath MVP
Communications Mining Series - Zero to Hero - Session 1DianaGray10
This session provides introduction to UiPath Communication Mining, importance and platform overview. You will acquire a good understand of the phases in Communication Mining as we go over the platform with you. Topics covered:
• Communication Mining Overview
• Why is it important?
• How can it help today’s business and the benefits
• Phases in Communication Mining
• Demo on Platform overview
• Q/A
In his public lecture, Christian Timmerer provides insights into the fascinating history of video streaming, starting from its humble beginnings before YouTube to the groundbreaking technologies that now dominate platforms like Netflix and ORF ON. Timmerer also presents provocative contributions of his own that have significantly influenced the industry. He concludes by looking at future challenges and invites the audience to join in a discussion.
2. • Mary Schlegelmilch
Cisco Education Advocate
• Albert Salazar
Cisco US Public Sector Solutions, Systems Engineering Manager
• Doug Walsten
Cisco US Public Sector Solutions, Senior Education Solutions Architect
• Polly Gifford
Education Partners Solutions, Inc.
Today’s Speakers
3. Introduction
How can you ensure that your technology
initiatives are successful?
CoSN SEND II Decision Tree
Wide-Area Access Initiatives
Live Q&A
Agenda
11. How can you ensure that
your technology initiatives
are successful?
12. Successful Deployment and Implementation of Digital
Learning will change:
• How the Learners Think: Improvement in cognitive thinking
• What the Learners Know: Improved access to knowledge and the structure of
that knowledge as it relates to core subjects
• Learning skills and techniques: Learners accept ownership of learning itself
while improving time management, note taking, strategic reading and
collaborative learning
Translating the Business of Education to
Information Technology
13. The Student Experience
Student
• Text
• Dynamic Data
• Collaborative Environments
• Audio
• Accessibility
• Online Assessment
• Distance Learning
Information Technology
• Cached
• Locally Stored
• Interactive
• Streaming
• Bit Rate
• Data Compression
14. The Educator Experience
Educator
• Project Based Learning
• Monitor Class Progress
• LMS
• Professional Development
• Educator Collaboration Tools
• Curriculum Based
Applications
Information Technology
• Interactive
• Streaming
• Bit Rate
• Data Compression
• Locally Stored
15. The Network Care-Abouts
• Classroom Devices
• Non-Instructional Components
• Physical Security
• Application Synchronization
• Cyber Security
• Curriculum Based
Applications
• Bandwidth
• District and/or Campus Caching
• Data Compression
• Network Broadcast
• Locally Stored
• User Ratio
17. http://www.cosn.org/SEND
What is CoSN SEND II?
SEND Initiative developed guidelines for network design and a
checklist for district network planning.
Currently, SEND II is building on that work in collaboration with leading
technology partners Cisco, Comcast, ENA, Ipswitch, and Presidio.
SEND II is developing next-level resources for building network
architectures that can handle and evolve with new demands.
In May 2015, we launched the Design Performance Guide, a digital
platform that delivers resources, videos, and information about
strengthening network design in school districts.
18. Basic
Support enterprise systems like student information systems, payroll
Staff and educators have access to computers
Computer lab being available for students
Emerging
Support initial 1:1 student-to-computer ratio pilot(s)
Transformational
Support full1:1 student-to-computer ratio and/or BYOD
Digital Transformation Environments
29. A New Network for Education
Reference Architecture Framework -
Design Drivers and Requirements
Network Models – First Generation and a New Network
Infrastructure to support the Digital Future.
New Network Components for Consideration
Polly Gifford
EPS, Inc.
30. Reference Architecture Framework: A New Network For Education
Comprehensive and Integrated Design
Digital Revolution and Digital Society
Mission, Vision, Goals
Innovation
DESIGN
DRIVERS:
MOBILITY CLOUD INTERNET ACCESS
ERATE - Fiber &
Wireless
REQUIREMENTS: CAPACITY SCALABILITY RELIABILITY SUSTAINABILITY
Strategic/Priority
Initiatives
System
Structures
Network Foundation
Infrastructure
Systems
Instruction &
Assessment
Leadership & Vision
SERVICES ACCESS NETWORKS
Devices - 1:1 - BYOD Governance
POINTS OF PRESENCE
(POPs)
WIDEAREA
NETWORK(WAN) Wired
Cloud Services Organizational Structure
Existing Internal
Network Internal WAN
Wireless (Wi-Fi)
Software Defined
Network & Data Center
Funding
andData Center
INTERNET
Convergence
Training & Professional
Development
External Service POPs External ExtendedWAN Commodity Internet
State/Reg Networks
Internet 2
Equipment
Consolidation
Service Level
Agreements
Shared Service
Co-Location
Internet Transit
Network Services
Delivery Platform
Network Virtualization Data Management Internet POP SIP Trunks
Network Function
Virtualization
Standards
Access & Security
Policy
Telecom POP
Data Center
Interconnects
Application
Virtualization
Disaster Recovery Technical Support
Cloud or Managed
Services POP
Consortium Network New Digital Learning
Business Continuity User Support Managed Services Internet 2 Community
Mobile Device Mgt. Documentation State, Regional, Co
Security Facilities Reference Model Technical Subsystems
Digital Content & Learning Management Systems, 1:Many Access, Everyone/Everything Connected
Digital Classrooms
Transformed Learning Environment
SafeSchoolsandEfficientManagementandOperations
DigitalLearning,Health,Social,WorkEnvironment
BigData,DataAnalytics,AccesstoInformationandContent
ParentandCommunityInvolvement
CloudComputingInternetofThings
ConnectedLearningCommunities
31. The Transformative Power of Information and Communication
Technology (ICT).
Digital Economy, health, education, society and communications.
Big data, data analytics, the Internet of Everything, everything and
everyone connected.
Connected learning community.
The Global Information Technology Report 2015, ICTs for Inclusive Growth
http://www3.weforum.org/docs/WEF_Global_IT_Report_2015.pdf
The Impact of Information and Communication Technology (ICT) in the
World in 2015 - 2020
32. Relevance and Impact of ICT in K12 Education in 2015
Safe Schools, Facilities, Management and Operations
Parent, Community and Stakeholder Involvement
Transformed Learning Environment
SETDA: The Broadband Imperative: http://www.setda.org/priorities/equity-of-access/the-broadband-imperative/
E-Rate Modernization Order: https://www.fcc.gov/page/summary-e-rate-modernization-order
The Impact of ICT In 2015 – 2020 in Education
The Transformative Power of Information and Communication Technology
DigitalEconomy,health,education,societyandcommunications.
Digital content, creation, communication in a Connected Learning Community.
Bigdata,dataanalytics,theInternetofThings,everythingconnected.
33. Cypress Fairbanks Long-Range Plan and 2014 Bond Program
http://www.cfisd-technologyservices.net/strategic-planning.html
The Impact of ICT in 2015 - 2020 In Your Schools
The Transformative Power of Information and Communication Technology
DigitalEconomy,health,education,societyandcommunications.
Digital content, creation, communication in a Connected Learning Community.
Bigdata,dataanalytics,theInternetofThings,everythingconnected.
Academic Achievement
Safe and Healthy Environment
Human Capital
Communications and
Community Relations
Financial, Technology and
Operations Management
Relevance and Innovation in a Digital Society.
Parent,CommunityandStakeholderInvolvement.
Transformed Learning Environment
SafeSchools,Facilities,ManagementandOperations
Mission, Vision and Goals of Schools.
AppforEverything,AllStakeholdersInternetConnected
24/7 Online Living and Learning, 1:Many Mobile Devices, Video Rich Content.
SecurityCameras,ConnectedHVAC,Banking,Tele-health.
34. The Digital Revolution is Real and the Result is a Digital Society.
DigitalEconomy,health,education,societyandcommunications.
Digital content, creation, assessment, communications
Bigdata,dataanalytics,theInternetofThings,everythingandeveryoneconnected.
Relevance and Innovation in a Digital Society.
.
DigitalEconomy,health,education,societyandcommunications.
Transformed Learning Environment
SafeSchools,Facilities,ManagementandOperations
Mission, Vision and Goals of Schools.
AppforEverything,AllStakeholdersInternetConnected
24/7 Online Living and Learning, 1:Many Mobile Devices, Video Rich Content.
SecurityCameras,ConnectedHVAC,OnlineBanking,Tele-health.
REFERENCE ARCHITECTURE
FRAMEWORK:
A New Network for Education
35. The Digital Revolution is Real and the Result is a Digital Society.
DigitalEconomy,health,education,societyandcommunications.
Digital content, creation, assessment, communications
Bigdata,dataanalytics,theInternetofThings,everythingandeveryoneconnected.
Relevance and Innovation in a Digital Society.
.
DigitalEconomy,health,education,societyandcommunications.
Transformed Learning Environment
SafeSchools,Facilities,ManagementandOperations
Mission, Vision and Goals of Schools in a Digital Society.
AppforEverything,AllStakeholdersInternetConnected
24/7 Online Living and Learning, 1:Many Mobile Devices, Video Rich Content.
SecurityCameras,ConnectedHVAC,OnlineBanking,Tele-health.
Design Drivers MOBILITY INTERNET CLOUD E-RATE
Requirements Capacity Scalability Reliability Sustainability
REFERENCEARCHITECTUREFRAMEWORK:
ANewNetworkforEducation
36. Design Drivers and Requirements – Clear Creek ISD
Wireless and Associated Network Access Wireless Infrastructure High Level Device Estimates
Impact: -1.0% 39.64 Gb Mobile Device Support
Total HS MS/JH EL
Mobile Device (District)=: 22,270 6,905 5,099 10,266
BYOT Assumption: 2:1 for HS, MS/JH and 1:1 for EL Mobile Device (BYOT)=: 63,382 25,241 18,704 19,437
Guest Assumption: 2:1 for HS, MS/JH and 1:1 for EL Mobile Device (Guest)=: 3,964 1,222 907 1,834
Mobile Device Support Target 2017-2018=: 89,616 33,368 24,710 31,537
Education Partners Solution Bandwidth and ERate 2015-2020 Trending Report
Created For:
CLEAR CREEK ISD
Internet Target TOTAL HS MS/JH EL
Aggregate Internet need near term: 4.21 Gb 4.21 Gb 1.30 0.96 1.94
Aggregate Internet target long term: 42.09 Gb 42.09 Gb 13.02 9.63 19.44
WAN Target TOTAL HS MS/JH EL
Aggregate WAN Bandwidth near term: 42.09 Gb 42.09 Gb 13.02 9.63 19.44
Aggregate WAN Bandwidth target long term: 420.86 Gb 420.86 Gb 130.16 96.34 194.36
URBAN URBAN Program: ERate 2.0
ERate 2.0 Category 2 Budget 50% Per Student: $150
Projected ERate District Budget 2015-2020: $5,945,250 $150.00 ADA: 39635 Category 1 Max = 90%
Projected ERate District Share 2015-2020: $2,972,625 $75.00 Discount: 50.0% Category 2 Max = 85%
Projected ERate Funding for 2015-2020: $2,972,625 $75.00 Budget: $2,972,625 5 Yr Max Urban Sample
37. Design Drivers and Requirements – Cypress-Fairbanks ISD
Education Partners Solution Bandwidth and ERate 2015-2020 Trending Report
Created For:
CYPRESS-FAIRBANKS ISD
Internet Target TOTAL HS MS/JH EL
Aggregate Internet need near term: 11.63 Gb 11.63 Gb 3.40 2.61 5.62
Aggregate Internet target long term: 116.32 Gb 116.32 Gb 34.00 26.15 56.18
WAN Target TOTAL HS MS/JH EL
Aggregate WAN Bandwidth near term: 116.32 Gb 116.32 Gb 34.00 26.15 56.18
Aggregate WAN Bandwidth target long term: 1163.20 Gb 1163.20 Gb 339.96 261.47 561.77
URBAN URBAN Program: ERate 2.0
ERate 2.0 Category 2 Budget 80% Per Student: $150
Projected ERate District Budget 2015-2020: $16,500,900 $150.00 ADA: 110006 Category 1 Max = 90%
Projected ERate District Share 2015-2020: $3,300,180 $30.00 Discount: 80.0% Category 2 Max = 85%
Projected ERate Funding for 2015-2020: $13,200,720 $120.00 Budget: $13,200,720 5 Yr Max Urban Sample
Wireless and Associated Network Access Wireless Infrastructure High Level Device Estimates
Impact: 12.4% 110.01 Gb Mobile Device Support
Total HS MS/JH EL
Mobile Device (District)=: 61,318 17,961 13,793 29,564
BYOT Assumption: 2:1 for HS, MS/JH and 1:1 for EL Mobile Device (BYOT)=: 173,101 66,066 50,857 56,178
Guest Assumption: 2:1 for HS, MS/JH and 1:1 for EL Mobile Device (Guest)=: 11,001 3,207 2,471 5,323
Mobile Device Support Target 2017-2018=: 245,420 87,234 67,121 91,065
39. Design Drivers and Requirements
CFISD Firewall, Wireless and Internet Capacity Requirements
BASELINE FOR IMPLEMENTATION
Cluster District Devices
District Device
Totals
BYOT
Devices
BYOT Device
Totals
BYOT
Students
BYOT
Teacher
and Staff
Visitor Devices
(10% of Staff and
Student Count)
Total Subgroup
Counts
2014-
2015
Elementary Student 0.5 26887 1 53773 53773 Student ES 53773
Middle Student 0.5 12720 2 50880 50880 Student MS 25440
High School Student 0.5 16868 2 67470 67470 Student HS 33735
Staff and Teachers 2 28000 2 28000 28000 Total Staff 14000
Totals 84,474 200,123 172,123 28,000 19,042 Total Student 112948
Device Desciption
Total Wireless Devices 303,639
Wireless District Owned Devices 84,474
Wireless BYOT Teacher/Staff Devices 28,000
Wireless BYOT Student Devices 172,123
Wireless Guest Devices 19,042
Wired Computer Devices 80,000
BASELINE FOR IMPLEMENTATION SERVICES REQUIREMENTS
ISC REQUIREMENTS
Wired Computer Devices 80,000 ISC Firewall - Standard Operations 80,000
FAILOVER WIRELESS DEVICES - District Owned 84,474 Firewall in FAILOVER 164,474
FAILOVER Wireless BYOT Teacher/Staff Devices -
CyrusOne Requirements
Wired Computer Devices - Internet Access Firewall - Standard Operations 191,165 *3 CyrusOne Firewalls
FAILOVER WIRED - 80,000 Internet Access Firewall - Failover 191,165 & Loadbalances
District Owned Wireless Devicess 84,474
BYOT Students and Guest 191,165 DMZ Firewall - Standard 112,474 Active/Passive Firewall
BYOT Teachers and Staff 28,000 DMZ Failover 192,474 (Wired)
January 14, 2015
40. Design Drivers and Requirements
CFISD Firewall, Wireless and Internet Capacity Requirements
EXPANSION PLAN
Cluster
District
Devices
District
Device Totals
BYOT
Devices
BYOT Device
Totals
BYOT
Students
Totals
BYOT
Teachers
and Staff
Visitor Devices
(25% of Staff
and Student
Count)
Total
Subgroup
Counts
2020-
2021
Elementary Student 0.5 30382 1 60763 60763 15191 Student ES 60763
Middle Student 0.5 14374 2 57494 57494 7187 Student MS 28747
High School Student 0.5 19060 3 114362 114362 9530 Student HS 38121
Staff and Teachers 2 29468 3 44202 44202 3684 Total Staff 14734
Totals 93,284 276,822 232,620 44,202 35,591 Total Student 127631
Total Wireless Devices 405,697 Increase
Total District Owned Wired Devices 100,000 14683
Wireless BYOT Teacher/Staff Devices 44,202
Wireless BYOT Student Devices 232,620
Wireless Guest Devices 35,591
Total Wired Devices 100000
EXPANSION PLAN SERVICES REQUIREMENTS
ISC REQUIREMENTS
Wired Computer Devices 100,000 ISC Firewall(s) - Standard Operations 100,000
FAILOVER WIRELESS DEVICES - District Owned 93,284 ISC Firewall in FAILOVER 193,284
FAILOVER Wireless BYOT Teacher/Staff Devices 44,202
CyrusOne Requirements
Wired Computer Devices - Internet Access Firewall - Standard Operations 268,211 *3 CyrusOne Firewalls
FAILOVER WIRED - 100,000 Internet Access Firewall - Failover 268,211 & Loadbalances
District Owned Wireless Devicess 93,284
BYOT Students and Guest 268,211 DMZ Firewall - Standard 137,486 Active/Passive Firewall
BYOT Teachers and Staff 44,202 DMZ Failover 237,486
January 14, 2015
41. The Digital Revolution is Real and the Result is a Digital Society.
DigitalEconomy,health,education,societyandcommunications.
Digital content, creation, assessment, communications
Bigdata,dataanalytics,theInternetofThings,everythingandeveryoneconnected.
Relevance and Innovation in a Digital Society.
.
DigitalEconomy,health,education,societyandcommunications.
Transformed Learning Environment
SafeSchools,Facilities,ManagementandOperations
Mission, Vision and Goals of Schools in a Digital Society.
AppforEverything,AllStakeholdersInternetConnected
24/7 Online Living and Learning, 1:Many Mobile Devices, Video Rich Content.
SecurityCameras,ConnectedHVAC,OnlineBanking,Tele-health.
Design Drivers E-RATE MOBILITY INTERNET CLOUD
Requirements Capacity Scalability Reliability Sustainability
STRATEGIC IT
PRIORITIES &
INITIATIVES
ORGANIZATIONAL &
SYSTEM STRUCTURES
Instruction & Assessment Leadership & Vision
Devices – District, BYOD Governance
Cloud Services Organizational Structures
Software Defined Networks Funding
Consolidation Training & Development
Network Virtualization Data Management
Open Standards Access & Security Policy
Disaster Recovery Technical Support
Business Continuity User Support
Mobile Device Mgt. Documentation
Security Facilities
NETWORK FOUNDATIONS
INFRASTRUCTURE
SYSTEMS
SERVICES POINTS
OF PRESENCE
(POPs)
WIDE AREA
NETWORK
(WANs)
ACCESS NETWORKS
Wired
Wireless (Wi-Fi)
Internal Network
and Data Center –
Existing Facility
Within District
Internal WAN
Within District
Connects
Facilities
INTERNET SYSTEMS
Commodity
State/Reg/Internet2
Service/Security/AAA
External Services
Point of Presence:
Shared Service CoLo
Carrier Neutral DC
External /
Extended WAN
Internet Transport
SIP Transport
NETWORK ACCESS
SERVICES SYSTEM
Network Functions
Virtualization
Internet POP
Telecom POP
Cloud Access
Internet 2 Access
Data Center &
Consortiums
CONNECTED
LEARNING
COMMUNITY
TECHNICAL NETWORK REFERENCE MODEL
REFERENCEARCHITECTUREFRAMEWORK:
ANewNetworkforEducation
45. Second Order for E-Rate Modernization
• first priority - addresses the connectivity gap facing many schools and
libraries, particularly in rural areas, by maximizing the options available for
purchasing affordable high-speed connectivity.
– Dark Fiber
– Lit Fiber
– Self Provisioned Broadband