Let the Games Begin! Google vs. Microsoft
- By John A. Bielec
- 08/27/08
At the recent Campus Technology Conference in Boston, both Google and Microsoft were on the showroom floor competing for the education market. Drexel University reinforced the battle of these two corporate giants via a session "IT as a Service: E-mail and Web Services from Goggle and Microsoft." The session description read, "At Drexel University, IT is truly a service. IT leaders there focus on providing the right service and fostering innovation, rather than focusing on technology. Sometimes, offering the right service means outsourcing, which is why Drexel recently embraced student e-mail and Web services from
both
Goggle and Microsoft."
Drexel University, known as "Philadelphia's Technological University," has long been at the forefront of higher education technological firsts. In 1983, long before today's students were born, Drexel required all students to have access to a personal computer -- the Apple Macintosh. As the technology landscape has rapidly changed, Drexel's IT strategy has also changed, from being prescriptive (i.e. what technology hardware and software students must own), to a technology strategy based on student choice.
Drexel abandoned its "one size, one vendor fits all" computer requirement and distribution facility in the mid-90s and opted instead for a new model -- a virtual computer store accessible via Drexel's Web site that emphasized students' choice of vendor platform. All students are still required to own a personal computer, but Drexel is out of the costly and labor-intensive purchase, distribution, and maintenance businesses. Instead, Drexel's role has changed to developing student computer specifications, negotiating competitive pricing with vendors, and maintaining virtual storefronts. As technology has become commoditized (hardware, software, and services), the "take up" decision has quickly moved from the institution to the individual.
In today's world of wikis, blogs, IMing, YouTube, MySpace, FaceBook, and WebKinz (yes, this generation will soon be knocking at your door) is there any reason a higher education institution would continue to prescribe IT services to students who have been brought up in a click-away world of cloud computing? The answer is clearly
no
!
Drexel has recognized the IT as a Service business and provides Bb Vista; SunGard Higher Education Banner Student, Finance, Human Resources, and Luminis Portal applications; and Microsoft "school of the future" learning and collaboration tools, as well as Internet2 connectivity to a number of institutions. At the same time, pursuing a strategy as a consumer of services and choice, Drexel has partnered with both Google and Microsoft to provide students with massive e-mail mailboxes, gigabytes of file storage with collaboration tools, Web-based calendars, personal blogs, and more.