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From the inception of the IT-oLogy vision, one key message has remained constant over the last three years. Our epidemic around the shortage of IT talent must certainly address one key fallacy. Mainframes are not dead. Every one of the most important industries in this country rely on enterprise servers to manage large, integrated, high volume business.

As a founding partner in IT-oLogy, IBM contributed hardware and software to help launch computing environments to help grow IT talent with real hands-on learning. Most importantly though, IBM has offered the IBM Mainframe Academic Initiative free to universities and tech colleges. This full suite of curriculum and applied industry examples is being delivered by many of the IT-oLogy academic partners.

Still, we need more higher education partners to join this program.  Take a look at the following videos and see WHY.

 

ECC LogoDuring the summer, over 100 students, professors and professionals interested in enterprise computing come together at Marist College in Poughkeepsie, New York, for two days to share innovative thoughts and ideas. This year, we are excited to announce the 2012 ECC Satellite Location at IT-oLogy in Columbia, South Carolina! Why is this important? The satellite location will allow those interested in the ECC Conference to attend without making the trip to New York.

So, what is the Enterprise Computing Community? The mission of this group is to improve undergraduate education in large systems and graduate a new generation of talent that will provide industries with the ability to secure, sustain and grow their operations. The ECC also recognizes that filling the skills shortage will stabilize a vulnerable technology environment before the problem reaches crisis proportions. This fits within the mission of IT-oLogy, because the ECC is focused on talent – growing it, advancing it and filling the IT talent pipeline.

We invite you to join us, either at Marist College in New York or at IT-oLogy in South Carolina, on June 11-12, 2012. This conference will bring together great minds and world-class speakers for two informative days. The tentative agenda is as follows:

Tentative Conference Agenda – IT-oLogy Location:

Monday, June 11th
8 a.m. – 9 a.m. – Registration & Light Breakfast
9 a.m. – Noon - Welcome, Opening Remarks, Keynote Speaker, Sessions
Noon – 1 p.m. – Sponsored Lunch
1 p.m. – 5 p.m. – Keynote Speaker, Sessions
5:30 p.m. – 7:30 p.m. – Networking Reception at the University of South Carolina

Tuesday, June 12th
8:30 a.m. – 9 a.m. – Light Breakfast
9 a.m. - 11:45 a.m. - Hands on Workshops, Concurrent Sessions, Tour of IT-oLogy Data Center
11:45 a.m. – 1 p.m. – Sponsored luncheon in conjunction with the Columbia Information Technology Council

For registration information, please visit http://ecc2012.eventbrite.com/.

Gartner Conference Session at IT-oLogyEarlier this month I attended the Gartner briefing on IT Modernization presented at IT-oLogy. Gartner brought in some of their heavyweight analysts for the Insurance and Banking industries, two of the major industries here in Columbia.

I found Dale Vecchio’s presentation especially interesting, for two reasons:

The first reason reason, one I’ll not spend too much time on, is that I quickly figured out I was not the intended audience. Dale was making the effort to debunk things like ‘You can no longer ignore mobile ubiquity’ and ‘You need to take steps to make you data easier to access internally via the web’. While I was sitting there and thinking: ‘Really, does anyone believe that anymore?’, I saw a number of heads nodding as if it was something that needed serious consideration.

Further into the presentation, Dale mentioned a couple of features on the system Z mainframes (regularly used in the industries present) that could be used to enable the above modernization efforts. He off-handedly mentioned that IBM actually introduced the features (like Linux kernel hosting and web server capabilities) several years ago, so the audience no longer had the excuse that they were ‘untested technologies’. It was then I suddenly had that ‘a-ha’ moment – you know, the one where something you hear gets you thinking so hard you accidentally miss the rest of the presentation. Sorry Dale!

Courtesy IBMThe zSeries mainframe itself wasn’t the primary challenge for IBM or anyone in this room. As Dale mentioned, IBM had taken the steps to make the system itself a relatively competitive alternative to midframe and WinServer solutions, based on your needs and requirements. The challenge was the people in the room, or rather, the type of IT Departments they represented.

Let me explain:

In the global and national business market, I think we can all agree that the degree to which business conditions change continues to accelerate. This is especially true in the last few years for the banking and insurance markets. International, national and personal debt matters continue to reverberate across the banking industry. National Health Policy is forcing changes to catch-up from behind, while the public demand for more timely and accurate data in all areas will continue to drive the pace of change for the health care industry. Both of these industries are facing significant pressures to increase their rate of change.

I would argue that most business leaders in these organizations see this happening and are making attempts to react accordingly. Frankly, it’s in their best interest and their jobs are most likely on the chopping block when revenues fall or if they lose share to a market competitor. However, in these two industries in particular, there is a growing gap between those organizations that ‘get it’ and those that are getting further behind. Both internally and externally, the users of IT are demanding more flexibility in how the data is presented, where they can access it and what they can do with it. The message I heard was that many haven’t caught up.

Now, four to five years ago, according to Gartner, some of the blame for the slowness in ‘steering the ship’ could be laid at the feet of their IT framework vendors. This is no longer the case. The gating factor now is not the mainframe itself. The challenge instead is the IT department’s speed of adaptability to new environments and initiatives, causing unnecessary hurdles to the organization’s ability to become (or remain) an agile competitor. This is the classic IT Department of ‘No’.

Ironically, the actions (or inactions) by these IT departments impact not only the organization itself, but also the industry at-large, and so they hurt everyone in the process. How? By perpetuating the reputation of mainframe-based departments as entrenched unyielding places, they actually help reduce the quantity and quality of job seekers.

Photo Credit: Kaizen Institute‘Yeah, right,’ I hear you saying (I have good hearing, just don’t tell my wife). Hang with me here - picture your average 2.3 kid family where both parents now work. As mom or dad come home after a long day’s work and complain about ‘those computer people at the office’ keeping them from getting any work done’ because ‘they denied my request for access’, how many kids want to go into a job their parent talks about with such disdain?  Don’t believe it? If you’re kid is on a sports team, listen to what your fellow parents are complaining about. If you don’t believe those same complaints aren’t happening on days they go straight home, think again. And if you don’t think the kids are listening, think again… again.

Of course, some IT departments are stepping up to address this challenge. They’re leveraging their mainframes to run Linux, consolidating their servers, reducing costs and making their applications web-accessible and more flexible than ever before. One place I heard about is trying to build a ‘SimCity’-like program to figure how people will interact with their doctor in the future. These IT departments are trying to be more responsive to the business needs, and as a result they’re likely more responsive in general. You can bet the parents at those organizations are less likely to complain about what IT didn’t let them do.

Outside IT-oLogy at duskOkay, but what about everywhere else? This is where IT-oLogy is such a great initiative and opportunity for all of us. By sharing stories of how they’re leveraging their IT infrastructure and the z Series to do new, agile things, they can help us all find out how cool some of these technologies really are. This helps ‘Grow IT’ by raising the bar for all IT shops with similar architectures. IT-oLogy can also share these stories with our ‘future engineers,’ helping to increase the level of talent that chooses to go into these fields.

So no, maybe we can’t make the mainframe cool overnight, but the mainframe itself isn’t uncool; it’s usually the people and departments that are (or maybe ‘aren’t') managing it.  By doing everything that analysts like those at Gartner say we need to do anyway, we can make our IT departments more nimble, more responsive to the business and yes, maybe just a little bit cooler.

What do you have to say?   Are you a user of one of those IT shops of ‘No’?  Do you have a ‘cool’ enterprise IT story that you’d like to share?  Am I way off the mark as usual?  Share your thoughts with us below!



Karl McCollester resides in Columbia and is the CEO of Udhaa, a mobile and web application software products company. You can follow his regular blog posts about Information Technology, Agile practices, Gov 2.0, and whatever else comes to mind at his blog or on Twitter: @karlmccollester

This just in from IBM Academic Initiative System z!

The IBM Academic Initiative System z has a few quick announcements that may be of interest to you and your students this semester:

1.  IBM Master the Mainframe Contest

Registration for the 2011 IBM Master the Mainframe Contest is now open for students across the U.S. and Canada (excluding Quebec).  This year, the IBM Academic Initiative System z team is giving away over $35,000 in prizes, including Samsung Galaxy tablet computers, T-shirts, pre-paid debit cards and trips to the mainframe lab in Poughkeepsie, NY.  No mainframe or large systems experience is necessary.

Contest homepage: http://ibm.com/university/contest

Students can access the simple registration form from that page.  We also put a link to a printable PDF Flyer on the homepage to help promote the contest to your students.  

The contest, which begins on October 3, is an educational tool that progresses in difficulty and prize value as contestants complete hands-on tasks, logging into a remote mainframe system from their own workstations.  Many professors offer the contest as extra credit or a mandatory assignment — if you are interested in receiving reports on your students’ progress to help with your grading, you can request them from me (todd@us.ibm.com) at any time.  The contest runs through December 28.

This year, the custom Master the Mainframe Contest T-shirt (the prize for being among the first 1,500 contestants to complete Part 1) will feature “tour dates” on the back, which will match the hometowns of the 50 schools that have the most registrants as of October 3.  Students who complete Part 2 of the contest will also be invited to put their resumes into the Student Opportunity System, a recruiting tool for enterprise systems employers.  We’ll be directing interested recruiters to link up with your students through that system, and also for students to use their mainframe skills to help them apply for the jobs on our new System z Job Board at systemzjobs.com.

2.  Destination z Enterprise Computing Scholarship

This semester, the IBM Destination z community will be accepting student applications for the fourth annual Destination z Enterprise Computing Scholarship.  This scholarship is awarded to students at Destination z member schools who have demonstrated excellence in their mainframe coursework, and who plan to continue their academic and professional development on the platform.  If your school is interested in joining Destination z so that your students will be eligible for the scholarship, please visit the simple enrollment form.  Further instructions will go out to Destination z member schools when the student application window opens in October.

3.  IBM Academic Initiative System z Facebook page

If you’d like to keep up on the latest IBM Academic Initiative System z news, please follow us on our new Facebook page.  We encourage you to post information about your own enterprise computing programs there as well.

We hope to see you on Facebook, and to see your students winning scholarships and Mastering the Mainframe this fall.  Best wishes for a successful semester!