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Fall 2007 MSSE Industrial Seminar
schedule
Topics and Schedule
| Time & Place |
Presenters |
Topic |
22 Sept. 8:00-11:15
EE/CS 3-210 |
Dr. Bill Estrem |
Worlds In Collision: Methodology Mashups in the Enterprise
Mashups are popular in pop music - blending two or more different
types of songs to create a new one. Web 2.0 applications often
mashup disparate systems to provide useful capabilities.
However, what happens when enterprise planning methods interact?
The enterprise is constantly adapting to its surroundings and each
functional area employs its own set of methodologies to plan, and
execute. Methodology mashups can also occur within the enterprise.
What happens when these methodologies conflict? Can methodologies
be harmonized to leverage their strengths and overcome their
weaknesses?
This presentation will examine these questions from the
perspective of the Enterprise IT Architecture practitioner. It
will consider how methodologies employed in IT architecture can
and do conflict with other methodologies in strategic planning,
operations management, finance, and overall governance within the
organization. In particular, it will examine the interactions of
Enterprise IT architecture frameworks such as The Open Group
Architecture Framework (TOGAF) and methodologies such as Six
Sigma, ITIL, COBIT and Lean Manufacturing.
Dr. Bill Estrem is the Principal Consultant of
Metaplexity Associates Inc, an education and consulting firm that
provides services to organizations across the globe. He is a
member of The Open Group Architecture Forum and is a contributor
to the development of TOGAF. He is an adjunct associate professor
at Saint Mary's University of Minnesota in the International
Business Administration program where he teaches courses in
Operations Management.
Presentation materials
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13 Oct. 8:00-11:15
EE/CS 3-210 |
Jamie Thinglestad
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Software as Strategy
Starting technology-leveraged companies takes a combination of
talent, strategy, product innovation and a good helping of
luck. Do you have the right product? Can you deliver it at the
right time and cost? Why do you need to know about Web 2.0? What
is an open company? Where does open source fit in?
In this discussion we will review the aspects of leveraging
technology as you build out great products, and how to operate in
an agile, ever-changing environment. There have never been more
tools and services to leverage, but choosing the right ones can be
the difference between success and failure.
Jamie Thinglestad is chief technology officer and
vice president for the Wall Street Journal Digital Network, the
internet services division of Dow Jones & Company. His team
creates, builds and supports the web platform behind such popular
sites as the Wall Street Journal, MarketWatch.com and
Barrons. Additionally the team runs a number of smaller sites such
as BigCharts and Virtual Stock Exchange.
Mr. Thingelstad joined Dow Jones in January 2005 when Dow Jones
acquired MarketWatch Inc. where he was the chief technology
officer for that online news, information and licensing
business.
Mr. Thingelstad started his information technology career at the
University of Minnesota in 1992, building a database to serve
disabled students. He moved in 1994 to WebSpan, an internet
services startup, as vice president for technology.
In 1995, he joined BigCharts as vice president and chief
technology officer. When BigCharts was acquired by MarketWatch in
June 1999, Mr. Thingelstad became the MarketWatch chief technology
officer. He left for one year to take a comparable position at
Breakstep LLC before returning to MarketWatch in 2002.
Mr. Thingelstad attended the Institute of Technology at the
University of Minnesota. He lives in Minnetonka, Minnesota with
his wife and daughter.
Presentation materials:
The presentation
Web 2.0 movie
CNBC piece on BigCharts, day 1
CNBC piece on BigCharts, day 2
Windows 2000 launch with BigCharts
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10 Nov. 12:30-15:45
EE/CS 3-210 |
John Feikema, Brett Peterson
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An Iterative Approach to Healthcare Connectivity
The healthcare system requires significant amounts of
communication between hundreds of thousands of hospitals, clinics,
insurance companies, patients, and other interested parties. Most
of these communications transmit structured data that is amenable
to electronic automation. However, due to the size and organic
growth of the industry, a large number of custom solutions and
technologies have been applied to subsets of the overall problem.
The resulting lack of interoperability pushes costs into the
system and produces a fragile, inefficient, and sometimes insecure
healthcare communications fabric. VisionShare is a
Minneapolis-based secure healthcare communications company focused
on providing a platform to achieve secure healthcare
interoperability by technologically decoupling trading partners
from one another. To provide value in such a large and complex
marketplace, an iterative mentality permeates VisionShare's
business. We will discuss how a "culture of iteration" allowed
VisionShare to make progress in all of the following areas:
sales, marketing, product architecture, software development
process, and strategy formulation.
John Feikema is President and CEO of VisionShare,
Inc., where he
has spent the last six years focused on healthcare information
security while building the foundation for efficient information
exchange and interoperability among healthcare providers, insurers
and third party solutions providers. Feikema's experience
developing new opportunities and building businesses using
disruptive technologies has elevated VisionShare to its current
standing as a national leader in secure information exchange.
Prior to joining VisionShare, Mr. Feikema held various leadership
positions at 3M, Imation and at CDXC Corporation, where he served
as president. He earned a MS degree in electrical engineering
from the University of Minnesota and regularly speaks on the
topics of workflow efficiencies, corporate culture and
entrepreneurship.
Brett Peterson is Chief Architect for VisionShare
and previously
served as Vice President of Development. He most recently held Chief
Architect, team lead, and senior software developer positions with
ObjectFX, a geospatial visualization and platform company. Prior to
ObjectFX he held senior development roles with Platinum Technology
specializing in electronic software distribution and asset management
products. He also spent several years with IBM developing PL and C++
compilers targeting the IBM AS/400 product line. Brett holds Bachelor
of Science and Master of Science degrees in Computer Science from Iowa
State University.
Presentation materials:
The slides
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8 Dec. 12:30-15:45
EE/CS 3-210 |
Prof. Yongdae Kim
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Security and Peer-to-peer Systems
In this talk, we discuss some of the security issues related with
P2P systems. In the first part of the talk, we discuss how to
design a P2P system to be more robust. First, I introduce Myrmic, a
peer-to-peer routing mechanism, guaranteeing to deliver 99 % of
packets even when 50% of nodes are malicious. Second, I will
introduce mechanisms to correctly account for a peer's consumption
and contribution even when some of the nodes are selfish or
malicious.
The second part of the talk will be dedicated to current P2P
systems. First, we discuss security of a popular P2P network,
the Kad network, which has over 1.5 million concurrent
nodes. By exploiting critical implementation weaknesses, we
developed an attack on Kad that prevents completion of a
significant fraction of all Kad keyword searches with reasonable
costs -- a single node with a 100Mbps link could
stop 65% of all Kad searches. Second, I will discuss the relationship
between the Kad network and the storm worm, which has been one of
the worst spam relaying botnets also engaged in several
distributed denial of service attacks. In particular, I will
discuss how to detect bots (infected hosts or zombies) using our
attacks on the Kad network.
Prof. Yongdae Kim has been working on various
projects in data and communication security. During his PhD study,
he designed group key agreement protocols, TGDH and STR protocol,
which are integrated with Secure Spread. He received the NSF
career award on storage security and the McKnight Land-Grant
Professorship Award from University of Minnesota in 2005. His
research interests include security issues for distributed systems
such as P2P systems, storage systems, sensor and ad hoc networks.
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