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College of Information

Science and Technology

Visit our home page at www.ist.unomaha.edu

Dean's door still open

Student profile: Tony Valenti imagining the possibilities

Journey to freedom

Professor Peter Wolcott: Demanding excellence

Dean's door still open

Dr. Hesham Ali, new dean of UNO's College of Information Science & Technology (IS&T), says he will continue to welcome visitors to his office, as did his predecessor, retiring Dean David Hinton.

"His door was always open to students, faculty, staff and alumni who were either seeking his advice or offering their input," Ali says. "I plan to follow in his footsteps in that regard."

Ali took over as dean Aug. 1. Previously he served as associate dean for academic affairs and professor of computer science. Born in Alexandria, Egypt, he received his master's and bachelor's degrees from Alexandria University and his Ph.D. from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln.

He is widely recognized for his work in bioinformatics, mobile computing and wireless networks, including a project called "Wireless Omaha" (see article in spring 2006 Alum). He is the recipient as principle or co-principle investigator of more than $6 million in research funding and is the co-author of two books, two dozen referred journal articles and more than 70 other articles.

The College of IS&T includes the departments of computer science and information systems and quantitative analysis, as well as programs in bioinformatics, telecommunications, information assurance and a doctorate program in information technology (IT). 

The college also is home to the Center for the Management of Information Technology, the International Academy for Advanced Decision Support, the Nebraska University Consortium on Information Assurance (NUCIA), and the newly formed Institute for Collaboration Science (in partnership with the UNO College of Business Administration). IS&T also is a partner with the University of Nebraska-Lincoln College of Engineering in the Peter Kiewit Institute on UNO's Ak-Sar-Ben campus.

"What we have in the college is a marvelous balance of education advancing our core of information technology programs, and our ability to help other entities advance through the incorporation of our IT components," Ali says. "This enables the college to impact the community far beyond the campus boundaries.

"By working with business, industry and non-profit agencies and organizations, we can play a significant role in making Omaha one of the most technology-friendly metropolitan areas in the nation."

Hinton became dean of IS&T in 2001 after serving 15 years as dean of UNO's College of Public Affairs and Community Service (CPACS). His retirement marks 34 years at UNO.  

In his five years at IS&T, Hinton helped develop the doctoral program in information technology and the undergraduate degree program in bioinformatics. He played a significant role in NUCIA being designated a National Center of Academic Excellence in Information Assurance by the National Security Agency. In 2001, NUCIA was one of the first 20 centers to receive the designation.

Hinton calls his time as IS&T dean a personally-rewarding honor. "I worked with an excellent faculty and staff, and an especially outstanding group of students," he says. "Watching more than 1,200 receive their degrees was more than ample reward to me."

There are grand things ahead for the college, Hinton says. "I believe the college is at a stage of maturity where it can launch more educational offerings and programs and engage in even more cutting-edge research," he says. "I know Hesham Ali is well qualified to help the college continue to grow and contribute, and I look forward to watching from the sidelines."

Photo by Tim Fitzgerald / University Affairs: Dean in, dean out. Hesham Ali, left, and Dave Hinton.

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Student profile: Tony Valenti Imagining the possibilities

Tony Valenti is the founder and chief architect of four technology companies, one of which employs 15 permanent contractors stretching from Canada to Australia. His Bellevue-based high-speed computer servers host the web sites of several corporations, government agencies and even a celebrity. He leads the development of the "Emergency Stick," a microchip-equipped medical bracelet that placed second in the worldwide Software Design Invitational of Microsoft's Imagine Cup 2006.

Just imagine what Valenti might do once he graduates.

Currently, Valenti is a senior computer science major at UNO's College of Information Science & Technology. He says his interest in computers began when he was 5 years old. "I was watching the TV show '20/20' interview a man who owned a small software company. The man was Bill Gates. I said to my mom, 'That looks interesting. I'd like to learn about that.'"

His mother, Dwynette, began to smile. "Is that so?" she replied. "Well, I just so happen to have my degree in computer science."

She sat him down in front of a computer.

"It was an old DOS computer," he recalls. "She opened a program called Q Basic and told me about the F1 'Help' key, which could teach me anything I wanted to know. I pressed it, started reading and from that point on, I was hooked. It was fun."

Home-schooled until his junior year in high school, Valenti got his first technology job when he was 17. "I went on-site for an automation project for a company in Canada."

Today, his companies are Power DNN (www.powerdnn.com), Mobile Now (www.mobilenow.cc), Keep Alive Forever (www.keepaliveforever.com), and Emergency Stick (www.emergencystick.com). The services they provide include software development, server virtualization and technology consulting.

"You can't tell someone 'I do everything,' even if you do," he says. "I've set up different entities that focus on one or two aspects of a problem or issue. For me, it makes sense to have different companies that ultimately complement each other."

The Microsoft Imagine Cup 2006 invitationals drew 65,000 students from more than 100 countries to compete in six categories, including software design.

Valenti, Jeremy Capello, a student at Bellevue University, and Michael Knipp, a local high school student, developed the Emergency Stick bracelet. An encrypted USB device compatible with PDAs, cell phones and computers, it can hold critical medical information and in an emergency provide the wearer and responders with real-time feedback regarding recommended treatments.

In non-emergency situations, it can be synched with a desktop application to provide the user regular reminders, such as to take a medication. The device earned the team a $4,000 cash prize.

"The students at this year's Imagine Cup represent the next generation of technology and business leaders," says Sanjay Parthasarathy, corporate vice president of developer and platform evangelism at Microsoft. "Their creativity, innovation and commitment to improving people's lives is inspiring."

Valenti says he thrives on the technological challenges he faces at IS&T. After graduation, he plans to stay in Omaha, expand his services, and continue having fun.

"Other people go to work in the morning," he says, patting a rack of sleek Dell servers that are home to his Web-based clients. "I go play with these."

Photo courtesy Microsoft Corp: Tony Valenti, Jeremy Capello and Michael Knipp at the Microsoft Imagine Cup 2006.

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Journey to Freedom

Farida Majid, academic advisor at UNO's College of Information Science & Technology (IS&T), knows that higher education can lead to more than a successful career.

In her case, it helped lead to freedom.

A native of Afghanistan, Majid was about 7 years old when the Soviet Union invaded her homeland in 1979. Her father, a well-educated man with a doctorate in education, had been working on various U.S.-supported projects, including Peace Corps.

"The Russians wanted to recruit him for their purposes," Majid recalls. "They wanted him to be a part of the Communist government. When he refused and questioned their education policies, he was seen as a threat by them, so he was placed in prison."

Friends helped gain her father's release and in 1982, when she was 10, her parents took her and her five siblings on a perilous journey to escape Afghanistan by traveling through the mountains into Pakistan.

"For four days and three nights we walked and rode donkeys and camels. We carried only a few clothes and some food. We left everything else behind.

"It was very frightening. We knew that if we were caught we would either be killed or placed in prison. At times we were not allowed to cough or speak, as we might be heard and shot."

Their journey led to Omaha in 1983 when the family's immigration case was sponsored by Thomas Goutierre, dean of International Studies and Programs and director of the Center for Afghanistan Studies at UNO.

Majid's father, Dr. Moqin Rahmanzai, worked for the Center for Afghanistan Studies for three years before returning to Pakistan to take part in a UNO cross-border education support project for Afghanistan. Today, Rahmanzai continues to work on projects relating to the reforming and restructuring of the post-Russian occupation education system in Afghanistan.

Majid obtained a bachelor's degree in biology and a master's degree in counseling with a concentration in student affairs practice in higher education, both from UNO. She worked as a graduate assistant at the university before being hired as an academic counselor at IS&T in May 1999.

Two of her three older brothers, as well as her two sisters, also are UNO grads.

Majid serves as advisor for undergraduate students at the college. She monitors progress and development, conducts graduation audits and senior checks, and works with many of the scholarship students.

"I love it," she says. "It's personally rewarding to be able to work with such a highly qualified group of students."

When she meets with prospective students and their parents, she touts the strong programs IS&T and the Peter Kiewit Institute offer, and the unique relationships the institute has forged with the business community locally and nationally.

"People are quite intrigued by the fact our programs compete well with those offered by other universities," she says, "but when they see the facilities and meet the faculty, they are even more impressed."

For anyone who doubts the value of higher education, Majid has a very personal story to share.

"If my father would not have been well educated, well-rounded in experience, we would not have had the opportunity to come to the United States," she says. "His education and his connection to other individuals helped save our lives."

Photo of Farida Majid and her father, Dr. Moqin Rahmanzai, courtesy Farida Majid

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Professor Peter Wolcott: Demanding Excellence

Associate Professor Peter Wolcott teaches classes that are a very real reflection of his own personality.

"Some of what shapes my thinking also goes into my classes," says Wolcott, director of the master's of science in Management Information Systems program at UNO's College of Information Science & Technology. "I certainly enjoy the exercise of figuring things out and then explaining it all to others."

Wolcott, who received the 2001 UNO Excellence in Teaching award, says he is not an "easy" instructor.

"My courses are demanding, time-consuming courses, but because it is time well-spent, I think students appreciate the value they receive. I work hard to make sure my assignments are relevant, are value-adding and are useful to a student.

"The worst thing they can say is that an assignment amounted to a bunch of 'busy work.' That means the assignment failed miserably."

In his 11 years at UNO, Wolcott has had a considerable impact on his students. He hears back from former students and some comment on how they've applied his lessons to their current work.

"It's a source of great satisfaction for me when I see I have made a contribution to their lives, either personally or professionally."

He infuses a strong sense of values into the classroom and his private life with his wife, Ellie, and daughters, Elisa, 14; Lena, 11; and Clara, 7. "I am the same person in private as in public. I try to be open and honest with people."

He says honesty makes teaching easier. "I don't have to work on my image. All I have to be is me. There's a certain simplicity to life when you can just be who you are."

Wolcott serves as "a bridge" for student exchanges with Norway, his mother's native country. He lived a year in Norway before attending college and did graduate research in the former Soviet Union, where he lived for nine months.

The year he recently spent on sabbatical at Agder University College in Kristiansand in southern Norway also was a learning experience for his family, which accompanied him. "The kids attended school there and learned Norwegian, and we got to spend a lot of time with each other and with my mother's family."

Wolcott is indeed well-traveled. "I was born in New Jersey, grew up in New England, lived in California, went to school in Arizona and worked in Alabama. By the time I came to UNO, everyone I knew lived within 100 miles of either the oceans or Mexico. I didn't know anyone in the Heartland."

His research builds upon his interest in the world and the Internet. He has authored or co-authored several articles relating to "The Global Diffusion of the Internet," a project that examines the proliferation of the Internet in other countries "to capture the history of the Internet as it unfolds."

Much can be learned from the project, such as the Internet's role in promoting economic growth and social and human development. But it has to be learned quickly, Wolcott says.

"Being electronic, the information available on the Internet is extremely perishable," he says. "We have books that are 200 years old. We have hieroglyphics that are thousands of years old. Yet, a Word document we put together today, if it's even readable in 20 years, that would be amazing."

Photo by Tim Fitzgerald / University Affairs

 

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