AITP of Hampton Roads, Va. (Association of Information Technology Professionals)

June 2006 Newsletter

www.aitp-hr.com


Our Next Meeting is 
Tuesday, June 6, 2006

Point Plaza Suites & Conference Hotel at I-64 & US 17, Newport News, Va.

Social Hour - 5:30 PM
Dinner - 6:30 PM
Program - 7:30 PM

Members - $17 
Spouse/Significant Other - $20 
Guests - $20 
Students - $14

If you will be joining us for the speaker and not for dinner, we request a donation of $5. 

For Reservations: Call Digital Applications Inc., at 827-1250 no later than noon on the Friday preceding the meeting.

Officers and Directors

OFFICERS

George Koscho, President 382-8909 
Jim Pollan, Vice President 865-1400 ext 210 
Bill Shumate, Treasurer 827-1250
Jim Moore, Secretary
Alan Sutton, Association Liaison 486-1700

DIRECTORS

Clara Fox, Awards  826-0519
Ed Miller, Newsletter / Website 553-0128 
Bill Oshel, Program 249-2846 
Steve Tyler, Corporate Sponsorships
Charles Anderson, Student Chapters Liaison

Region 18 Spring Technology Conference

The "2006 Technology Convergence" spring conference was held in May in Greensboro NC. The event was a success and the Conference Committee extends a 'thank you' for your support. Please visit the Region 18 website a summary of events: www.aitp-region18.org

The planning for the Leadership Retreat in Pipestem is underway and the details regarding this event will be available next month. Please save the date - Nov. 10-12, 2006, and check the website for details.

Calendar
June 6 Dinner Meeting, Bill Sellers / NASA
July 11 Dinner Meeting, TBA
August 1 Dinner Meeting, TBA
Visit the Chapter Store

Buy Hampton Roads AITP Merchandise!
Books, T-shirts, Hats, Coffee Mugs and MORE!  Support the Hampton Roads AITP Chapter Store today!

www.aitp-hr.com/rstore.htm

Yellow T-shirt with AITP Hampton Roads logo, only $14.99
Green T-shirt with AITP Hampton Roads logo, only $14.99
10 pack of 2.25 inch AITP Hampton Roads Buttons! Only $11.99
Don't forget Fido! Hampton Roads AITP logo Doggie T-Shirt, just $13.99
Hampton Roads AITP Teddy Bear, $14.99
Women's Pink T-Shirt with Hampton Roads AITP logo, $14.99

Also, get books and CD's at Amazon! The chapter earns commissions on everything we sell. Start your search here!

Search Now:

 

Contact Us

AITP 
The Association of 
Information Technology Professionals

c/o Digital Applications Inc
2714 W Mercury Blvd, Hampton, VA 23666
Phone: (757) 827-1250

 

 
June  Meeting Preview

Our June 6th meeting will feature a presentation by Bill Sellers.  Bill is is a senior systems analyst, working as a contractor employee at NASA LaRC. He works for NCI Inc. on the Consolidated IT Services contract at NASA LaRC, in which Raytheon is the prime contractor. 

He will be speaking on a couple of projects that he is involved with at NASA LaRC.  This will include AVOSS, the Mars Reconnisance Orbiter, and how it uses computer clusters to aid NASA's mission.  Bill  will give an overview of cluster technology in use at LaRC, and its benefits. 

Bill Sellers has been working as a contractor at LaRC since 1990. Prior to 1990, he was a Master Instructor in the United States Air Force, teaching electronic computer systems, and later as an adult education instructor at New Horizons in Hampton, Virginia. 

His presentation promises to be informative and engaging. 

Please plan on joining us and please bring a friend.

May Meeting Highlights


Our May meeting featured a presentation from Tim Early  Regional Director for Virginia's Center For Innovative Technology and Vice President of the Hampton Roads Technology Council.

What Cyber Price for a National Identity?
by J. Square Humboldt
 
This is a case of 'let the seller beware' ...

The tiny Polynesian island nation of Niue is beginning to think it's been had.

Frankly, it's clear they didn't do their homework before they did their deal.

Ironically, it seems the buyer hadn't really done his, either.

Anyone who has been inundated by advertisements for 'global domains' can easily understand that it's a burgeoning business. The specter of purchasing a domain at a much better price than the more common 'dot com' or 'dot net' or 'dot org' is most attractive to most aspiring entrepeneurs on limited budgets. This niche's market leader is most likely Global Domains International (GDI), which has no doubt put Western Samoa on the mental map of many a cybernaut. The key element in that deal is that the Western Samoan government granted the rights to GDI in return for a royalty for every domain sold.

Niue's name is derived from the local language's phrase for, "Look, a coconut!" It seems they should have used theirs more thoroughly before signing a domain deal with Bill Semich in 1998.

An American businessman whose former station was editor for a computer magazine, Semich recognized the potential value in the marketability of unique domains. Apparently finding the 'nu' extension an attractive letter combination, he signed a contract with the Niue government that gave him the exclusive rights to it.

It wasn't a one-way deal. Semich guaranteed free wireless access for all 2000 of Niue's citizens and he delivered, completing the installation of an island-wide network of translator towers in 2003. The country's leaders surely felt they had provided their citizenry with a service for the new century which would favorably ensconce their place in island history.

Semich, meanwhile, intended to hawk his bargain domains to Americans. He had no idea that his ideal customers were in Sweden, where 'nu' is the local word for 'now.'

Obviously,'now' is a hot marketing action term in any language, so Semich was pleasantly surprised to find the Swedes flocking to his cyber-property. As a translated example of why this works for them, 'drive.now' (which would be 'köra.nu') is a very compelling sales slogan which becomes an ideal URL for a Swedish driving school. To date, Semich has had 110,000 sales of 'dot nu' domains at $30 a year, which has considerably swollen the coffers of his '.NU Domain Ltd' to the extent that its website's home page default language is now -- or nu --- in Swedish.

In fact, Semich has cleverly taken advantage of this windfall to become the first domain provider to incorporate a complete Unicode character set into its scripts, allowing users whose alphabets have unique characters --- in Swedish, that would be the letters 'å,' 'ä' and 'ö' --- to remain true to their language instead of settling for Anglicized versions, which often destroy their original meaning. His company has already announced the rollout of this service in Sweden. Given that Unicode enables linguistic propriety to Japanese, Cyrillic, Spanish, French, German, Arabic and any other script with unique characters, Semich has truly become a pioneer in his craft.

All this commercial success has wrought concerns in Niue. Not only is the disparity in financial benefit an issue, but the island's strongly Christian residents are upset that 'dot nu' has become a popular extension for pornographic sites. Semich disavows any responsibility for this segment of his clientele, but the fact remains that they are there.

The issue became such a political hot potato that 'neo-colonialism' was a trendy charge in Niue's recent elections. Semich seems shrewd enough to realize that he's got the high ground in any bargaining that must be done to assuage his Pacific partners, so a reasonable solution will surely be attained.

This scenario underscores the all-encompassing scope of cyberspatial commerce and the depth of considerations that both buyer and seller must assess before entering into far-reaching agreements. Not even the world's tiniest nation --- and that's remote little blip-in-the-Pacific Niue --- is immune from the effects.

The moral of the story, then, is to count your cyber-coconuts before they're cracked open. They may be worth more than you think.

About The Author

J Square Humboldt writes for the Longer Life Group, which provides information designed to improve the quality of living. His page is at http://longerlifegroup.com/cyberiter.html and his observations are published three times per week.  

 

 

 
Thanks for your support!

Thanks for your subscription!