GSA Technology Council

Archive for June, 2006

RecordFusion to manage land records digitally in SC

RecordFusion, a provider of end-to-end digital land records management solutions, announced that the company will bring its technology to South Carolina. Information about the company’s land records management services were recently unveiled to the Palmetto Land Title Association (PLTA). The Palmetto Land Title Association is the professional association for businesses and individuals who are part of the title and land records industry in the state of South Carolina.

Recently members of the PLTA attended meetings where representatives from the land title industry from Louisiana and Mississippi shared their Hurricane Katrina experiences. These individuals outlined the considerable issues and problems that exist with the loss of land records in their parts of the country. Many of these records were destroyed and no back up systems or disaster recovery plans were in place. This has left title insurance companies lenders and others without any means to perform title examinations to obtain proof of title. This has created significant issues for title insurers, land owners, mortgage companies as well as residents and businesses who need access to this information for insurance claims and governmental disaster relief programs.

“South Carolina is a coastal state with the same potential for disaster. We are very concerned about how our Register of Deeds and other governmental offices would fare should we have a similar catastrophe. The current state of land records management needs to be addressed as soon as possible. Back up systems and standards must to be established across the state. The PLTA is working statewide with the Register of Deeds offices, elected officials and companies like RecordFusion to address these issues and implement solutions,” said Stephanie Munsey, PLTA Board Member.

“In the wake of Hurricane Katrina it has become very clear that land records need to be protected, and systems need to be in place in South Carolina to ensure that they can be easily recovered. RecordFusion offers a complete solution for the land records management. Our comprehensive suite of products and services will protect all land records and allow for more effective utilization and management of this information. With our system records can be archived and categorized for easy research, systems can be implemented for the recording of new information, and we can create an infrastructure for information recovery following disaster,” said RecordFusion President Bill Welge.

via RecordFusion.

 

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Upstate Tech Event Calendar (Beta)


This calendar is a list of events that we think of interest to IT professionals in Upstate, South Carolina. To have your event listed, please contact us.

This calendar is currently in beta test mode. That means we are testing it and it might not always be available. We are working on it. As always, your comments and suggestions are welcome.

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Solutience partners with S+P Software Support Service GmbH

Solutience, an information technology and business consulting firm headquartered in Greenville, S.C., has been selected as one of only three companies in the United States to market and distribute new software that dramatically reduces the amount of time required for SAP upgrade projects.

SAP provides industry-specific business solutions through supporting IT infrastructures with software, services, tools and programs. Solutience’s expertise is in providing SAP to the manufacturing industry.

The new software, called U:RforU, was developed in Germany by S+P Software Support Service GmbH. Solutience recently was chosen as a partner because of its focus on particular geographic and industry areas.

“This new software results in improved productivity, streamlined processes and better project management for SAP upgrade and support package projects,” says Richard Fowler, Solutience CEO.

U:RforU helps the upgrade process by analyzing which custom objects need to be changed. “Normally, analyzing these customer-specific portions of the system can take weeks,” Fowler says. “But with U:RforU, the process is reduced to just a few hours.”

via Solutience
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How to destroy a hard drive (on the fly and on purpose)

After a U.S. intelligence-gathering aircraft was involved in a mid-air collision off the coast of China four years ago, the crew was unable to erase sensitive information from magnetic data storage systems before making an emergency landing in Chinese territory.

That event underscored the need for simple techniques to provide fail-safe destruction of sensitive data aboard such aircraft. Working with defense contractor L-3 Communications Corp., scientists at the Georgia Tech Research Institute (GTRI) have developed a series of prototype systems that use special high-strength permanent magnets to quickly erase a wide variety of storage media.

Developed so far for VHS tapes, floppy drives, data cassettes, and small computer hard drives, the techniques could also have commercial applications for banking, human resource and other industries that must also protect sensitive information.

“This is a very challenging problem,” said Michael Knotts, a research scientist in the GTRI’s Signature Technology Laboratory. “We had to verify that the data would be beyond all possible recovery even with unlimited budget and unlimited time. Commercial devices on the market for data erasure just couldn’t fill the bill, because they were magnetically too weak, they were physically too large and heavy, or they didn’t meet stringent air safety standards.”

During the project, the researchers developed testing procedures that use a magnetic force microscope (MFM) – a variation on the atomic-force microscope (AFM) more commonly used to provide detailed images of surfaces at the nanometer scale. The MFM mapped the very small magnetic perturbations created by data stored on the media, helping determine how well data patterns had been destroyed.

“If you erase the data by whatever means, you should see a surface devoid of any specific pattern or periodicity,” Knotts explained. “Our goal was to see a random distribution of magnetization that would indicate a clean disk.”

During the three-year project, Knotts and collaborators Don Creyts, Dave Maybury, Candy Ekangaki, and Tedd Toler explored a broad range of possible destruction techniques, including burning diskettes with heat-generating thermite materials, crushing drives in presses and chemically destroying the media.

The researchers had to select techniques and equipment that would:

* Be light enough for aircraft use and operate independently of aircraft electrical systems;

* Be mechanically simple to ensure reliable operation;

* Produce no harmful gases or flame;

* Provide mechanisms to prevent inadvertent erasure.

During their first year of work, the researchers learned that data could remain on diskettes that had been subjected to high heat, and had to abandon thermal destruction techniques because of the fire and harmful gases they generated. That left only magnetic techniques.

In developing techniques for complete erasure, the researchers first had to learn how different data storage drives operate, then assess the magnetic field levels necessary for complete erasure. To do that, they obtained a number of commercially-available micro-drives, cut the media into sections, subjected them to varying magnetic fields, and then tested the sections with the MFM.

“We had to understand how the data is laid out on the disk so we could know where to look for the patterns, and we had to do a lot of measurements to determine exactly what kind of magnetic field is needed to destroy all data,” said Knotts. “We had to do a lot of destructive testing to determine that, and our lab is littered with the carcasses of dead hard drives to prove it.”

Producing a magnetic field sufficient to destroy data patterns required the use of neodymium iron-boron magnets custom-designed for the project and special pole pieces made of esoteric cobalt alloys. The magnets, which weigh as much as 125 pounds, had to produce fields sufficient to penetrate metallic housings that surround some drives.

“We developed models for magnetic circuits that we could run through optimization codes to design the best shape to get the field that we needed,” Knotts said. “It takes quite a magnetic field to get through the steel enclosures on some of the drives. We are producing magnetic fields comparable to those used in magnetic resonance imaging equipment, so these are not your ordinary refrigerator magnets.”

Mechanically, the researchers faced challenges in reliably moving data storage devices through the magnetic fields. In some cases, aircraft crews would simply insert removable media into a motorized mechanism that pushes them past the magnets, while for other media, crews would have to twist a knob and pull drives out of their enclosures and through a magnetic field. To prevent accidental erasure, each technique requires several deliberate steps.

With success in erasing removable media and small hard drives, the researchers are moving onto a final phase of the project, which will involve large computer hard drives partially encased in thick steel caddies.

Beyond Department of Defense applications, the magnetic erasure techniques could have applications to the commercial world, where banks, human resource agencies and other organizations must ensure complete destruction of data in computer equipment being discarded.

Knotts admits he’ll be a bit sad to see the project end.

“This was certainly an unusual project,” he said. “It’s not often that we get paid to crush equipment in presses, blow things up and set off fires in microwave ovens.”

 via Georgia Tech

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Benefitfocus VP of Technology wins top InfoWorld award

John Smith, Vice President of Technology for Benefitfocus, has received one of the coveted InfoWorld CTO of the Year awards. InfoWorld magazine gives the awards each spring to 25 individual technology executives who have demonstrated leadership within their companies and in the IT community: Visit InfoWorld Top CTO Award for more information.

This year’s award winners recognized the fact that technology’s goals have changed, says InfoWorld Magazine: “Once, forward-looking CTOs and CIOs scanned the horizon for new technologies that would improve the lot of IT. Today, as many of this year’s top 25 CTOs can tell you, technology leaders must also focus on understanding the business goals of the enterprise — and then craft technology strategies to meet those objectives.”

John Smith has been able to apply new technology to an old and complex industry problem, which has led to his promotion from Director to Vice President of Technology for Benefitfocus, the fastest growing technology company in the State of South Carolina.

With his leadership, Benefitfocus has replaced decades of outdated Electronic Data Interchange (EDI), technology and processes in the healthcare system. Benefitfocus® eExchange is currently delivering over two million transactions a month, solving clients’ data exchange problems and enabling new Consumer Driven Healthcare technology.

via BenefitFocus
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Innovision Technology Awards Call for Entries

innovision150: Innovision Technology Awards

The InnoVision Technology Awards Program is the Upstate’s premier awards program focused exclusively on celebrating innovation and technological excellence. The InnoVision Awards have become the mark of distinction for outstanding leadership, innovation and technological excellence in the Upstate community.

InnoVision provides an opportunity for high visibility and exposure for your organization amid the Upstate business community. Each finalist will be featured in a video at the InnoVision Technology Awards Dinner on November 15, 2006. Each finalist will also be featured at a Finalist Reception to be held in September and at an InnoVision Technology Forum.

The InnoVision Technology Awards Program, encompassing the Awards Dinner and Technology Forum Series, has experienced tremendous growth since 1999, the year in which Deloitte and the inaugural Advisory Board developed and launched the program.

To submit an entry, sign up as a sponsor, or receive more information about the Awards Dinner or Technology Forum Series, visit www.InnoVisionAward.org or send an e-mail to info@InnoVisionAward.org.

Deadline for award entries: July 10, 2006

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June 2006 Learning Lunch

ColinMartin: Colin Martin


Colin Martin is the founder and President of PromoPipeline, a vertical search engine built to communicate promotions and product information in sales and distribution channels. Colin is also a Partner in Mace Marketing Group and prior to that was the founder and President of SecureShred, a commercial outsource shredding company which grew 650% a year prior to being sold to information services firm Recall, in May of 2001. Colin graduated from Erskine College with a BS in Management and Economics.

Colin Martin started PromoPipeline for the second time in 2005.  The second time?  Yes, after the first time failed 2004.  Colin’s business odyssey is one built around innovation, a desire to positively affect the world, a love of all things business, a compulsion to create, risk, reward and yes…failure.  What is the process of launching a truly innovative business and what does it take to pull it off?  What is the mindset and what are the traits of an entrepreneur?  Please join us for our June meeting.

GSATC Learning Lunch

Topic: One Techpreneur’s Odyssey

Featured: Colin Martin

Date: Wednesday, June 14, 2006

Time: 11:30 AM – 1:00 PM

Location: Crowne Plaza (Map: I-385 at Roper Mtn.)

Agenda

11:30 – 11:55 Registration, Networking, Lunch

11:55 – 12:10 Announcements

12:10 – 12:50 Presentation

12:50 – 1:00 Door Prizes, Adjourn

This meeting features easy access from I-385, plenty of free parking, ample networking opportunities, a great presentation, and door prizes. Plan to attend.

Lunch is $15 in advance, $20 at the door.

RSVP Today

Online registration now closed.
Please register at the meeting.

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Sealevel’s releases solid-state flat panel

Sealevel Systems, Inc. announces the SeaPACTM family of flat panel touchscreen computers designed to operate over a wide temperature range without fans or other moving parts. Available with bright, AMTFT LCDs ranging in size from 6.4” to 17”, SeaPAC systems are perfect for a variety of industrial control, machine interface, and point-of-sale applications where small size and extreme reliability are a must.

Powered by a high-performance, low-power 1GHz Celeron M processor, SeaPACs are equipped with robust standard I/O features including 10/100Base-T Ethernet, two serial ports, and three high-speed USB 2.0 ports. For flexible local and remote I/O expansion, SeaPACs expand using Sealevel’s SeaI/O data acquisition modules. Choose from Reed and Form C relays, optically isolated inputs, TTL, A/D, and D/A options. The SeaPAC’s processor subsystem communicates with SeaI/O devices using Modbus RTU allowing one or more SeaI/O modules to be physically attached to the SeaPAC or located remotely up to 4000 feet away.  Both the processor and I/O modules can be easily removed from the display assembly, making field upgrades easy.

SeaPAC systems include a rugged panel-mount bezel that provides Nema 4/IP65 protection from sprayed liquids on the front surface. The optional resistive touchscreen allows intuitive operator interface and offers years of durable service. SeaPACs are powered by 12VDC, and power is provided to SeaI/O expansion modules using convenient pass-through connectors. The system is rated for 0-50°C operation, and a VESA mounting bracket is available for attaching the system to a mounting arm.

Windows® XP Embedded is a perfect operating system choice for SeaPAC systems. Sealevel offers application assistance for efficiently transferring customer applications to the XPe platform. For users that require disk storage, an optional high-temperature hard drive is available. SeaPAC systems are priced beginning at $1795, and product is available immediately from stock.

Sealevel Systems, founded in 1986, provides industrial computing solutions in addition to a variety of communications and I/O products including PCI Bus cards, Ethernet serial servers, USB serial adapters, PCMCIA cards, and PC/104 modules. Their product line includes multi-port RS-232, RS-422/485, RS-232/422/485 multi-interface high-speed sync/async, and digital/relay I/O.

via Sealevel
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Order Logistics to acquire eBridge Solutions

eBridge Solutions has announced that the Company has accepted a Letter of Intent from Order Logistics, Inc., (www.orderlogistics.com) to acquire eBridge Solutions. eBridge’s solutions include global sourcing, supplier management, product quality assurance and manufacturing scheduling software to clients in the apparel, textile and manufacturing markets. eBridge’s KnowledgeSentry Division supplies security solutions including, risk management, disaster recovery and vulnerability life cycle management.

“We are very pleased about combining our world-class technology capabilities and solutions,” said Paul McCreary, Executive Vice President of Business Solutions for Order Logistics. “The technology solutions focus on supply chain processes such as vendor sourcing, supplier compliance, quality assurance and their proprietary supply chain-based software products are a great complement to our Solve(IT) 2 platform. Together we bring a very compelling and comprehensive solution to a wide variety of customers.”

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Dr. Wayne Bennett presented “Buffalo Hunter” award

Servosity has announced the 5.0 release of their online backup software service. According to a company press release, the new version supports the broadest range of platforms and applications in the online backup industry.

Features of version 5.0 include:

  • Support for – Windows, MAC, Linux, Unix, Lotus, Oracle, Novell, Sun, Exchange
  • Incremental in-file delta backup
  • Protect multiple devices at a single price point
  • Single mail level exchange backup
  • Backs up of open files
  • Bank Level encryption
  • Fast data restores
  • 24 x 7 available support

Servosity offers a free no-obligation trial of their service with 100GB of storage space. More at www.servosity.com

via Servosity

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