The Office for Research Partnerships and Commercialization (ORPC) recently celebrated the success of faculty and staff members whose research resulted in nine patents and 65 licenses in the last year, as well as honored the work of Athletics staff member Dot Sheehan, who received the university's Innovator of the Year award.
Almost 9 percent of Americans who graduated from college this year will be unemployed. Eighteen percent will be underemployed. And, according to the Economic Policy Institute, more than half of those who do get jobs will be in positions that don't require a college degree. But at the University of New Hampshire, 120 college students know for certain they'll be getting good, high paying jobs -- before they even graduate.
PORTSMOUTH - For a company known for flying under the radar, the networking testing company QA Cafe is making headlines. The company celebrated its 10th anniversary last year and founder Joe McEachern was honored with a New Hampshire Business Review Business Excellence Award in the technology category. This year QA Cafe, which has 11 employees and creates software used for Internet protocol testing and analysis, was recognized for the first time on the Inc. 5000 list of fastest growing companies...
I recently attended the Intel Developer Forum (IDF) 2013 in San Francisco, CA, in order to follow-up on the progress of NVM Express (NVMe). While there, I attended an NVMe technical session and spent a large amount of time in the NVMe Pavilion discussing NVMe with most of the vendors there. NVMe has made good progress since last year (last year's comments), with the first NVMe SSD announced and a robust ecosystem developing to support this technology.
DURHAM - The InterOperability Laboratory is referred to by some as one of the best kept secrets at the University of New Hampshire. For 25 years, the independent test site for new networking technologies has been employing students, working with industry leaders from IBM to Microsoft and bringing engineers and company representatives from around the world into Durham.
If your Dell computer prints to your HP printer and your smartphone programs your TV, you might thank some UNH students. For 25 years, students have powered the University of New Hampshire InterOperability Laboratory, one of the nation's premier independent test sites for new technologies, while jump-starting their own careers. The UNH-IOL, which celebrates its 25th anniversary with an open house Monday, Sept. 16, is unique in its dual mission to serve the technology industry and to train more than...
Twenty-five years is roughly forever in Internet time, which explains why it's surprising to learn that it's the age of a well-respected but obscure facility at UNH that exists largely to help things work together online.
DURHAM - The University of New Hampshire's InterOperability Laboratory is ready to celebrate 25 years as a premier independent test site for new technologies and a unique training ground for future engineers.
The University of New Hampshire InterOperability Laboratory (UNH-IOL), an independent provider of broad-based testing and standards conformance services for the networking industry, announced the laboratory is currently accepting enterprise server and storage companies as members of a new consortium dedicated to PCIe - a storage technology that accelerates performance of demanding, data-intensive enterprise and data center applications.