Trump visit targets technology, politics – Quad City Times

CEDAR RAPIDS Whether by coincidence or coordination, Gov. Kim Reynolds agenda for a meeting Wednesday with President Donald Trump in Cedar Rapids is on the same wavelength as the presidents Technology Week focus.

The president will visit Kirkwood Community College to see examples of technology that frankly, may not be at the top of your mind when you think about technology advancements in the United States, said Ray Starling, a special assistant to the president for agriculture, agricultural trade and food assistance as part of the White House Economic Council.

After the Kirkwood visit, Trump will have a campaign-style rally at 7 p.m. at the U.S. Cellular Center, 370 1st Ave. NE. in downtown Cedar Rapids.

Trump is visiting the college, in part, because it is home to one of the first programs in the country to focus on agricultural geospatial technology and precision farming, Starling said in amedia briefing. The program has been honored by the National Science Foundation.

Among the demonstrations Trump will see is technology that guides farm implements and allows farmers to collect data about pesticide and fertilizer needs, soil moisture and yields, Starling said. That takes on added importance this year because net farm income is expected to decline for a fourth year in a row, falling to half of what it was four years ago, Starling said.

Much of precision agriculture technology and other technology used on the farm and in rural American is dependent upon access to the web, he said. The president recognizes that the penetration of the availability of the web has obviously lagged in rural areas.

Connectivity is one of the priorities Reynolds will be lobbying the president on at Kirkwood.

We want Iowans to be able live anywhere in the state of Iowa no matter the size of the community or where it is located to have high-speed internet and connectivity where they can take an idea, create a business, grow it into a successful company and market their products to the world, Reynolds said at a news conference. Its really important that we continue to provide that level of high-speed internet to every single corner of the state.

At Kirkwood, Trump and Reynolds will be joined by Sonny Perdue and Wilbur Ross, secretaries of the Agriculture and Commerce departments, respectively, and Iowa Agriculture Secretary Bill Northey.

It also will serve as a send-off for former Gov. Terry Branstad, who will leave Friday for China where he will serve as ambassador.

Reynolds also plans to lobby for White House approval of Iowas stopgap health insurance proposal to provide a coverage option for 72,000 Iowans on individual plans.

The plan, put forth last week by Iowa Insurance Commissioner Doug Ommen, asks the federal government to approve a measure he hoped would both keep a statewide health insurer in the state and also lure others to the states marketplace. The measure contingent on approval by the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services would provide consumers with age- and income-based tax credits as well as use a reinsurance mechanism for costly medical claims.

In response to the Trump visit, a protest is planned from 5-7:30 p.m. outside the Cellular Center. And at 2:30 p.m., Linn County Democrats will be hosting a community conversation in Room A, Beems Auditorium, the Cedar Rapids Public Library, 450 5th Ave. SE. The event is open to the public.

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Trump visit targets technology, politics - Quad City Times

Technology further influencing benefits management – Employee Benefit News (registration)

HR technology is not only helping professionals manage benefits and make their jobs easier, its also helping them gain C-suite influence.

According to the inaugural Paychex Pulse of HR Survey, more than two-thirds of HR leaders at small and mid-sized companies say they have grown beyond serving a traditional administrative function to taking on a more strategic role within their respective organizations. And technology is helping to drive that shift.

A growing number of HR leaders (41%) are meeting with their CEO or CFO or both on a weekly basis, according to the survey, while close to one-third have access to top management when they need it.

Three-quarters of respondents said that HR technology has enabled them to become more strategic and efficient on the job. In addition, 60% of respondents considered their HR technology to be very effective for payroll, retirement and benefits administration, and time and attendance tracking, indicating they feel that technology is allowing them to maximize their effectiveness when it comes to the administration of critical business functions.

Further, a vast majority of respondents (95%) find their technologies to be either somewhat or very effective for the full range of HR tasks, including onboarding, recruitment, performance management, and other administrative functions.

Technology is a powerful tool in our everyday lives and especially for HR leaders, with the right solution offering countless opportunities for increased accuracy and efficiency, says Martin Mucci, president and CEO of Paychex, a payroll, HR, retirement and insurance services provider.

But despite the high levels of satisfaction, the survey suggests that leaders recognize that digital transformation in HR is not quite complete.

As HR technology exponentially evolves, HR leaders are working to keep pace: 48% said theyve changed their technology solutions in the past one to three years, according to Paychex. And, as in other areas where state-of-the-art technology is a moving target, adopting point solutions versus a single platform may be creating new challenges.

Further enhancing the influence of HR leaders is their ability to make data-driven recommendations and decisions, the study notes.

A large majority of respondents (86%) said analytics help them to be more informed and objective, but nearly half are unsure if theyre leveraging the correct data to meet business goals.

With the vast array of data now available, new analytics tools are becoming a key tool for HR leaders. These range from straightforward reports of current data to AI-driven predictive modeling and recommendation engines.

Eighty-six percent of HR leaders said analytics help them be more informed and objective but nearly half arent sure if theyre leveraging the correct data. Further, those who are using analytics are doing so mainly to target HR communications more effectively.

Technology, combined with knowledgeable service professionals, can empower todays HR professionals to make objective, data-driven workforce recommendations to the C-suite that will ultimately help achieve the organizations overall business goals, Mucci says.

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Technology further influencing benefits management - Employee Benefit News (registration)

Biotech startup Rubius raises $120m to develop red blood cell technology – The Boston Globe

Red blood cells.

Rubius Therapeutics Inc. of Cambridge is set to announce Wednesday that it has raised $120 million one of the largest biotech financing rounds this year to develop a novel drug-making technology.

The funding, led by life sciences venture capital firm Flagship Pioneering in Cambridge, will let Rubius step up work on its drug discovery technique, which genetically engineers red blood cells so they can produce drugs for a range of diseases. The company had been operating in what is known as stealth mode, with plans under wraps.

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Rubius has already made and tested about 200 red cells, each producing different proteins, and plans to use them as catalysts for medicines to fight cancers, enzyme deficiencies, autoimmune and infectious diseases, and rare blood disorders such as hemophilia.

Were developing a new class of medicines that no one else is working on, Rubius president Torben Straight Nissen, a biopharma industry veteran, said. The ultimate goal is to bring as many red cell therapies to patients as possible.

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Rubius, which raised an initial $25 million in early 2015, started in Flagship VentureLabs, a Kendall Square incubator that has spawned dozens of companies. It now employs about 40 cell therapy scientists and researchers in larger space at 325 Vassar St., near Memorial Drive, and could grow to nearly 100 employees in the coming year, Nissen said.

Nissen said the company could be moving to even bigger quarters as it advances its experimental therapies into clinical trials. Were looking to expand our footprint over the next six to 12 months, and were looking to stay in Cambridge or Boston, he said.

The companys scientific approach is part of a broader Flagship strategy to focus not on individual drug candidates but on platform technologies capable of generating many medicines, said Flagship chief executive Noubar Afeyan, Rubius cofounder.

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Were looking for first-of-its-kind platforms, Afeyan said. The risk of doing anything new in our business is so high that theres more reward if youre developing new approaches that can create multiple drugs. Once you can show that one or two [drug candidates] can become drugs, then 10 or 20 of them can.

After the Rubius scientists genetically engineer the red cells, they can be grown in bioreactors, the stainless steel tanks used to produce biotech drugs. We are basically using a manufacturing process where the actual art of making the protein is done by the cells, Afeyan said.

The companys financing round includes co-investors, including large publicly traded institutional firms that werent identified by Flagship.

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Biotech startup Rubius raises $120m to develop red blood cell technology - The Boston Globe

Technology To The Rescue: Blockchain Method Can Tidy Up Property Title Transactions – Swarajya

Dealing in real estate in India is hard. According to the World Banks Ease of Doing Business survey, India ranks at hundred and thirty-eighth in the world in difficulty in registering property. But we dont need an international survey to tell us this.

As anyone who has transacted with property in India will testify, everything to do with transferring interest or title in real estate, be it something as simple as leasing a flat or as complex as developing a commercial project across multiple land parcels, is complicated and mired in intricacy and uncertainty.

Central to any real estate transactions is the question of title, and unfortunately, it is still very hard to confirm whether a seller in India has title to the property he intends to sell.

While the law requires transfers of title and interest in the property to be registered, this only provides limited assurance as transfers can be assailed in many ways from family members who claim title through inheritance to unknown third parties who try and assert their right to specific performance.

In India (as is true of most common law countries), ownership rights to property are proved through title deeds a chain of documents that evidence the transfer of title from person to person over the years all the way to the current owners. The problem is that any one of these intermediate transactions is capable of being challenged under the principle of nemo dat quod non habetone cannot give that which he does not own. If we are to introduce greater certainty into the real estate business, we must devise a mechanism by which transfers cannot be set aside.

In 1858, Sir Robert Richard Torrens, the third premier of South Australia, proposed a revolutionary new system of land registration designed to do just that. Under the Torrens system, the title is established solely by the facts recorded in the land register, making title deeds completely irrelevant.

Once so recorded, the state guarantees indefeasible title to all those whose land is included in the register and, if in the process, someone can prove that they illegitimately lost their title due to private fraud or state error, rather than revoking the transfer, the state is bound to compensate such person for his loss.

Rajasthan recently passed the Urban Land (Certification of Title) Act, 2016, and became the first state in India to enact a title guarantee legislation. If implemented successfully and eventually rolled out across the country, this could transform the Indian real estate industry. That said, there remain legitimate concerns that this new system will be plagued by the same malaise of corruption that affects our current land registration process.

Title guarantee relies on the accurate and exhaustive inclusion of every single property transaction in a centralised register maintained by the state. Since this register is the sole determinant of ownership, it is essential that the bureaucratic machinery responsible for its maintenance operates with the highest standards of probity and integrity. If the officials tasked with its maintenance can be suborned to manipulate dates or alter the records in any other manner, the entire system will fall apart. It is therefore critical to the success of this model that the mechanism for recording transfers is tamper-proof.

Sir Torrens did not have the benefit of modern technology when he invented this system. We do and should use it to our advantage to ensure that our registers are tamper-proof. One technology that immediately comes to mind is the blockchain and the elegant way in which it uses distributed ledgers. Every user of the blockchain has a copy of the entire ledger of transactions that have taken place with that crypto-currency, and every subsequent successful transaction is uploaded onto each such copy of the ledger. If we can, in a similar manner, record property transfers on a blockchain ledger, wed have an immutable history of every property transaction that can be viewed by everyone and yet tampered by no-one.

There are many other benefits to using blockchain for land records. Every entry will be accurately time-stamped significantly reducing the chance for fraud. While transfers can be recorded on a public block-chain to ensure transparency, it is possible to store them on a private block-chain by turning the record into a cryptographic hash which will make the data verifiable without anyone seeing the data itself.

If necessary, ancillary features such as notarial services and escrow can be easily added.

The Republic of Georgia has recently implemented a land titling system based on blockchain technology and allegedly recorded over 1,00,000 title transactions within the first two months of its launch. The state of Rajasthan, as the forerunner in the adoption of this new system in the country, should seriously consider following suit.

Then we might, finally, have a modern solution to a very old problem.

This article was originally published in Mint and has been republished here with permission.

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Technology To The Rescue: Blockchain Method Can Tidy Up Property Title Transactions - Swarajya

Technology is created for the purpose of augmenting the fundamental weaknesses of human beings – Recode

A version of this essay was originally published at Tech.pinions, a website dedicated to informed opinions, insight and perspective on the tech industry.

One of the core premises of our research is to understand technology from a deeper human level. We too often get caught up in the technology itself, and may lose sight of the basic human needs or desires technology is serving. With all the tech of artificial intelligence, augmented reality and any number of other buzzwords, I sense that the human angle is again being lost while we chase technological advancements for the sake of the technology rather than the sake of the human.

The human angle is being lost while we chase technological advancements for the sake of the technology rather than the sake of the human.

To frame my perspective, I think it is helpful to use the idea of human augmentation as a basis for our understanding of how technology serves humans and will always do so. The core definition of augment is to make something greater by adding to it. Using this framework from a historical perspective, we can observe how nearly every human technological invention was designed to augment a fundamental weakness of human beings.

Tools were invented to augment our hands so we can build faster, bigger, more complex things. Cars were invented to augment the limitations of the distance humans can travel. Planes were invented to augment humans lack of ability to fly. The telephone was invented to augment the limitations of human communications. Nearly every example of technological innovation we can think of had something to do with extending or making greater some aspect of a human limitation or weakness.

This was true of historical innovation, and it will be true of future innovation, as well. Everything we invent in the future will find a home augmenting some shortcoming of our human bodies. Technology, at its best, will extend human capabilities and allows us to do things we could not do before.

While we can analyze many different angles in which technology will augment our human abilities, there is one I think may be one of the more compelling things to augment our memory.

My family and I recently took a vacation to Maui. It is always nice to get out of the bubble of Silicon Valley for a more natural atmosphere to observe human behavior and technology. Going to a place where most people are on vacation provides an even deeper atmospheric layer to observe.

One of technologys greatest values to humans is in the assistance of capturing memories.

On vacation, I saw how critical and transformative the smartphone camera has been when it comes to memory augmentation. Ive long thought that one of technologys greatest values to humans is in the assistance of capturing memories. For sure, this is the single driving motivation behind most people purchasing of digital cameras and video cameras through the years. With most people in developed markets now owning a memory capture device, and comparable apps on their smartphones to enhance these memories, observing memory augmentation is now a frequent activity.

It was fascinating to see the lengths people on vacation would go through with their phones, drones (I was surprised how many drones I saw), GoPros, waterproof smartphone cases and more to capture and preserve their memories.

I saw people climbing trees, braving cliffs and hiking extreme conditions with their phones to get a unique selfie. Flying their drone overhead as they jumped off waterfalls. Putting their phones in waterproof cases to get pics of kids snorkeling. And obviously, there were lots of uses for GoPros to capture unique photos and videos of undersea creatures and experiences.

The camera sensor is, and will remain for some time, one of the most important parts of our mobile computing capabilities.

As was often the case, most of the memories captured are designed to share on social media, but the point remains that these pervasive capture devices enable us to create and capture memories we would most likely forget, or have a hard time recalling if left to our memory.

Ive argued before that the camera sensor is, and will remain for some time, one of the most important parts of our mobile computing capabilities. The desire to preserve, or capture a unique memory will remain a deeply emotional and powerful motivator for humans.

Allowing technology to take this idea a step further, we have things like Apple Photos and Google Photos, which look over our memories and make short videos to not just augment but to automate our memory creation process. As machine learning gets even better, these technologies will make creating memories from moments even easier.

As technology continues to augment more and more of our human capabilities, my hope is that the technological tool or process involved will fade so deeply into the background that it nearly disappears. This way we can get the most out our time whether at work, school, play or vacation, and spend less time fidgeting with technology. Ultimately we will be able to do more with technology, but also spend less time with the technology itself, and more time doing the things we love.

Ben Bajarin is a principal analyst at Creative Strategies Inc., an industry analysis, market intelligence and research firm located in Silicon Valley. His primary focus is consumer technology and market trend research. He is a husband, father, gadget enthusiast, trend spotter, early adopter and hobby farmer. Reach him @BenBajarin.

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Technology is created for the purpose of augmenting the fundamental weaknesses of human beings - Recode

On the Mexican Border, a Case for Technology Over Concrete – New York Times

This gives us a pretty good picture of who is moving across the border, said Frank Longoria, a Customs officer who is assistant director of field operations for border security. Ninety-nine percent of people who cross are doing so for good reason, but trying to catch that 1 percent that is doing something illegal is challenging.

In a small building not far from the entry and exit lanes, a Customs officer, Eugene Jimenez, looked at an X-ray scanning system, which allows him to see anomalies in the frame of a vehicle. He said he was looking for spaces where there should be solid material, or obvious signs of tampering in the gas tanks, batteries or other areas.

A few days before, after a currency detection dog reacted to a white 2008 Volkswagen Passat traveling into Mexico, Mr. Jimenez noticed a space in the bumper when the car was pulled aside for a scan, he said.

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On the Mexican Border, a Case for Technology Over Concrete - New York Times

China sees quantum leap in secure telecommunications technology – Christian Science Monitor

June 20, 2017 BeijingA Chinese quantum satellite has dispatched transmissions over a distance of 746 miles, a dozen times further than the previous record, a breakthrough in a technology that could be used to deliver secure messages, state media said on Friday, June 16.

China launched the world's first quantum satellite last August, to help establish "hack proof" communications between space and the ground, state media said at the time.

The feat opens up "bright prospects" for quantum communications, said Pan Jianwei, the lead scientist of the Chinese team, Quantum Experiments at Space Scale (QUESS), according to the official Xinhua news agency.

The scientists exploited the phenomenon of quantum entanglement, in which a particle can affect a far-off twin instantly, somehow overcoming the long distance separating them, a situation termed "spooky action at a distance" by the Nobel-prize winning physicist Albert Einstein, Xinhua added.

The team had successfully distributed entangled photon pairs over 1,200 km, it said, outstripping the distance of up to 62 miles at which entanglement had previously been achieved.

The technology so far is "the only way to establish secure keys between two distant locations on earth without relying on trustful relay," Mr. Pan told Xinhua, referring to encrypted messages.

The new development "illustrates the possibility of a future global quantum communication network" the journal Science, which published the results of the Chinese team, said on its website.

China still lags behind the United States and Russia in space technology, although President Xi Jinping has prioritized advancing its space program, citing national security and defense.

China insists its space program is for peaceful purposes, but the US Defense Department has highlighted its increasing space capabilities, saying it was pursuing activities aimed at preventing adversaries from using space-based assets in a crisis.

China's launch of the first experimental quantum satellite was a "notable advance in cryptography research," the Pentagon said this month.

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China sees quantum leap in secure telecommunications technology - Christian Science Monitor

Subway’s Technology Chief Resigns Just as New Mobile App Debuts – Bloomberg

Subway Restaurants Chief Information and Digital Officer Carman Wenkoff is stepping down this month, leaving the sandwich chain without a tech leader just as it rolls out a critical new mobile app.

Wenkoff will depart by the end of the month to take a new job, Subway said in a statement Tuesday. The company didnt say where he is heading.

During his five years as head of the technology group, Carman helped build a strong foundation and developed a Subway digital team that will continue their innovative work to transform the customer experience at Subway restaurants around the world, the Milford, Connecticut-based company said.

Wenkoff is exiting the chain at a critical juncture. Facing one of the worst sales slumps in its history, Subway is increasingly relying on technology to help boost its image and win back customers. In addition to the new app, its also adding touch-screen ordering kiosks and testing dedicated pickup areas for mobile orders.

The company also is following other fast-food chains, including McDonalds Corp., in trying out more delivery options. Subway hasnt teamed up with any third-party services on a larger scale yet.

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Subway's Technology Chief Resigns Just as New Mobile App Debuts - Bloomberg

Can technology make stadiums more secure? Seattle renovation team ups its game with new safety initiative – GeekWire

Oak View Group rendering of Key Arena. Via Oak View Group.

Oak View Group is serious about keeping its arenas around the world safe and secure.

Thats partly why the sports and entertainment facility company led by CEO Tim Leiweke who will speak at the Sports Tech Summit on Thursday recently launched its own security-focused subsidiary made up of former members of the LAPD, Green Berets, and Special Forces.

Called Prevent Advisors, the company is responsible for ensuring that OVGs 26 arenas across the world provide a safe place for sports fans and concert-goers to experience their favorite team or artist. That includes Key Arena in Seattle, where OVGwill lead a $564 million renovationand try to lure the NBA and NHL to the Emerald City.

GeekWire caught up with Mike Downing, a 35-year veteran of the LAPD who ran the counter-terrorism special operations bureau and oversaw more than 1,000 employees. Downing last month joined Prevent Advisors as its vice president of security and talked about how technology is being used to keep arenas secure.

Weve got a tool chest of new technology that is out there and ready to use, Downing said.

He said there are ways to prevent an attack like the one in Manchester last month after an Ariana Grande concert, noting how there were hints on social media and in ISIS propaganda of a potential bombing.

Predictable is a strong word, but you knew we were going to get hit again, Downing said. You knew the attacks were going to come.

He said there needs to be focus on not only creating a safe environment indoors, but also on securing the area outside of an arena or stadium. Technology can play a key role in that for example, solutions likeeyes in the sky, which are high-depth smart cameras powered by algorithms that run off a database; anti-drone systems that keep out weapon-equipped drones; or cybersecurity tools that protect against digital attacks. Other solutions include Vapor Wake Dogsand decoy cars.

All that information can be used to help alert a security team before its too late.

If you get the heads up, you can put more effort into the prevention side of things, Downing said.

He added that enhanced security screening systems can help reduce the amount of queuing that happens outside an arena.

Queueing is a potential soft target,' Downing said. You want to reduce the queuing and increase the flow in and out of the stadiums.

While technology is important, there still needs to be balance with the human side of security, too. Downing said team staff needs to be extra vigilant and should know what to look for, while fans shouldnt hesitate to point out suspicious activity.

You cant lose sight of the human factor, he noted.

Leiweke and Irving Azoff created Oak View Group in 2015. Leiweke, who has more than three decades of leadership experience in the sports industry, will join us at our second annual GeekWire Sports Tech Summit on June 21-22 in Seattle to talk about how technology will impact the future of sports stadiums and the fan experience. Tickets are still available below; for those attending, heres an FAQ page for the event.

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Can technology make stadiums more secure? Seattle renovation team ups its game with new safety initiative - GeekWire

Stephen Curry, Andre Iguodala hosting tech summit for pro athletes – The Mercury News

Silicon Valley ventures may become more frequent for NBA players and professional athletes in general after The Players Technology Summit.

Warriors stars Stephen Curry and Andre Iguodala will host the summit Aug. 14-16 in San Francisco, as announced Monday.

The summit, presented by Bloomberg, is intended to bring together top leaders in the technology, venture capital and sports communities to exchange ideas and share expertise in an educational and empowering forum.

Curry specifically touched on the connection between professional athletes and venture capitalists.

Playing in Silicon Valleys backyard has exposed me to information and resources that Im excited to share through the Summit, Curry said in a statement. Whether youre thinking about your first move into entrepreneurship or investing, or perhaps already a veteran in the space, its about surrounding yourself with the right team and putting in the work to always be improving as a professional.

Gold Standard chronicles the Warriors run to the 2017 NBA Championship. Order the book here.

In regard to this event, Curry surrounded himself with Iguodala who is already entrenched among Silicon Valley VCs.

Ive been fortunate to learn from some of the best in the tech and venture capital business and have put those learnings to work, Iguodala said in the statement. The Players Technology Summit is about sharing those learnings and relationships and building a lasting impact.

Curry is a co-founder of the marketing startup Slyce and an investor in mobile applications like Pinterest whileIguodala is an investor in companies likeThrive Global and The Players Tribune.

They both seemingly envision more athlete involvement in tech investment.

Once content to watch each other from the sidelines, professional athletes and Silicon Valley investors and entrepreneurs now realize they have a lot to learn from each other, Bloomberg Technology editor Brad Stone said in the statement. Im excited for Bloomberg to present The Players Technology Summit and to see where the conversation goes this year.

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Stephen Curry, Andre Iguodala hosting tech summit for pro athletes - The Mercury News

The Latest: Technology CEOs urged to join Trump initiative – ABC News

The Latest on President Donald Trump's meeting with technology CEOs (all times local):

2:55 p.m.

Technology CEOs are being urged by White House officials to pitch in on President Donald Trump's effort to modernize government.

Trump senior adviser and son-in-law Jared Kushner welcomed technology executives to the White House on Monday for an afternoon of working groups. They are discussing issues like technology infrastructure, cyber security and visas for foreign workers.

Kushner says the CEOS are working on some of the country's biggest challenges.

Those attending include Apple CEO Tim Cook and the executive chairman of Google parent company Alphabet, Eric Schmidt. Also on hand is Trump's daughter and Kushner's wife, senior presidential adviser Ivanka Trump.

The gathering is the first event for a technology-focused effort within the White House Office of American Innovation. It seeks to overhaul government functions using ideas from the business sector.

6 a.m.

Technology CEOS are expected at the White House Monday for an event focused on modernizing government.

The White House said expected attendees include Apple CEO Tim Cook and Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos.

This will be the first event for a technology-focused group within the White House Office of American Innovation, which seeks to overhaul government functions using ideas from the business sector.

Jared Kushner, senior adviser and son-in-law to President Donald Trump, will oversee the event with Chris Liddell, a White House aide who directs the technology effort.

It comes after some technology executives clashed with Trump over his decision to exit the Paris climate accord. Leaders at Apple and Google were among the American corporate executives who appealed to the president to stay in the pact.

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The Latest: Technology CEOs urged to join Trump initiative - ABC News

Remarks by President Trump During Roundtable with the American Technology Council – The White House (blog)

State Dining Room

5:22 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT: Thank you very much. Its great to have you at the White House. And I just wanted to pass on word -- Otto Warmbier has just passed away. He spent a year and a half in North Korea. A lot of bad things happened. But at least we got him home to be with his parents, where they were so happy to see him, even though he was in very tough condition. But he just passed away a little while ago. Its a brutal regime, and well be able to handle it.

But I want to thank you all for being here, special people. Im really thrilled to welcome many of you for the first time, and certainly the first time meeting as the American Technology Council. Were joined by an incredible group of leaders on the absolute cutting edge of innovation, including many CEOs from the worlds most successful businesses.

We have approximately $3.5 trillion of market value in this room -- but thats almost the exact number that weve created since my election. (Laughter.) In fact, I think we have you beat by a little bit, which is a pretty good number. But I congratulate you all. Done an amazing job. Thank you for lending your time and your talent to the American people. A lot of ideas have come out of the room today, and a lot of ideas will over the next short period of time.

I also want to welcome Secretary Mnuchin, Secretary Kelly, Administrator Verma, and my Budget Director, Mick Mulvaney. Thank you all. Done a great job. I want to thank Jared and Chris -- Chris Liddell -- for assembling such a spectacular group of people. Theyre working very, very hard. I want to thank Ivanka for working so hard on it; its a real passion.

Our goal is to lead a sweeping transformation of the federal governments technology that will deliver dramatically better services for citizens, stronger protection from cyberattacks -- which we were just discussing in the Oval Office with a little bit smaller group. Thats a big problem, theres no question about it. Were going to be working on it and were going to solve the problem -- and up to a trillion dollars in savings for taxpayers over the next 10 years. Over a trillion.

Were embracing big change, bold thinking, and outsider perspectives to transform government and make it the way it should be, and at far less cost.

My administration has already taken very historic steps to modernize critical IT systems and make government more transparent. As an example, youre seeing what were doing with the airports, with all of the billions and billions of dollars that have been spent on planes flying all in the wrong directions -- were getting a change. Theyve spent many billions of dollars, and we are getting that whole system fixed. Money wasted over the last six or seven years -- billions.

VA Secretary Shulkin recently announced that were upgrading technology to allow the seamless transfer of veterans medical records from the Defense Department, which has been a huge problem for decades and decades for our great veterans. Well have it fixed very soon, but its been a problem for many, many decades. Across government, were fixing problems in months that others have not fixed in many, many years. And were just getting started.

Fifty years ago, our government drove the innovation that inspired the world and put Americans on the moon. Today, many of our agencies rely on painfully outdated technology, and yet, we have the greatest people in technology that the world has ever seen right here with us in this room. And most of them are just nodding as I say that. Theyre actually agreeing with me, which -- (laughter) -- thats interesting, Eric, right?

Government needs to catch up with the technology revolution. Were going to change that with the help of great American businesses like the people assembled. The businesses represented here today employ hundreds of thousands of American workers. Your innovation has shaped the modern world and created millions of jobs. America should be the global leader in government technology just as we are in every other aspect, and we are going to start our big edge again in technology - such an important industry. I view it from the standpoint of jobs and other things; you view it somewhat differently. But were all in the same ballpark. Its so important. So important.

My administration is embracing a new spirit of innovation that will make life better for all Americans. And when it comes to what were here for today, American technology, were working very diligently with everybody, including Congress, on immigration so that you can get the people you want in your companies. And its been a tremendous problem that youve had over the past long period of time. So were working very hard on that and well be able to solve that problem.

I want to thank everyone in the room for lending your time, again.

END 5:28 P.M. EDT

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Remarks by President Trump During Roundtable with the American Technology Council - The White House (blog)

New technology is eroding your right to tinker with things you own – The Economist

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New technology is eroding your right to tinker with things you own - The Economist

MIT President Reif attends White House technology meeting – MIT News

MIT President L. Rafael Reif today attended a technology conference convened by the White House Office of American Innovation. The meeting included leading corporate CEOs and other technology leaders, brought together to advise the White House on how technology and data can be used to improve government operations and on how best to anticipate future technologies and their implications for the government and society.

The participants broke into small groups to discuss issues and then met with U.S. President Trump at the end of the day.

Reif attended two of the small group discussions one titled Analytics/Dashboard, focused on how to use data and metrics to improve government services, personnel and technology; and one titled Future Trends, on how government can anticipate, integrate, and facilitate the development of emerging technologies, especially in fields such as machine learning and the internet of things (IoT).

As U.S. government leaders seek to use innovative technology to better serve the American people, its vital to make sure that they receive expert advice, both about the best ways to use these technologies to serve the public, and about how to anticipate and address the complex implications of their use, Reif says. As an institution with a mission of national service, and as a pioneer in many of the technologies under discussion at the White House from machine learning and AI to robotics and IoT MIT has an important role to play at the center of this conversation.

In support of MIT's mission, President Reif has spoken in recent months, through letters to the MIT community and published opinion pieces, on the importance of continuing to attract global talent to the United States, sustaining federal financial support for advanced scientific research, and continuing global cooperation on climate change.

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MIT President Reif attends White House technology meeting - MIT News

Fiserv’s new digital technology can pay workers in real time – Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

DailyPay utilizes technology from Wisconsin-based Fiserv to give employees instant access to their earned wages.(Photo: DailyPay)

Work today, get paid today.

That is how the relationship between some companies and their employees can function, thanks to new digital technology developed by Fiserv Inc.

No more waiting until payday.

The Brookfield-based financial technology company said Monday that its Digital Disbursementsolution gives companies the ability to paytheir employees in real time.

DailyPay, a New York startup, is the first to announce it will use the Fiservdisbursement solution to integrate instant access features into companies existing payroll systems.

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While some financial advisers point out dangers in workers havingimmediate access to their day's wages, Fiserv contends companies that partner with DailyPay for the new system recruit talent more quickly and reduce employee turnover by an average of 41%.

We are deeply committed to reducing stress for Americans living paycheck to paycheck, DailyPay CEO Jason Lee said in a statement.

It could mean being able to pay a bill on time and avoid a late fee, Lee said. For some, it could mean being able to put food on the table that day.

DailyPay's services areavailable for companies in every state, aspokesman for the startup said, and all of its users have the instant payment tool now.

DailyPayhas tailored the technology tosend payments to employee bank accounts inseconds.

Along with immediate payment, the toolgives companiesthe ability to send payments throughemail addresses andphone numbers, as well as throughpaper checks.

Fiserv manages the payment process and uses bank-grade security to ensure safe transactions, the company said in a statement.

Companies can use their existing payroll systems to facilitate theinstant payments without much setuptime, and employees just providebasic information such as their bank account numbers.

Employees get the wages sent to their "available balance" and can access the money by transferring it to their bank account.

Whatever money they transfer from their available balance is taken off the next paycheck. Transferring money before the time of the paycheck involves a a $1.25 starting transfer fee.

Erik Kroll, who owns the Milwaukee-based company Hilltop Financial Advisors, said he sees advantages of the real-time payment tool. However, Kroll, a certified financial planner, said that the daily access to paymentshould be used by employees sparingly.

"I wouldn't advise someone to rely on this, Kroll said. "It could reinforce some bad habits of spending more than what's coming in."

Such spending is sometimes inevitable, he said, especially for lower income earners.

For others, however, theymay not know how to manage their cash flow and taking out money every day may only exacerbate those money management issues, he said.

Having money foremergenciesand avoiding late fees involves tracking ones own expenses, cutting out unnecessary costsand puttingmoney into a savings fund, he said.

The feeling of securitythat you can access your money any day can be counter-intuitive to appropriate savings goals, he said, and may further encouragepeople to spend their money as it comes in.

Having daily access to earned wagesstill can benefitsavings efforts, Kroll said, if itis used as a bridge to a secure emergency fund.

Especially for people who can putonly a few dollars into their savings each paycheck, the daily access to money can help pay off surprise expenses without forcing them to dip into their savings, he said.

The key to using the DailyPay tool, Krollsaid, is using it only when you need it.

Fiserv offers the digital disbursements solution directly to companies, charging them on a per-transaction basis. Startup costs vary by transaction volume.

The technology allows companies such asDailyPay to offer paymentsolutions for companies to send money securely and efficiently, said Tom Allanson, president of electronic payments at Fiserv.

Our payments capabilities are helping enable the digital economyand helping businesses connect with their customers by enabling safe, reliable and fast transactions, Allanson said.

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Fiserv's new digital technology can pay workers in real time - Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Technology Stocks Surge; Apple Leads Broad-Based Advance – Investor’s Business Daily

XAutoplay: On | Off The stock market traded strongly higher early Monday as technology stocks led the advance. The Nasdaq jumped 1.1%, while the S&P 500 and Dow Jones industrial average rose 0.5% and 0.4%, respectively.

Among the Dow industrials,Apple (AAPL) looked to put an end to its recent declines. The iPhone maker has declined six of the past seven trading sessions. Shares rose over 2%.

Other leaders in early trading includeBoeing (BA), JPMorgan (JPM), DuPont (DD)and Goldman Sachs (GS).All four rose over1%. Airplane maker Boeing added to its recent advance after announcing it had more than 240 orders worth about $30 billion for its new 737 Max 10 jet.

The main laggard in early trading was Wal-Mart Stores (WMT), falling nearly 1%. Shares of the discount retailer plummeted almost 5% on Friday, sinking below the 50-day moving average, after Amazon.com (AMZN) announced it was purchasing Whole Foods Market (WFM).

Within the S&P 500, Micron Technology (MU) and Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) set the pace, advancing about 4% each. Leading chip stocks Broadcom (AVGO) and Applied Materials (AMAT) rose about 2.5% apiece.

On the downside, EQT (EQT) fell 8% after the oil and gas exploration company announced it was acquiring Rice Energy (RICE) for $6.7 billion. Meanwhile, Costco (COST)fell 1.5% after being downgraded to hold by Deutsche Bank.

Clovis Oncology (CLVS) surged 43% after reporting positive trial results for its ovarian cancer drug Rubraca.

Leading stocks surged higher in thestock market today.Chinese e-commerce giant JD.com (JD) advanced over 5%, while rival Alibaba (BABA) rose 3.5%.Meanwhile, all four FANG members rose between1.5% and 2%.

Action in the IBD 50was extremely positive as only one component traded in the red early Monday: Control4 (CTRL)declined 0.1%. On the upside, TAL Education (TAL) jumped 5%, Grubhub (GRUB) rose 4.4%, and YY (YY) traded up 3.5%.

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Technology Stocks Surge; Apple Leads Broad-Based Advance - Investor's Business Daily

Emmanuel Macron’s Call To Action: Viva Technology! – Forbes


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Emmanuel Macron's Call To Action: Viva Technology!
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If you're in the fashion business, you come to Paris for fashion week; if you're in the aerospace business, you attend the Paris Air Show at Le Bourget; if you're in the film business you head to the Cannes Film Festival. If the new French President ...
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Emmanuel Macron's Call To Action: Viva Technology! - Forbes

Why I’m Optimistic About the Next Wave of Education Technology – EdSurge

Over the past 25 years, multiple waves of education technology and innovation have slowly washed into Americas schools and colleges. Along the way, innovators have often over-promised and under-delivered, causing many smart people to wonder if were now in a frothy bubble of irrational exuberance, most eloquently summarized by Audrey Watters in Hack Education, who worries that education technology [merely] serves as a Trojan Horse of sorts, carrying... the ideology of Silicon Valley [into public schools].

Working as an entrepreneur, executive, philanthropist and investor over the past few decades, at some of the very organizations Watters bemoans, Ive had a unique vantage point for observing numerous successes, failures andmost importantlylong-term trends that make me optimistic about the next wave of education innovation. Although the pessimists correctly observe that many questionable edtech startups have been over-funded and over-hyped these past few years (and some of the biggest are likely to crash to Earth in the near future), its simultaneously true that the next decade is likely to see the birth and growth of some of the most transformative education companies of this century.

My bet is that by 2040, our children will look back on this period between 2015 and 2030 in education technology much the same way internet historians look to the period 1995 to 2010 as the birth of the commercial web. The new millennium started with the dot-com crash which decimated 78 percent of the value of the NASDAQ and hundreds of first-wave internet startups went bankrupt. But during that same fifteen-year period, we also witnessed the birth and growth of highly influential firms like Google, Amazon, Facebook, Tencent and Alibaba.

Edtech, I believe, is going through a similar rebuilding moment powered by three trends: widely available infrastructure, the catalytic impact of spending by both the government and philanthropy in education, andfinallythe embrace of edtech by educational institutions and educators themselves. Not yet convinced? Join me on a quick tour of the past quarter century in education technology history.

Working closely with partners, I spent the years from 1993 to 2004 starting and leading a handful of technology startups. The first online class we launched in 1998 was little more than flat text on webpages, and we closely followed the birth of learning management systems, meeting with both Blackboard and WebCT before they achieved their first $1 million in revenue. In 2002, our team at Microsoft Education created an LMS for a world where every teacher and student had a tablet computer.

The only problem was that that world didnt yet exist. Tablet computers didnt take off until a decade later. The web was increasing its use of graphics, but had barely adopted video. Although we were convinced that technology could transform education, simple internet access was patchy at best. As recently as 1997, only 27 percent of Americas K-12 school had internet accessa number that skyrocketed to 92 percent by 2003. But visions of a world where every teacher and every student had an internet-connected device, and every student would get personalized assessments for learning, were still just thatvisions. The infrastructure just wasnt ready.

Nowadays, 99 percent of classrooms are wired with high-speed internet (which is very different than schools being wired), more than half of schools have wireless capability, hundreds of school districts have 1:1 devices and the U.S. Department of Education has researched and published an excellent National Education Technology Plan. The infrastructure challenges of that first wave arent completely solved, but they are mostly solvedand todays challenges have little to do with lack of wires, routers or devices.

Between 2004 and 2011, I worked as an executive in SchoolNet and Kaplan, both of which grew into successful and innovative education companies. This was the era of No Child Left Behind, when Americas K-12 districts got religious about regularly measuring student and teacher results and when test prep and online colleges became thriving businesses. And behind the scenes, the federal government played a critical role in driving these trends.

SchoolNet built and marketed an instructional management system that aimed to deliver useful data about student progress to teachers and administrators. Our system was user friendly, allowing educators to see student grades, benchmark assessments and progress against standards on student dashboards. But the bigger driver of our success was new government policies; specifically, No Child Left Behind and specific funding under the Enhancing Education Through Technology programand our focus on selling multi-year enterprise contracts to large districts. (To this day, too many entrepreneurs try to sell to schools, teachers or parents, when 90 percent of the budget and decisions in K-12 are made at the district level).

The edtech industry made big strides during this era. School districts developed IT departments, even creating and hiring for the title CTO/CIO. Internet ubiquity in the classroom led teachers to adopt email and experiment with other technologies. Summative and formative assessments, powered by technology, became much more commonplace and almost every school district developed a strategy around using data to measure school, teacher and student performance. Many districts analyzed their performance and implemented reforms that led to higher student achievement and graduation rates. (I wish everyone knew that our nations high school graduation rate reached a record high 83 percent in 2016, probably about nine percentage points higher than 2002 when NCLB was passed and we couldnt even agree upon or calculate the rate!)

SchoolNet helped many of these districtsand benefitted as well. As a result of solid leadership, great product, friendly government policies and large enterprise contracts, SchoolNet rode the accountability and assessment wave to almost $40 million of annual revenue and a $230 million acquisition by Pearson in 2011.

At Kaplan, I came to see even more clearly how government policy drives some of the biggest successes in education technologyand exactly how policys invisible hand can be 10 to 100 times more powerful than Adam Smiths free market when it comes to education. Kaplan thrived during the decade, growing to more than $2.8 billion in global annual revenue by 2010, helped immeasurably by hard work and acquisitions.

That said, Kaplans growth was substantially driven by what seemed like a modest change in 1998 to the Higher Education Act, which allowed accredited colleges to generate up to 50 percent of their Title IV revenue (student loans and grants) from correspondence or distance-learning courses. It was a policy change that greatly encouraged the growth of telecommunications correspondence courses.

In 2006, legislators amended the Higher Education Act again, eliminating the 50 percent rule and allowing for-profit colleges to generate up to 90 percent of their revenue from government sources, which most often applied to for-profit colleges offering online courses. If the 1998 change in HEA enabled the birth of online higher education, this next legislative change caused postsecondary online education to grow even faster as millions of adult and part-time students enrolled in for-profit, usually online, colleges funded by tens of billions of dollars in federal loans and grants.

Together these two little-noticed legislative changes helped create multiple billion-dollar online education companies over the next decade, including Kaplan, University of Phoenix, Capella, Strayer, Bridgepoint, Grand Canyon and many others. Kaplan Higher Education, which included more than 80 ground-based colleges and one very large and fast growing online university, grew from less than $10 million in revenue in 1999 to $1.9 billion in 2010.

In sum, the primary growth driver for all for-profit, online colleges during the 2000s (including Kaplan) were two legislative changes in 1998 and 2006, which together channelled tens of billions of dollars in student loans and grants to students, which they used to enroll in convenient online programs largely offered by for-profit colleges, until the past few years when technologically-savvy nonprofit colleges and universities began to really appreciate the importance of the trend and made huge strides in offering these programs themselves.

In large part because of the growth of for-profit colleges during the 2000s, smart market observers now keep a close eye on how the invisible hand of policy shapes education markets. Theyve developed a keen ability to spot other education companies with the potential to capitalize on giant pools of revenue created by tiny legislative changes. For example, over the past few years, 23 states have made computer science courses a graduation requirement and authorized special funding to promote their growth. As a result, hundreds of school districts are now scrambling to adopt and deploy computer science coursesand a number of startups are dipping into this new revenue river.

The past few years have seen an explosion of education technology companies and investment, with more than a billion dollars of venture capital invested in U.S. education technology companies each year for the past three years. A handful of these startups will grow into billion-dollar education companies in the years ahead.

2U has already proven that a billion-dollar education company can now be created from scratch in only seven years. Lynda.coms $1.5 acquisition by LinkedIn in 2015 shows that billion-dollar exits are not limited to companies in higher education. Purdues recent acquisition of Kaplan and ETS acquisition of Questar for $127.5 million show that even nonprofits understand that the digital revolution is transforming education and they are making acquisitions that would have been unheard of in a prior generation.

But the most interesting developments are happening a little further downstream. StraighterLine has proven that the cost and price of quality online education can be driven down to Netflix prices. ASU Global Freshman Academy, Coursera and edX have taken the StraighterLine modeland pushed it even further. But were still in just the first inning of the game, because less than 10 percent of college students know that StraighterLine or ASU Global Freshman Academy exist. During my tenure at the Gates Foundation, I learned how evidence-based innovations and reforms like these are guided by the hand of philanthropy in a way thats similar to how public policy shapes the market. (For more details, see my 2015 piece)

EdSurge tracks more than 2,400 education technology companies; LearnPlatform allows educators to see and rate more than 4,000 edtech products through their Chrome web browser. For all you science nerds out there, we are definitely in the middle of the Cambrian explosion of education technology: If historical trends hold up, more than 80 percent of the edtech startups created in the past five years will not survive through 2020. But those that do survive and build successful enterprises could change the world forever. Observing the internet revolution, Marc Andreessen famously wrote software is eating the world. From my vantage point, technology is transforming education from an art into a data-driven learning science.

My partners and I at New Markets Venture Partners have been observing this market for more than a decade and weve made investments in 25 edtech companies during that timeframe; 24 are still healthy. Weve also had seven successful exits over the past decade. Having watched the education market evolve through multiple cycles, we believe we can spot which education technologies have the wind of government policy or philanthropic support at their back, which are starting to cross the chasm from early adopters to early mainstream clients, and which have the essential building blocks common to all successful venture-backed companies. No surprises here: Those ingredients include strong leadership teams, great product that works, highly satisfied early customers, and, most difficult in the education-market, a market-focused scalable business plan with the right unit economics.

Each year, New Markets takes a close look at about 400 education technology companies and invests in about four. Our 1 percent acceptance rate means were 4.6 times harder to get into than Stanford or Harvard. We need to be this discerning because the education market is really difficultand its not just one market. Building and selling products to K-12 school districts is very different than building and selling products for higher education institutions. And K-12 isnt just one market if youre a content company; you need to hone your expertise in particular subject areas, such as math, English or STEM.

Oh, and by the way, U.S. higher education is four markets, too: community colleges, public universities, predominantly online universities and private independent colleges, each of which have subtly different priorities, and do their purchasing and implementation in different ways. In fact, one could even argue that higher education has more than 15 distinct markets, since there are multiple discipline and functional associations in higher education, some of which are stronger in community colleges or four-year institutions. And I havent even mentioned how different policies and philanthropy drive funding streams differently for education technology products in each market.

At this point, Americas education system finally has all the key building blocks in place: The infrastructure is solid, almost every student has a device and wireless internet access, schools and educators (at all levels) are now much more comfortable working with technology and data, and thousands of entrepreneurs are workingnot just with early adopters, but increasingly with early mainstream schools and educatorsto bring edtech and personalized learning to the masses.

This is why Im optimistic about the next decade of educational technology and innovation. I cant wait to see how the next chapter unfolds!

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Why I'm Optimistic About the Next Wave of Education Technology - EdSurge

KCC bolsters community partnerships with technology – Herald and News

Klamath Community College is furthering its commitment to the community by sharing ideas with the Oregon Institute of Technology.

At Oregon Techs request, KCC recently led a small group of Oregon Tech staff members through two synchronous classrooms at the KCC Klamath Falls campus.

The synchronous system gives opportunities to community members who dont have access to higher education, said KCC Network and Systems Manager Mike Pearson, who led the tour. It puts college in front of them in the comfort of their own space.

KCC has five synchronous classrooms at the Klamath Falls campus, each costing several thousand dollars and funded by grant awards. The synchronous rooms include an audio/video control panel, a life-size video conference system, a 75-inch SMART TV, two 70-inch presentation TVs used to stream distance classes in real time, and an interactive podium for instructors to write on the screen without moving to a whiteboard or TV.

The synchronous KCC classes stream classes in real time to Bonanza, Lost River, Chiloquin, Lakeview, North Lake and Paisley high schools.

Tony Richey, OIT manager of IT operations and educational technology, said Oregon Tech would like to use synchronous technology to expand offerings at its Wilsonville campus, as well as at Chemeketa Community College and other colleges and high schools throughout the region.

According to Richey, Oregon Tech is in the process of creating a synchronous classroom design similar to KCCs, that will provide students with a full-blown classroom experience, allowing distance-education students to engage with faculty and other students and incorporating the social aspects of learning.

It will also offer them flexibility because there are a limited amount of times a class can be scheduled, Richey said.

Pearson pointed out that synchronous technology could also benefit Oregon Tech students pursuing a four-year degree who cannot travel due to finances or disabilities.

The courses OIT may initially offer via synchronous learning include engineering, mechanical and management, according to Richey.

I think synchronous delivery for distance education is part of the future, and Im glad other institutions are looking at the same technologies, Pearson said.

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KCC bolsters community partnerships with technology - Herald and News

CT scan technology used in Aberystwyth Uni wheat study – BBC News


BBC News
CT scan technology used in Aberystwyth Uni wheat study
BBC News
Aberystwyth researchers are using CT hospital scanner technology to study wheat. The new technique, being developed by undergraduate computer science student Nathan Hughes, could help scientists create new types of wheat which can thrive in a ...

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CT scan technology used in Aberystwyth Uni wheat study - BBC News