1 / 43

Higher Engineering Education Network

Higher Engineering Education Network. IHE-Net Steering Committee. Outline. Work Force / Demand of IT in Indonesia. Architecture of Academic Information Infrastructure (AII). Internet Application in Indonesia. Summary. Internet User Profile. 40-60 million users.

elu
Télécharger la présentation

Higher Engineering Education Network

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Higher Engineering EducationNetwork IHE-Net Steering Committee

  2. Outline • Work Force / Demand of IT in Indonesia. • Architecture of Academic Information Infrastructure (AII). • Internet Application in Indonesia. • Summary.

  3. Internet User Profile • 40-60 million users. • >90% are university educated. • 70-80% are male. • US$40-60.000 / year.

  4. Internet User Profile • 40-60 million users. • >90% are university educated. • 70-80% are male. • US$40-60.000 / year. IT based business is run by educated people!

  5. Demand of IT? KOMPAS, 4 March 1997: • 80.110.060 (100%) total work force. • 56.033.911 (69.95% ) in agriculture, forestry, fishery, mining - at the most SD. • 12.193.652 (15.2%) in trade, retail business & services - high school graduates. • 2.868.140 (3.5%) financial, private sector & services - post-high school graduates. • Approximately 60.000 (0.1%) are on Internet.

  6. Demand of IT? KOMPAS, 4 March 1997: • 80.110.060 (100%) total work force. • 56.033.911 (69.95% ) in agriculture, forestry, fishery, mining - at the most SD. • 12.193.652 (15.2%) in trade, retail business & services - high school graduates. • 2.868.140 (3.5%) financial, private sector & services - post-high school graduates. • Approximately 60.000 (0.1%) are on Internet. Only small number is a potential IT user

  7. Demand of IT? KOMPAS, 4 March 1997: • 80.110.060 (100%) total work force. • 56.033.911 (69.95% ) in agriculture, forestry, fishery, mining - at the most SD. • 12.193.652 (15.2%) in trade, retail business & services - high school graduates. • 2.868.140 (3.5%) financial, private sector & services - post-high school graduates. • Approximately 60.000 (0.1%) are on Internet. Only small percentage is in a competitive business

  8. It is a shame ... • Only 19% of high school graduate receiving higher education in Indonesia. • Only approx. 40 higher educational institutions connected to Internet. Mostly(more than half) through ITB. • Only 0.1% of the work force are in a competitive business environment.

  9. It is a shame ... • Only 19% of high school graduate receiving higher education in Indonesia. • Only approx. 40 higher educational institutions connected to Internet. Mostly(more than half) through ITB. • Only 0.1% of the work force are in a competitive business environment. Strong demand for continuing education

  10. More than half via ITB It is a shame ... • Only 19% of high school graduate receiving higher education in Indonesia. • Only approx. 40 higher educational institutions connected to Internet. Mostly(more than half) through ITB. • Only 0.1% of the work force are in a competitive business environment.

  11. Business Environment is not forcing people to be competitive? It is a shame ... • Only 19% of high school graduate receiving higher education in Indonesia. • Only approx. 40 higher educational institutions connected to Internet. Mostly(more than half) through ITB. • Only 0.1% of the work force are in a competitive business environment.

  12. Indonesian Speed to Internet

  13. Indonesia Edu-Network

  14. Arch. of Nat’l Info Infrastructure

  15. Arch. of Nat’l Info Infrastructure Telkom, Satelindo, Indosat, CSM, Lintas Arta, Elektrindo

  16. Multimedia, Real Time, Telecomm - expertise Arch. of Nat’l Info Infrastructure

  17. Arch. of Nat’l Info Infrastructure IP, Routing, Domain, BGP-4, OSPF, RSPF, NNTP, NTP, IGRP, DNS, TCP, UDP, ICMP, MBONE, Multicast, RIP, SMTP, FTP, HTTP, ARP, RARP, POP2, POP3

  18. Arch. of Nat’l Info Infrastructure Web, Video Conference, News, Mailing List, FTP, Tele-Medicine, EDI, Tele-Education, E-Commerce

  19. Arch. of Nat’l Info Infrastructure Transfer of Credit Unregistered Radio Frequency for Education Unlicensed ISP for Education Tax Incentive / Break to support Education

  20. Basic Strategies • Try to use the existing infrastructure or build your own whenever possible. • Employed Qualified Human Resource.

  21. Basic Strategies • Try to use the existing infrastructure or build your own whenever possible. • Employed Qualified Human Resource. The most difficult task!

  22. IHE-Net Strategies • Strategies in HEE-Net application layer development. • Strategies in legal framework to support HEE-Net. • Strategies in IT & Telecommunication infrastructure.

  23. Purpose of IHE-Net • To promote the exchange of information and human resources among institutions and even individuals and realize the mutual benefits in the collaborating partners. • To enhance the quality and capability of engineering education by improving the teaching staff competence in teaching and research activities.

  24. Purpose of IHE-Net Setup of information exchange networks • Education promotion. • Research activity promotion. • Teaching staff. • Event and publications.

  25. Purpose of IHE-Net Education promotion • Standardization of the curriculum. • Student exchange programs. • Transfer of credits. • Faculty member exchange programs. • Exchange of class lessons by multimedia.

  26. Purpose of IHE-Net Research activity promotion • Organization of an annual international seminar / workshop on the network. • Support for the participants to international seminars, conferences and symposiums. • Establishment of domestic academic societies.

  27. Purpose of IHE-Net Research acitivies promotion con’t .. • Support for year-wise collaboration researches on a specific field or a subject. • Organization of a periodical international seminar, conference, or symposium on a specific field or a subject. • Support for research works at Japanese supporting universities.

  28. Strategies in The Application Layer • First, one has to have some knowledge on the resources & expertise of the other parties.

  29. Strategies in The Application Layer • First, one has to have some knowledge on the resources & expertise of the other parties. Web applications would be to perfect fit to it.

  30. Strategies in The Application Layer • First, one has to have some knowledge on the resources & expertise of the other parties. many university administrators are using printed media (and most of the time difficult to ask for it)

  31. Strategies in The Application Layer • First, one has to have some knowledge on the resources & expertise of the other parties. • Second, LMO doing “link & match”.

  32. Physical contact through seminars, workshops, conferences on various topics. Strategies in The Application Layer • First, one has to have some knowledge on the resources & expertise of the other parties. • Second, LMO doing “link & match”.

  33. should be followed by virtual contact through E-mail discussions through various mailing lists Strategies in The Application Layer • First, one has to have some knowledge on the resources & expertise of the other parties. • Second, LMO doing “link & match”.

  34. Strategies in The Application Layer It will require sometime (might be 1-2 years) to get the results of such activities. • First, one has to have some knowledge on the resources & expertise of the other parties. • Second, LMO doing “link & match”.

  35. Strategies in The Application Layer • First, one has to have some knowledge on the resources & expertise of the other parties. • Second, LMO doing “link & match”. • Third, use of multimedia technology.

  36. For example, we can do live broadcast of regular seminars through Multicast Backbone (MBONE) facilities in Internet. Strategies in The Application Layer • First, one has to have some knowledge on the resources & expertise of the other parties. • Second, LMO doing “link & match”. • Third, use of multimedia technology.

  37. It has been done between Hong Kong University of Science & Technology (HKUST) and Institute of Technology Bandung (ITB) over our AI3 link Strategies in The Application Layer • First, one has to have some knowledge on the resources & expertise of the other parties. • Second, LMO doing “link & match”. • Third, use of multimedia technology.

  38. Strategies in The Application Layer • First, one has to have some knowledge on the resources & expertise of the other parties. • Second, LMO doing “link & match”. • Third, use of multimedia technology. • Fourth, mutual collaboration could be initiated by keeping a win-win situation among parties.

  39. Strategies in Telecom Infrastructure • Educational institutions will rely on telco services for its telecommunication infrastructure. • Educational institution should run its own Internet operation on top of telco highways.

  40. Summary • Internet would be one of the best media for building the required Indonesian human resources. • Internet is only a tool. • The key factor is on the qualified human resource employed.

More Related