Seeding clouds
Why cloud computing is the future of technology for the higher education sector. By Beverley Head. Forests have been felled analysing the federal government’s April announcement that it would work with private enterprise to create a company that will invest ...
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Last word
Gloom boom for the brain06, the social networking service Twitter has grown to the point where it is the most used behind the well-established MySpace and Facebook. It differs from these in its immediacy – input is essentially a short ...
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It’s bigger than just libraries
The next generation of professional librarians are enrolled in information management degrees. They need to be given the explosion in digital information, reports Jeremy Gilling. The information revolution has transformed the world of libraries. Books are still borrowed, though in ...
More »It’s time for transport parity: Committee for Melbourne
The Committee for Melbourne has called on the Victorian government to extend public transport concession fares to overseas students, describing the issue as the “number one factor alienating our international students”. The committee, an independent network of business and institutional ...
More »Tax case may open door for mass deduction of education costs
The decision by the Federal Court in Melbourne to allow a student to offset education-related expenses against her Centrelink youth allowance for tax purposes could open the door for thousands of student assistance recipients nationwide, according to an ABC report. The court ...
More »Vexatious litigants: new protection will help unis
New legislation to control vexatious legal proceedings will prove particularly beneficial to universities, according to a leading law firm. NSW is the latest state to introduce provisions against vexatious litigation, following similar moves in Western Australia, Queensland and the Northern ...
More »Further doubts raised about training of overseas cooks
Monash University academic Bob Birrell has pointed to dramatic increases in the number of overseas students enrolling in cooking, and the number who subsequently obtain permanent residence, as fresh evidence that the migration industry has “hijacked” a substantial part of ...
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