Information Technology: The Changing Roles of 21 st Century Universities Dan Reed [email protected]...
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Transcript of Information Technology: The Changing Roles of 21 st Century Universities Dan Reed [email protected]...
Information Technology: The Changing Roles of 21st Century
Universities
Chancellor’s Eminent ProfessorVice Chancellor for IT
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Director, Renaissance Computing Institute (RENCI)Duke University
North Carolina State UniversityUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Information Technology: The Lever
• The 21st century is about knowledge economies– managing information for competitive advantage
• Universities are in the knowledge business!– creation, preservation, transmission, and application
• IT is about knowledge management– education, research, service and business processes
• Two relevant entities at UNC Chapel Hill– Information Technology Services (ITS)– Renaissance Computing Institute (RENCI)
“Give me a place to stand and a lever long enough, and I will move the world.” Archimedes, 287-212 BC
President’s IT Advisory Committee
• Computational Science: Ensuring America’s Competitiveness1. A Wake-up Call: The Challenges to U.S. Preeminence and Competitiveness2. Medieval or Modern? Research and Education Structures for the 21st
Century3. Multi-decade Roadmap for Computational Science4. Sustained Infrastructure for Discovery and Competitiveness5. Research and Development Challenges
Exemplar 21st Century Challenges
• Population growth– severe weather sensitivity
• statewide impact– geobiology and environment– economics and finance– sociology and policy
• Economics and health care– longitudinal public health data
• environmental interactions– genetic susceptibility
• heart disease, cancer, Alzheimer's– privacy and insurance– public policy and coordination
Severe Storm Modeling• $10T U.S. economy
– 40% is adversely affected by weather and climate• $1M in loss to evacuate each mile of coastline
– we now over warn by 3X!– average over warning is 200 miles ($200M/event)
• Multiple models– atmosphere, ocean, geography– biology, fishing, environment– economic and social
• Goal– timely and accurate forecasts
• using dynamic adaptation• Attributes
– integrated monitoring and analysis– data capture and adaptive analysis
• LEAD Grid– Linked Environments for Atmospheric Discovery
• Oklahoma, Indiana, UCAR, Colorado State, Howard, Alabama• Millersville, NCSA, North Carolina
Leuttich and BlantonStorm SurgeUNC ADCIRC Model
June 26, 2000
0 25 50 100 125 150
Automobile
75Years
20
50
100 TelephoneElectricity
Radio
Television
VCR
PC
Cellular
Inte
rnet
% P
enet
rati
on
The Pace of Innovation is Quickening
• Social compacts and acceptable use– historically, generally over a generation– generational internalization is no longer possible
• Concomitant economic dislocation– learning for a lifetime
Source: Council on Competitiveness
Understanding the Future
• Some rules of thumb – in the near term, we overestimate change– in the long term, we underestimate changes
• Outside their field of expertise– experts are often better at predictions
• the contra-Delphi effect
• Inventing the future is far more successful– recognize exponentials
• quantitative change brings qualitative change
• Technological and social change– move at different rates and have differing consequences
• Consider digital music– born of storage technology advances– bred social and business change
Qualitative Change
5 MB in 195680 GB in 2004
1972
Digital Photography
• Digital camera sales– now exceed analog
• Kodak (January 2004)– cutting up to 15,000 jobs
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
1999 2000 2001 2002 2003
Digital Analog
Source: GfK Marketing Services
Digital Reality: The Exponentials
• Megabyte– a small novel
• Gigabyte– a pickup truck filled with paper or a DVD
• Terabyte: one thousand gigabytes – ~$1000 today– the text in one million books– entire U.S. Library of Congress is ~ten terabytes of text
• Petabyte: one thousand terabytes– 1-2 petabytes equals all academic research library holdings
• coming soon to a pocket near you!– soon routinely generated annually by many scientific instruments
• Exabyte: one thousand petabytes– 5 exabytes of words spoken in the history of humanity
• See www.sims.berkeley.edu/research/projects/how-much-info-2003/
Source: Hal Varian, UC-Berkeley
The Six Computing Eras
• Big Iron (post WW II)– vacuum tubes and campy science fiction movies
• Mainframe (‘60s/’70s)– spinning tapes and bad science fiction movies
• Workstations (‘70s/’80s)– spinning disks and Star Trek™
• PCs (‘80s/’90s)– spinning CDs and Jurassic Park™
• Internet (‘90s)– spinning DVDs and Internet pet food companies
• Implicit computing (21st century)– IPods™ and The Matrix™– embedded intelligence in everyday objects
• number of processors/person infinity
Social Process Implications
• Social compacts and acceptable use– historically, generally over a generation
• telegraph, telephone, automobile
– today, the pace of change has accelerated• generational internalization no longer possible
• Concomitant economic dislocation– learning for a lifetime
• Applications and ethics– right/wrong and consensus– informed debate and engagement
• Diverse domains– biomedicine, environment, business, …
Information and Social Processes• Google
– it’s a search engine, it’s a verb, …
• Blogs– published self-expression
• Instant Messenger– social networks
• Wireless messaging– semi-synchronous
• Internet commerce– the dot.com boom/bust– EBay, Amazon
• Spam, phishing, …– anti-social behavior
Attention as a Scarce Resource
What information consumes is rather obvious: it consumes the attention of its recipients. Hence a wealth of information creates a poverty of attention, and a need to allocate that attention efficiently among the overabundance of information sources that might consume it.
Herbert Simon
University Data Challenges• Multiple cultures
– arts, humanities and social sciences– sciences and engineering
• Many scholarly communication approaches– books, monographs, journals, conferences
• access time, priority and intellectual property– multiple media and expression
• text, audio, video, artifacts, performances, …– primary and secondary source materials– professional societies and private publishers
• Institutional repositories– multiple visions and roles
• digital archives and/or alternative publication venues– research and education
• access modes and goals, not just articles or books• longitudinal access and lifelong learning
– what and how much to save• declining cost of storage and simplicity of deposit
Phishing and Identity Theft
Privacy and Security: Eternal Tension
“But it was all right, everything was all right, the struggle was finished. He had won the victory over himself. He loved Big Brother.”
George Orwell
Even McDonalds Can Outsource “If you're in L.A.... and you hear a person
with a North Dakota accent taking your order, you'll know what we're up to," McDonald's Chief Executive Jim Skinner told investors during a presentation at the Bear Stearns Retail, Restaurants and Apparel Conference in New York.
“You have a professional order taker with strong communications skills whose job is to do nothing but take down orders,” said Matthew Paull, McDonald's chief financial officer.
• Why outsource?– increased accuracy
• fewer incorrect orders– reduced wait time
• higher customer satisfaction• more customers served
The World Is Flat
• North Carolina’s competitors are not– Boston, Atlanta, Chicago, Los Angeles, …
• The competition is global– Bangalore, Mumbai, Shanghai, Seoul, …
• Costs of information flow– are approaching zero
• Global economic winners will – have a better trained workforce– have the ability to participate globally– be horizontally, not vertically integrated
• nobody is best at everything
Lessons for North Carolina
• Evolving economy– shrinkage
• agriculture, textiles, furniture, …– growth
• banking/finance, biotechnology, IT
• Shifting demographics– rapid Hispanic population growth– changing age distributions
• Globalization– virtual organizations– come as you are structures
• Embrace change, for it brings opportunity!– albeit with pain and dislocation
Evolving University Roles• American university “eras”
– pre and post-colonial• private and original state universities (e.g., UNC-CH)
– land grant• many state universities (e.g., NCSU)
– post World War II• GI bill and educational “democratization”
– today, the fourth wave• economic drivers and continual re-education
• A new compact with the citizens– lifelong education and economic competitiveness– knowledge economy leverage– value chain enhancement
• Intelligent application of IT is a powerful force
Roles of Great Universities• Frame and lead the debate on critical issues
– shape state, national and international positions• Train tomorrow’s leaders
– public and private• Enrich the human experience
– scholarly, cultural, social and recreational activities• Nurture and broaden participation
– the common wellspring of humanity• Produce and transfer new knowledge
– the raw material of the knowledge economy• Sustain lifelong education
– knowledge for a lifetime and refreshed skills for a profession• Catalyze economic development
– job creation and corporate competitiveness
Science and Engineering Degrees
• Population ratios– 24 year olds– NS&E degrees
• Natural Science & Engineering
• Changing behavior– U.S. implications
• globalization and innovation
– 21st century economy
Source: NSF S&E Indicators, 2004
Bachelor’s Degree Holders: 2002
Source: NSF S&E Indicators, 2004
Engagement and Economics
Bohr Pasteur
Edison
Use Driven
Un
de
rsta
nd
ing
Dri
ven
Industry/Academic Relationships• Industry
– create marketable products– return fair shareholder value– be a good corporate citizen– effective working environment
• Environment– relatively short timelines– applied R&D– proprietary bias– frequently productize
• Universities– educate students and staff– generate knowledge– take research risks
• Environment– relatively long timelines– basic research– “openness” bias– less frequently productize
InnovationCollaboration
PrototypesProduction
Lessons from the Dot.Com Bust• Pets.com
– founded in 1999– February 2000 IPO for $82.5M
• IPO at $11/share• ultimately closed at $0.22/share
– national TV marketing • $2M Super Bowl spot• $20M total in 1999
– 1.8M visitors/month by October 2000– 570,000 customers
• Lessons– outspent rivals 2:1– overestimated online customer base– ineffective value proposition
• did not offer compelling rationale• sold below cost with free shipping
My grandmother told me, “Good judgment comes from experience. Experience comes from bad judgment.”
Lessons from the Dot.Com Bust
• Dot.Com strategies– build customer brand– increase web site traffic
• Lessons– recognize costs
• customer acquisition
• service fulfillment
– make money
• The “irrational exuberance” happened before– vehicle manufacturing
• 2600 U.S. companies since 1896
• only two remain (Ford and GM)
– high-end commercial aircraft• only our friends at Boeing remain
Lessons from the Dot.Com Bust• Competitive advantage
– low cost or differentiation at a premium• operational effectiveness or strategic positioning
• Customer value proposition– identify it clearly and never forget it
• eBay provides a market for rarities
• Customer base retention– simplify customer return and repurchase
• Amazon retains credit card and preference data
Procurement and Logistics
Manufacturingand Operations
OutboundLogistics
Sales andMarketing
Service
Technology Human Resources Management
Technology Adoption Cycles
Nu
mb
er
of
Ad
op
ters
EarlyAdopters
EarlyMajority
LateMajority
Time
Q F
ac
tor
Trigger
Time
Hype
Hangover
Realism
Death (e.g., dot.com)
“A small group of thoughtful people could change the world. Indeed, it's the only thing that ever has. ”
Margaret Mead
Based on Gartner Group Idea
Carolina’s Institutional Priorities1. Strengthen faculty recruitment, retention, development
2. Create richest possible learning environment for undergraduate, graduate and professional students
3. Invest in centers of excellence in research and creativity
4. Enhance Carolina’s engagement with North Carolina and the world
5. Successfully complete campus development plan; begin Carolina North
6. Determine strategies to direct resources to highest priorities
7. Define Carolina’s role as a leader
Information Technology Services (ITS)
• Mission– empower faculty, staff, students– advance Carolina institutional missions
• Organizational structure– integrated three separate elements
• academic and research computing (ATN)• administrative computing (AIS)• systems and procedures
– created ITS advisory committees• customer engagement
• Senior leadership– VC for IT and CIO
• Dan Reed– Associate VC and Deputy CIO
• Robyn East (from GWU)– Associate VC for Planning
• John Oberlin
• Ten technical areas – communications– financial planning and HR– teaching and learning– research computing– telecommunications– IT infrastructure & operations– enterprise data management– enterprise applications– user support and engagement– security
ITS Is …• Security and privacy services• Computer laboratories • IT Response Center (ITRC)• Campus licensed software• Carolina Computing Initiative (CCI)• Blackboard and distance education• Electronic classrooms• On-campus telephone company• Campus network and email• Administrative applications• Research computing support• and many more things …
Selected ITS Goals• Implement Enterprise Resource Planning systems to
replace aging administrative systems, integrate major business functions and enable more effective management of Carolina’s $2B+ enterprise
• Upgrade the campus network infrastructure to state-of-the-art capacity, enabling the services of the future – integrated telephony and networking
• Develop a storage infrastructure that will adequately accommodate academic and research computing needs
• Develop the physical IT infrastructure to accommodate growth in buildings, programs and IT adoption
• Develop new and innovative applications of IT in the classroom and across the curriculum
Admissions
Student Web Services - Student Central
Student Records - Grades, Transcripts, etc.
Billing for Tuition and Fees
Student Aid
Student Housing
Academic Advising
Institutional Reporting
External Agencies Online Interfaces
Student Information Services
Student Web Services - Applicant Central
Degree Audit
Financial Records System
Investments Management
Budget System
Cash Receipts
Purchasing System
ONE Card System
Student Stores Retail Management System
Environmental Health and Safety Management Information System
Employment System
Finance and AdministrationPayrollAccounts Payable System
Research Grants Accounting
Asset Accounting
Travel Accounting
Materials Management Inventory Control
System
Printing Services Management System
Campus Police System
Person ID (PID) Management System
Employee RecordsTarheel Temps
Motor Vehicle Tracking
Position Management
Benefits SystemTraining and Development System
InPower Human Resources Information System
Capital Improvements Facility Planning & Design
MAXIMO Cogeneration Facility System
Facilities Maintenance Enterprise
Utilities Billing System
Work Order Tracking
Equipment Tracking
Mailing Services System
Student Information Services
Coeus
InDEPTh
Inventory Tracking
Insite Space Management System
Job TrackingInventory
Time & Material Tracking
Facilities Equipment – ToolFacilities Procurement
Facilities Personnel System
AdmissionsStudent Web Services
- Student Central
Student Records - Grades,
Transcripts, etc.
Billing for Tuition and Fees
Student Aid
Student Housing
Academic Advising
Institutional Reporting
External Agencies Online Interfaces
Student Web Services - Applicant Central
Degree Audit
Information Technology Purchases System
Finance Central
Campus Directory
Telecommunications Billing System
Alumni Records System
Development Office Contributor Records System
Continuing Education Management System
UNC Physicians & Associates Medical
Billing System
Computer Repair Center System
Other State Agencies
Office of the President Financial System
UNC Television Contributor Records System
Other University Applications
Investments Management
Budget System
Cash Receipts
Purchasing System
ONE Card System
Student Stores Retail Management System
Environmental Health and Safety Management Information System
Employment System
Finance and AdministrationPayroll
Accounts Payable System
Coeus
Asset Accounting
Travel Accounting
Materials Management Inventory Control
System
Printing Services Management System
Campus Police System
Person ID (PID) Management System
Employee RecordsTarheel Temps
Position Management
Benefits SystemTraining and Development System
InPower Human Resources Information System
AdmissionsStudent Web Services -
Student Central
Student Records - Grades,
Transcripts, etc.
Billing for Tuition and Fees
Student Aid
Student Housing
Academic Advising
Institutional Reporting
External Agencies Online Interfaces
Degree Audit
Student Information Services
Data Warehouse
Student Web Services – Applicant Central
Insite Space Management System
Motor Vehicle Tracking
Capital Improvements Facility Planning & Design
MAXIMO Cogeneration Facility System
Facilities Maintenance Enterprise
Utilities Billing System
Work Order Tracking
Equipment Tracking
Mailing Services System
Inventory Tracking
Job TrackingInventory
Time & Material Tracking
Facilities Procurement
Facilities Personnel System
Information Technology Purchases System
Finance Central
Campus Strategic IT Planning
• Tied to campus strategic plan– becoming America’s best public university
• Coordinated planning groups– overall strategic IT plan
Research &ScholarshipCommittee
Research &ScholarshipCommittee
CoordinatingCommittee
CoordinatingCommittee
Communication& Networking
Committee
Communication& Networking
Committee
EnterpriseApplicationsCommittee
EnterpriseApplicationsCommittee
Education& LearningCommittee
Education& LearningCommittee
Renaissance Computing Institute• RENCI vision
– a multidisciplinary institute• academe, commerce and society
– broad in scope and participation• from art to zoology
• Objectives– enrich and empower human potential
• faculty, staff, students, collaborators– create multidisciplinary partnerships
• science, engineering and computing• commerce, humanities and the arts
– develop and deploy leading infrastructure• driven by collaborative opportunities
– enable and sustain economic development• Multidisciplinary team model
– scientists, creative artists, and computing researchers– exploring new approaches to old and new problems
• Leverages research excellence • Targets statewide opportunities
RTP
Wilmington
Triad
Charlotte
AshevilleGreenville
Fiber Optic links
National Lambda Rail (Atlanta)
National Lambda Rail (Washington)
Renaissance Presence: Multiyear Rollout
• Components– optical networks, infrastructure, collaboration and people
The Barriers of Time and Space
• Networks are the 21st century interstate highway system– expertise and information, the real product
National Lambda Rail (NLR)
Projecting Presence
• Many modalities– Access Grid, network-enabled group meetings– remote sites, following the people, opportunities and money– mobile presence, to opportunities and remote areas
RENCI Distributed Vision
Anchor SiteAnchor Site
…Regional SiteRegional Site
MobileMobile MobileMobile
Engaged Staff and OutreachEngaged Staff and Outreach
Regional SiteRegional Site
MobileMobile MobileMobile…
Statewide OpticalNetworking
Statewide OpticalNetworking
DistributedData Archives
EconomicEngagement
Education &Outreach
ResearchSupport
StateEngagement
Leading EdgeComputing Facilities
RENCI and Strategic Competitiveness
• Industry challenges– quarterly profits– international competition– little R and big D
• The Innovator’s Dilemma • Crossing the “valley of death”
– new technologies and ideas• the pipeline of new ideas
– committed and experienced staff• university and industry engagement
• Lessons from the NCSA experience– industrial examples
• Caterpillar: virtual environments and design• Motorola: rescue channels and standards• Allstate: data mining• Eli Lilly: drug screening
– hundreds of millions of dollars in savings • 10:1 investment advantage
Thanks for Your Interest!