Information Systems
Five-Year Plan, FY 1999-2003
Table of Contents Information Systems
- I. Mission
- II. Accomplishments
- III. Strategic Priorities
- IV. Current Program Priorities
- V. Issues
Information Systems Practice Summaries
Information Systems FY 1999 Schedules
I. Mission
Work in Information Systems is centered on opening new pathways for MIT's core missions of education, research, and service, and is focused on six strategic goals:
- Consistent, reliable I/T
services
IS delivers consistent, reliable
information technology services to the MIT community. Its goal
is convenience and cost-effectiveness.
To further its goal of operational excellence, IS supports applications and initiatives which provide increased efficiency and effectiveness while continuing to improve the hardware, communications, and software components of the I/T infrastructure. IS's efforts clearly benefit MIT's educational goals, which include modernizing and extending MIT's academic computing facilities and resources.
- Partnerships with customers
for solutions
IS partners with customers
to develop and deliver timely solutions for their business needs.
It values customers as collaborators in a joint effort to support
the Institute's quest for excellence. The focus is on
solutions that are reliable, easy to acquire, and easy to use.
In its collaboration with customers, IS promotes its standard services,
ensuring that they be used where appropriate, and seeks to understand
users' unique needs when they are not.
The IS organization
is structured to maximize the value of information technology
to its MIT customers.
- Partnerships with vendors for products
and services
IS also partners with
vendors to influence and adapt their products and services to
meet MIT needs. IS actively monitors industry and technology
trends and works with vendors to introduce appropriate, reliable,
and accessible products to the MIT community.
- Employees as key resources
IS's employees are key resources enabling the delivery
of I/T products and services. Therefore, IS works to provide
competitive salaries, recognition, state-of-the-art equipment,
training, and an enjoyable workplace.
IS strives to maintain an
environment of learning and engagement where people are valued,
and the commitment and responsibility for pursuing appropriate
innovation aligned with the Institute's strategic mission
and goals are shared by everyone.
IS relies on interpersonal skills
and expertise in both communication and technology to accomplish
its work. Effective communication across teams and with customers
provides opportunities for effective learning and improvement
from past and current practice.
- Policies, procedures, and
standards
IS
engages in a dialogue with its customers about the substance and
rationale of I/T policy, procedures, and standards. IS educates
its customers about the use of information technology, the need
for I/T standards across MIT, the scope of IS's resources,
and IS's recommended products and services.
IS advocates
the use of and adherence to standards as a key step in providing
a scaleable, common computing environment with applications developed
to interact smoothly with each other and the MIT infrastructure.
IS is extensively involved in external standards-setting activities
and advocates with customers and vendors for the adoption of those
standards.
- Effective use of resources
As a steward of critical Institute resources, IS works in collaborative
and integrated teams with customers and I/T colleagues to ensure
that those resources are effectively, equitably, and efficiently
maintained and applied.
Its efforts to reduce costs and improve
business processes are continuous.
Organization
Work in Information Systems is organized around
a framework with three explicit elements: IS's customers,
its work, and the skills of its staff.
![process work flow diagram](./isorg.gif)
The three information technology practices -
Academic Computing, Office Computing, and Voice, Data, and Image
Networking - focus on customers, advocating on their behalf
to Information Systems and on behalf of Information Systems to
them. The practices promote and enable technology-based work
at MIT. They assist the Institute community in identifying information
technology needs and opportunities to use technology in education,
research, and administration. The practices also assist in planning
for the effective use of these resources.
As a process-centered organization, the information
technology work of developing and operating products and services
is the responsibility of five I/T processes - Integration,
Discovery, Delivery, Service, and Support.
The Integration Process has the responsibility
for the information technology infrastructure at the Institute.
This infrastructure encompasses the hardware and software components
underlying MIT's cross-organizational and Institute-wide
academic and administrative applications and related systems.
As part of its responsibilities, the Integration Process serves
as an advocate for the infrastructure (often referred to as the
"commons";) to IS and to the Institute community.
The Discovery Process collaborates with customers
from academic, research, and administrative areas to identify
ways to leverage information technology for business benefit -
increased value, reduced work, and lower costs. Discovery work
is done in teams populated by representatives of the business,
its customers, and information technology staff from across the
Institute. A discovery team's work product is a business
case and conceptual design for a new I/T application. Once approved,
that design moves to the Delivery Process where a team acquires
or builds that application and readies it for use in the Institute
community. Both the Discovery and Delivery Processes are influenced
by the three I/T practices and the Integration Process.
The Service Process has the primary responsibility
for operating and renewing the information technology assets of
the Institute. These assets include the servers in the Data Center,
the telephone system, the Athena clusters, the communications
wire and cable plant, and the computer network. Among Service's
responsibilities are the identification of and action on opportunities
to improve efficiency and customer service. The Service Process
also has responsibility for business continuity in these areas.
The Support Process promotes the widespread effective
use of existing I/T products and services by the community. Its
focus is on the effective use of standard products and services.
To this end, it provides help to the community through training,
documentation, and a help desk.
The third focus of the IS organizational framework
is staff. Work in this area is the responsibility of the Staff
Development and Resource Management Team (formerly known as the
Competency Group Team). This team's goals are two-fold:
- To ensure that information technology human resources
- staff and contingency workers - have the skills,
experiences, and performance feedback they need in order to perform
their current I/T work effectively; and
- To ensure that the Institute develops and acquires
the skills that will be necessary to perform I/T work well in
the future.
The IS evolution from a traditional functional
organization to the process and team-based network described above
has taken longer than anticipated. However, recent experience
has begun to show the benefits of this new design. We are now
seeing more effective application of MIT's I/T resources
through increased staff mobility and concentrated team focus on
I/T issues.
II. Accomplishments
Consistent, reliable I/T services
- IS continued to operate and renew
the Athena Computing Environment's approximately 700 workstations for
general and departmental use; 300 private workstations on faculty,
teaching-assistant, and staff desks; and 100 servers. In total,
approximately 14,000 users and 1,100 machines were supported by about
50 people at an approximate annual cost of $6.3 million. Renewal
efforts this year focused on replacing aging and obsolete machines; by
the end of the fiscal year, IS will have deployed 226 Sun SPARC5s and
3 SGI Indys to public and departmental Athena clusters, as well as
five "Quickstations" in the Student Services Center.
- IS released version 8.1 of the Athena
software suite to support an upgrade of Sun machines to Solaris 2.5.1,
providing a number of small improvements to users, and improving the
software's internal structure. These changes will facilitate porting
the Athena environment to new hardware or new operating system
releases in the future. In addition, IS continued to expand and
upgrade the suite of commercial software available to Athena users:
ENVI and IDL for data analysis and visualization; Babel, ITEREX 87,
and YAEHMOP for quantum molecular Chemistry calculations; Maxwell 2d
and 3d for electromagnetic field visualization; and RDD for
Aeronautics-Astronomy workflow structuring.
- This past year the number of administrative servers
continued to increase. There are now 41 administrative servers with
over 1.3 terabytes of disk space in the MIT Data Center. Despite
required system outages for upgrades, administrative servers averaged
99.81% availability. To provide a stable environment for MIT's
mission-critical applications, IS worked with Physical Plant to
install an emergency generator for the W91 data center.
- MITnet usage continued to grow this year. Currently,
there are 31,000 assigned network addresses on-campus, over two for
every member of the on-campus MIT community. E-mail accounts number
22,000 plus 12,000 alumni mail-forwarding accounts. IS's Tether
service reached over 100,000 calls in November, a 50% increase from
the prior quarter indicating the importance of off-campus
connectivity. To address signs of increasing network congestion
during the past year (approximately 250,000 megabytes flow through
MIT's network per day), IS replaced the network's primary routers and
added an FDDI switch to improve overall network throughput.
- The MIT homepage and top-level web pages were redesigned to be simple both in design and function. The homepage's dynamic logo and varied "spotlights" on Institute events and information have received numerous accolades. Over the year, the homepage has proven an effective medium for communicating with the MIT community.
- Usage of the 5ESS telephone system also continued to grow. There are now about 17,500 phone lines in use, an increase of 5% from FY 1997. To accommodate growing usage and to begin conversion to newer technology, IS installed its first SM2000 switch module. Major software upgrades were installed for the switch (5E.11), the Automated Call Distribution (ACD) system, and the Voice Mail system.
- The reengineered Help Desk handled approximately
60,000 customer requests for help. A new software system environment
was rolled out in November to support the Help Desk. This system
includes a set of help tools designed to improve the help process,
including Web and e-mail interfaces to a common database.
- Tuition-free core computer skills training was initiated at the beginning of FY 1998, leading to course enrollments of over 500 MIT staff in the first quarter, approximately double the previous highest enrollment for a single quarter.
- IS developed a Roles and Authorization application
to enable local administrators to grant access to data and business
functionality associated with their organizations. The first
applications to use this infrastructure will most likely be the
Student Services graduate admissions application and SAP.
Partnerships with customers for solutions
- The "IT Partners" program -
a program to build and support expertise local to the departments,
laboratories, and centers - entered its second year. Some
95 individuals representing 65 MIT departments participated in
monthly meetings focused on IS customer communication and support.
- IS continued to contribute staff and resources to the SAP delivery project. As part of the SAP rollout, needs assessments and desktop deployments for several hundred customers were completed. A Web user interface for displaying purchasing data from SAP was developed, successfully deployed in June, and enhanced in November. The credit card pilot functionality was specified and deployed within SAP in August. SAP technical documentation standards were defined; work continues in this area to document MIT's configuration.
- The MIT Data Warehouse was expanded as part of
a program with six major research laboratories to include data
from the SAP and Coeus systems. Currently, the Data Warehouse
contains OSP, personnel, student, space, key, parking, and financial
transaction data; it also includes data for mapping Kerberos
principals to MIT-ID numbers. Future expansion plans include
purchasing, payroll, labor, telephone billing, and OSP detail
data.
- IS collaborated with the Registrar's Office, Audio-Visual Services, and MIT architects to plan and design ten new classrooms with Athena workstations in Building 2. Of these, eight classrooms were outfitted with projection equipment, network drops, and control panels to support computers brought into the room; two classrooms were also equipped with Athena workstations. These classrooms were remodeled to meet the needs of Mathematics department and other faculty.
- IS supported departmental educational computing initiatives with approximately $100,000 of equipment grants. Supported projects included: work by Professors Christopher Cummins and Larry Stern in Chemistry; a minicluster project in EAPS's Building E34; Professor David Pritchard's development of Pre-Calculus tutorials for Physics; Professor Ken Manning's work in Writing and Humanistic Studies; Professor Clark Colton's work in Chemical Engineering; and Professor Markus Zahn's work in EECS.
- IS coordinated MIT's membership in the New Media Centers Consortium, a nonprofit organization designed to bring together academe and industry to enable the use of multimedia in education. This collaboration informed IS's planning work for MIT's new Media Center, which will allow faculty to create and use instructional materials and produce workshops that require multimedia-based software.
- IS also coordinated Crosstalk, an information technology pedagogy forum, which featured presentations and discussions relating to the use of computers in MIT education.
Partnerships with vendors for products and services
- IS reached agreement with NECX to implement MCC-Online,
a groundbreaking Web-based service for the purchase of computing
hardware and software. This new service is the result of a radical
redesign of the traditional MIT Computer Connection retail operation.
Current sales are at a level of $500,000 per month and increasing
as the MIT community takes advantage of MCC-Online's desktop
delivery and better prices.
- IS renewed its contracts with AT&T and ACUS for domestic and international long distance telephone service. The renegotiated pricing resulted in a decrease in student rates in September 1997.
- IS continued to build strategic alliances with
I/T entities outside MIT, including technology vendors (e.g.,
Apple, Sun, SGI, Oracle, Netscape, and Microsoft) and interest
groups (e.g., Nercomp, EDUCOM, Cause, and the Common Solutions
Group). Through these alliances, IS worked to ensure that vendor
solutions can be integrated into MIT's I/T infrastructure.
- IS embarked on a partnership with Microsoft to develop capabilities and security for a scaleable, remotely-managed, serially-reusable Windows NT environment. Project Pismere will eventually lead to the deployment of workstations running NT in public clusters at MIT.
- IS began working with iXOS to integrate security into its imaging product which is to be used with SAP. In November, IS agreed to collaborate on future secure Web development with SAP.
- Because of IS's and Stanford University's advocacy, Qualcomm released a new version of Eudora with features to ease significantly the management of large numbers of mailboxes on multiple servers.
- IS identified a calendaring and scheduling software package - Crosswind's "Synchronize" - for deployment campus-wide. It meets MIT's security, scaleability, and multiple-platform requirements. An IS pilot will begin in March 1998 after development work necessary to integrate the product into MIT's infrastructure is completed.
- IS continued to collaborate with other universities on software solutions. During the past year, MIT shared design work for Kerberos Versions 4 and 5 integrated solutions for both Macintosh and Microsoft NT desktops.
- IS staff continued to influence setting technical standards for the Internet, especially those relating to network-layer security services, by participating at the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF).
Employees as key resources
- Market data, including the starting salaries
of new hires, clearly indicates that in critical areas such as
database, SAP, and client-server programming and development,
MIT salaries are too often unacceptably lower than those available
in industry. Exit interviews indicate that starting salaries
frequently are 20-50% higher for IS staff who leave for employment
elsewhere. IS staff salaries continue to be reviewed in the light
of market data. Over the past 18 months, about 30% of the IS
professional staff have received promotions or equity increases
to address discrepancies between their current salaries and their
market value.
- Two ABAP programming and two Windows NT development
courses were presented for I/T technical personnel. All were
run at the MIT Professional Learning Center in W89. Other technical
training initiatives included Integration lunch-time seminars
for system architects and training opportunities for MIT I/T staff
in Powerbuilder and Oracle.
- A Mentoring program was designed and introduced
to the IS staff in December 1997. At the same time, team leader
responsibilities for staff development and coaching were clarified.
Coaching and Behavioral Interviewing workshops were offered to
IS staff by the Staff Development and Resource Management Team.
- IS worked to improve its administrative processes by establishing a new Team Leader accountability matrix and a Project Database, as well as redesigning its performance appraisal process.
- IS began to use competency-based hiring practices, and the new Director, I/T Staff Development and Resources Management position was defined using this methodology.
Policies, procedures, and standards
- IS continued to develop guidelines for web interfaces. The Campus-Wide Information Systems (CWIS) group published design specifications for web pages and clarified Institute policy and procedures regarding fundraising, advertising, and other commercial activity on the MIT network. CWIS also clarified legal implications of publishing copyrighted and licensed materials on the web. (See http://web.mit.edu.ezproxyberklee.flo.org/cwis/faq/guidelines.html.)
- IS revised infrastructure requirements for purchased software packages and new applications to include standards for web authentication and security. (Refer to http://web.mit.edu.ezproxyberklee.flo.org/is/integration/doc/requirements.html.)
- In keeping with its efforts to deliver a seamless, integrated desktop to its customers, IS adopted the Microsoft NT 4 operating system as one of the MIT standard desktops for both student and office applications. Also, IS defined standard sets of desktop applications on Macintosh and Windows 3.1 and NT 4 that work together for office customers.
Effective use of resources
- The process-oriented, team-based I/T structure
extended its influence and effectiveness across campus. The process
orientation to work has been used successfully in structuring
the work in IS as well as that of reengineering project teams
(SAPWEB, ECAT, Release 2, iXOS, Internal Providers), and recommendations
from our processes have initiated work in other I/T units on campus
(MITSIS, CAO). The nomenclature of our process-centered organization
- Discovery, Delivery, Service, Support, and Integration
- is more comfortable for IS and our customers.
III. Strategic Priorities
For the period Fiscal Year 1999
- 2003, Information Systems will focus on three strategic objectives
consistent with the goals stated in our mission:
- Ensure that MIT processes use
modern information technology effectively.
- Grow Information System's
commitment to customer service and operational excellence.
- Continue to develop and implement
clear goals, vision, principles, roles and responsibilities, process
and subprocess designs, and performance metrics to enable the
effective use of the Institute's information technology
resources.
To accomplish these objectives,
Information Systems will continue to pursue the broad outlines
of many program priorities that have been described in earlier
plans. This plan includes a number of new program priorities
for IS, many of which can be accommodated within IS's current
budget parameters.
Other new priorities cannot be
so accommodated, however. These include ramping up for the educational
computing initiatives envisioned by the Council on Educational
Technology; upgrading our network infrastructure on- and off-campus
to accommodate both normal growth in network traffic and the Council's
initiatives; supporting the Alumni Network Services initiative;
and recognizing the on-going cost of implementing and maintaining
SAP.
In part, the predominant driver
for this set of new priorities is the continued growth in the
capabilities of desktop computers at a constant or decreasing
price. This phenomenon is primarily the result of Moore's
Law - the number of devices on a microchip will double
in number approximately every eighteen months as the chip halves
in price - and a similar recognition by Jerry Saltzer that
the price of disk memory decreases by a factor of two every 12
months. Take for example the changes in the Macintosh computer
since its introduction in 1983. In 1983, its processor was the
Motorola 68000 running at 8 Mhz; it had 128 Kbytes memory, no
hard drive, and a 9-inch monochrome screen. The machine cost
about $2000. Today, for a similar price in constant dollars,
you can buy a Macintosh with a Motorola G3 processor running at
266 Mhz, with 64 Mbytes of memory, a 4 Gbyte hard drive, and a
17-inch color monitor display. Today's machine represents
an increase of over two orders of magnitude in performance over
the 15-year period. Similar increases in performance at a constant
price are anticipated to continue for at least one more decade
and likely for two.
Academic Computing
The Council on Educational Technology's
proposed initiatives are based largely on the possibilities of
today's technology and the promise of tomorrow's.
During an undergraduate's four-year tenure at MIT, we
can anticipate improvements in hardware performance of a factor
of about five. Such performance improvements pave the way for
waves of new educational applications, as well as new ways of
learning, with successive generations of technology. To prepare
for the full implementation of the Council's recommendations
(which will require major funding), we propose three start-up
initiatives:
- Initiate a technology discovery
project to examine how we might move from our present infrastructure
to one that will support the initiatives proposed by the Council.
This project would take a first look at the network infrastructure,
the required system services, the application development environment,
and a prototypical toolkit; it would also produce a draft technical
plan and a process for changing the plan as more is learned.
The project would be staffed with a small group of technical experts
who would be expected to complete their work within a three-month
period of time.
This work will be done in the
second half of FY 1998. Funding may be required
if it is necessary to backfill the operational responsibilities
of staff assigned to this task.
- Provide a core staff of three
to begin to develop and provide a set of common tools and services
for use in the next generation of educational initiatives, and
to provide support for the initial explorations. Strengthening
support for educational development is consistent with a direction
first recommended by the Committee for Academic Computing in the
1990s and Beyond, and more recently by the Council. Development
of initial tools and services must precede the development of
actual educational explorations.
This proposal requires additional
funding for salary, employee benefits, and additional
software for these staff.
- Provide two additional staff
to begin development and operation of the additional services
- higher bandwidth on- and off-campus, network drops for
serial reuse across the campus, wireless services, etc. -
required for the initial phases of the Council's proposed
initiatives.
Funding will be required
to support this work.
Campus-wide Communications Infrastructure
MIT installed its present 5ESS
telephone system in 1988. This system consisted of the switch
and a completely new internal and external wiring plant, including
a network of multimode fiber cables connecting each building to
one of the three 5ESS switch sites and interconnecting the switch
sites. It is now time to begin to replace the switch modules.
The first of these replacements occurred this year, and one or
two modules will be replaced each year over the next several years.
In the coming year we will also upgrade the switch software (as
we do each year) and replace the switch management software.
Costs of this hardware and software will be funded via the rate
structure as was the initial installation.
The demand for on-campus network
bandwidth will soon surpass the capacity of our current multimode
fiber plant. Replacing the fiber plant with single-mode fiber
that will permit data rates of 2.4 Gb/s with current technology
will cost about $2,250,000. Most of the present multimode fiber
was installed as a gift of AT&T when we purchased the switch
from them. Gift possibilities for the replacement fiber need
to be explored at this time. Also, we need to explore the possibility
of funding all or part of the replacement cost from the telephone
and network rate bases.
Increasing the bandwidth to the
desktop requires not only a high-bandwidth backbone provided by
the fiber plant and the central network switches but also a high-bandwidth
building infrastructure of network switches, hubs, and wiring
to the desktop. Current estimates for the building infrastructure
costs are not complete. Hardware available today is early in
its production cycle and therefore expensive. The original intrabuilding
wiring predated the specifications now used to guarantee the support
of higher speed networks. Since wiring installed after 1993 meets
these specifications, the need for new wiring will have to be
determined on a case-by-case basis.
While the costs for equipment
and wiring for all of MIT's buildings is significant, these
costs likely will not be the limiting factor in increasing network
bandwidth to the desktop. When the 5ESS wiring infrastructure
was installed, many non-standard spaces were used for wiring closets.
For example, many janitor's closets were turned into shared
space with wiring blocks simply mounted on the wall. In other
locations (e.g., second floor of Building 3) small indentations
in the corridor were walled off to serve as phone closets. These
spaces which constitute about half our telephone closet inventory
will not accommodate the equipment required in order to deliver
100 Mb/s network service to the desktop. Replacing these closets
will require difficult negotiation with the current occupants
of the necessary space and construction. However, higher bandwidth
cannot be provided in the areas of the Institute served by these
non-standard wiring closets until they are replaced. (New closets
require 150 square feet of space to accommodate the network equipment
racks for 150 network drops.)
The total costs involved in these
activities to upgrade the network infrastructure will be significant
although they are not fully known at this time. Options for funding
the costs are being developed and will be presented later in the
year.
Office Computing
The principle strategic priority
in the Office Computing Practice is to place even greater emphasis
on completing the SAP rollout to the departments, laboratories,
and centers (DLCs) by the end of June 1999. This will include
the work remaining in Rollout98, the conversion of the Physical
Plant system to the SAP infrastructure, the configuration and
rollout of SAP HR-Payroll (if a decision is made that this software
meets MIT's requirements), and introduction of SAP 4.0c
release. By any definition, this is an ambitious undertaking;
however, it must be accomplished within this time schedule so
that we can reach some measure of stability in our SAP environment.
This work will likely require
funding beyond that already
budgeted for one-time reengineering expenditures.
Before the end of FY 1999 we
must structure the on-going operational partnership for SAP and
see it fully staffed. In all likelihood this will be a cross-functional
team with membership drawn from the organizations that support
or have custodial responsibility for SAP. These would include
Audit, Budget, CAO, Information Systems, Personnel, Plant, Purchasing,
and the Management Reporting Reengineering Team.
Also of strategic importance
for Office Computing is the development of processes to systematically
renew the administrative computing desktop hardware environment;
to better manage the integration, testing, packaging, and release
of software for this environment; and to provide on-going training
and support for the Institute's staff who use the new business
applications to do their work.
MIT Alumni Network Services
Based upon work begun in FY 1996
jointly by the MIT Alumni Association and Information Systems,
the Alumni Association launched its first Alumni Network Service,
Email Forwarding for Life. Today some 12,000 alumni have registered
with the service. Enthusiasm is high and additional services
- electronic alumni directory; on-line discussion forums
for students, faculty, and alumni; secure financial transactions
between alumni and MIT permitting on-line gifts and registration
for MIT events; and career and professional support services
for alumni - are already planned. This work has been performed,
and continues to be done, on the margin, on a time-available basis,
by staff in both Alumni and Information Systems.
Because of its strategic importance
to the Institute, the Alumni Association and Information Systems
are now jointly requesting an increase in base budget
funding beginning in FY 1999 to continue the development and support
of MIT's Alumni Network Services (ANS). This budget increase
would fund four new staff positions - two each in Alumni and IS
- plus the resources required to support the ANS infrastructure
and the working environment for these four individuals. In the
Alumni Association the two individuals would focus on customer
service for the ANS products and on managing the content provided
through ANS services; in IS, one individual would have responsibility
for the continued development of the ANS infrastructure, and its
support and integration into the MIT network, and the other would
focus on building scaleable applications to deliver ANS services.
III. Current Program Priorities
IS's mission is to support MIT's
commitment to education, research, and service. To accomplish
its mission, IS focuses its work in six broad areas:
- consistent, reliable services
- partnerships with vendors for products and services
- partnerships with customers for solutions
- employees as key resources
- policies, procedures, and standards
- effective use of resources
Work in these areas crosses boundaries between
the Academic, Office, and Voice, Data, and Image Networking Practices.
Key initiatives for the remainder of FY 1998 and for FY 1999
are described in this section. The listing is not exhaustive,
however. Given the dynamic nature of information technology,
it is difficult to predict all the projects that will be done
within this period or which projects may be affected by unexpected
work of higher priority.
Consistent, reliable I/T services
- Operate the I/T environment
- Continue to operate and maintain Athena servers,
client workstations, and peripherals, as well as system software.
- Continue to operate and maintain administrative
servers, databases, and production applications:
- Eliminate legacy systems replaced by SAP (contingent
upon SAP implementation) and the Data Warehouse.
- Review applications remaining on the mainframe
and develop a strategy for their replacement.
- Phase-out services, such as the SecureLAN, that
no longer provide value.
- Continue to operate and maintain MITnet, the
5ESS telephone switch, voice mail and cable TV systems, and electronic
mail and directory services.
- Provide telephone and network services to new
facilities both on- and off-campus.
- Maintain personal computer repair services.
Coordinate these services with the new MCC-Online computer sales
model.
- Monitor and improve efficiency and customer
service
- Implement process improvements:
- Automate many repetitive tasks such as directory
assistance and simple requests for 5ESS services.
- Improve the process for 5ESS and MITnet installations.
- Consolidate telephone and network billing functions
to improve customer service and administrative efficiency.
- Reduce effort required to introduce new Athena platforms into production service.
- Improve the process for identifying
recommended desktop hardware and software products. Better translate
that identification into a clear strategy for providing customer
support and for replacing desktop devices on a
regular and predictable basis.
- Improve process for providing both continuing
and authorized transitory members of the MIT community with access
to information technology services and resources including educational
materials. Investigate more flexible controls for permitting
access to support distance education.
- Improve mechanisms to control and monitor the
large number of servers required for mission-critical applications.
Monitor existing services and increase capacity as necessary.
- Explore and perhaps pilot alternative means of
providing service and support to the MIT community, such as dividing
the Institute's customer base into logical "zones,"
with cross-functional teams assigned to coordinate support for
each zone.
- Explore and perhaps pilot outsourcing options
for some support services.
- Explore and perhaps pilot the concept of regular "Office Computing Releases" to enable users to update their desktops easily. The release would contain updates of the operating system, major applications such as SAP, and personal productivity software including word processor, spreadsheet, and web browser. Such releases should enable individuals across MIT to manage their personal computing environment more easily without depending on centralized support and services.
- Investigate possibilities for providing a more
integrated communications environment that is cohesive and coherent,
and that links together systems that are now separate -
e.g., fax, voice-mail, and e-mail.
- Renew environment
- Renew the Athena environment, replacing approximately
30% of its client and server hardware. Upgrade operating systems,
and improve services. Adjust the Athena renewal strategy as necessary
in the light of new operating environments and technologies (e.g.,
Windows NT, SGI, Apple-Rhapsody), shifts in ownership patterns,
and needs for specialized facilities.
- Develop security, file system, and software distribution
for integrating Windows NT into the centrally-managed Athena public
cluster environment (Project Pismere).
- Receive and deploy remaining Intel-granted systems;
assist faculty in realizing their proposed objectives.
- Deploy next cycle of Athena renewal equipment
in FY 1998.
- Install SGI operating system IRIX 6.2 in FY 1999,
to be followed by IRIX 6.5.
- Install Sun operating system Solaris 2.6 in FY
1999.
- Examine the viability of "network computers,"
as well as the viability and implications of required student
ownership of computers.
- Renew the Institute's administrative hardware
and software "desktop":
- Upgrade operating systems, both Macintosh and
Windows NT, as well as applications such as BrioQuery, Kerberos
versions 4 and 5, and SNS/ANO.
- Plan for and replace the SAP server complex,
in production service since March 1995. This renewal will address
two issues: the systems will reach the end of their four-year
useful life; and additional capacity is necessary to accommodate
increased usage.
- Plan for and install SAP Release 4.0c on both
client and server systems. Planning for the release which brings
needed functionality will begin early in FY 1999 with installation
occurring late in the fiscal year.
- Increase available network bandwidth:
- Begin a systematic upgrade of the on-campus backbone
and building networks to support high-bandwidth applications.
- Begin widespread rollout of 100 mbps Ethernet
service to the desktop.
- Investigate additional service options to provide
increased bandwidth to faculty, staff, and student residences
in the Boston area.
- Implement MIT's Internet 2 connectivity
via a high-speed connection from the campus to the NSF's
vBNS network.
- Reevaluate our commercial Internet access provider
to determine the feasibility of increasing bandwidth to non-Internet
2 sites at reasonable costs.
- Continue renewal of 5ESS telephone system:
- Install new software for switch (5E12).
- Install one SM2000 switch module in each of the
next three years to replace the older equipment, thus maintaining
reliability.
- Replace switch management software.
- Plan for a new switch room to replace NW12, which
currently has no space for expansion. IS will need to expand
significantly facilities to meet the demands of planned building
projects in the Northwest area of the campus.
- Support users
- Increase the Computing Help Desk's hours to include evenings and weekends.
- Continue to offer I/T core and advanced application training for staff across MIT to enable them to improve their work effectiveness.
- Work toward ensuring that the "IT Partners" program include 80% of MIT DLCs. The goal of this program is to build and support expertise local to the Institute's organizational units.
- Encourage a common understanding of DLC and IS responsibilities regarding viruses, standards, and software and hardware support and maintenance, as well as network server administration in a client/server environment.
- Aggregate and analyze
the diverse uses of IS support services and use the results to
drive the design of user support.
- Develop ways to assess whether IS resources available
for customer support are equitably assigned across MIT in a way
consistent with IS resources and a DLC's demonstrated need.
- New services
- Increase network accessibility:
- Deploy network access points across campus to
allow users with laptops to "plug in" while moving
around campus (DHCP).
- Investigate alternative services for connecting
back to campus while "on the road."
- Develop a plan to introduce Personal Digital Assistants (PDAs), very small or pocket computers, into the MIT environment.
- Investigate wireless services to provide network
access across campus.
- Complete development of ECAT, Release 2 to provide a single web environment for MIT's electronic commerce services.
- Route purchases via SAP for approvals.
- Utilize Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) via the Internet to transmit orders to vendor partners.
- Plan and migrate vendor partners from ECAT, Release 1 to Release 2.
- Complete implementation of the OSP Electronic Proposal System (EPS), and deploy to the MIT community.
- Define a web-development environment with easy-to-use tools which are scaleable and supportable for I/T developers creating office and academic applications.
- Define, develop, and support web-based environments for teaching and learning. Features will include authenticated and customizable access to secure services such as library resources, class lists, and course assignments.
- Complete a Web-based information resource to
serve as an Academic Computing "clearinghouse" for
educational technology ideas, issues, and illustrative practices.
- Implement a common information technology application
for group discussion and work sharing ("Groupware")
that is independent of desktop platform (i.e., Windows, Macintosh,
or UNIX).
- Improve e-mail functionality by adding encryption
and signature (i.e., authentication) options. "Digitally
signed" e-mail will be used first with OSP's Electronic
Proposal System.
Partnerships with customers for solutions
- Collaborate with faculty, departments, and offices
to design and develop technology-mediated teaching, learning,
and living spaces. IS's success relies on the number of
faculty and departments who understand and use its services, and
on the collaborative engagement and alignment of IS teams with
other MIT organizations, such as the Libraries, Audio-Visual Services,
the Registrar's Office, CAES, I/T staff within local departments,
as well as the Office of the Dean for Students and Undergraduate
Education. In the coming year, IS will:
- Develop the mechanisms, business models, organizational
alignments, and staffing to increase IS's capacity to support
educational development projects, including instructional support
and courseware production. Develop business processes for education
and training , I/T tools and services, and ongoing service and
support.
- Continue solicitation and support of select educational
technology applications.
- Continue efforts, like Crosstalk, which provide
a forum for discussing and exploring issues relating to technology
and pedagogy. Crosstalk offers an opportunity for IS's
academic computing customers to contribute to IS's planning
of strategy and services that affect education at MIT.
- Continue to expand and extend the New Media Center
into the Rotch Library and Building 9.
- Test and implement model electronic classrooms
which provide unobtrusive computing at each classroom seat in
Building 2.
- Test model for Athena clusters in residential
halls; pilot as appropriate. Prepare for eventual Athena cluster
pilots in new residential facilities.
- Explore user-support models for student-owned
machines.
- Complete Discovery project by September 1998
for a facility for running computationally-intensive, long jobs
unattended.
- Collaborate with the MIT Libraries and the Laboratory
for Computer Science in an initiative to scan, archive, process,
and deliver Computer Science Technical reports to the desktop.
Based on research done as part of the LCS Library 2000 project,
this effort will deliver screen-viewable and printable page images
as a production-quality service.
- Expand the Alumni Network Services
(ANS) environment and service offerings. IS and the Alumni/ae
Association have developed a joint budget proposal for adding
ANS services to the successful collaboration-built service, "E-mail
Forwarding for Life."
- Complete a Discovery project with
the Technology Licensing Office to design an integrated, information-rich
I/T system that will enable MIT to market its
licenses more competitively.
- Collaborate with the Management
Reporting reengineering team and DLCs to help complete Phase 2
of SAP's Rollout98:
- Incorporate the Roles and Authorizations application in Rollout98 to allow the decentralization of SAP authorizations to DLCs.
- Complete SAPweb to permit authorized requisitioners to complete and post SAP requisitions from the web.
- Enhance security features of iXOS, an imaging software application that integrates with SAP to allow the capture, storage, and electronic distribution and annotation of invoices.
- Deploy detailed SAP financial transaction data from the data warehouse in January 1998. This is a collaborative pilot project with six major research laboratories. This functionality will be introduced to the remaining DLCs as they convert to MIT's new financial architecture during Rollout98.
- Release enhanced data warehouse access to DLCs. Recent releases of BrioQuery will enable DLC administrators to join data from local systems or their desktops with warehouse queries.
- Work with DLCs to ensure that their migrations to SAP and the data warehouse do not adversely impact their ability to manage their respective organizations. Planning, design, and implementation support will be required for most of the DLCs.
- Begin a Discovery project with Budget Office staff to design a new budget process to exploit the new infrastructure of SAP and the data warehouse.
- Reassess SAP's Human Resources (HR) Module, which includes personnel, payroll, and pension capabilities, as a replacement for MIT legacy systems. Work will begin with a Discovery effort to be initiated late in FY 1998 or early in FY 1999. If SAP's HR module satisfies MIT requirements, a Delivery project will configure the module and integrate it into our environment.
- Continue to meet with DLCs to identify the needs
for new or improved services:
- Enable more extensive information sharing on
I/T applications, best practices, and resources within and outside
MIT.
- Promote more extensive participation of faculty
in educational uses of information technology.
- Since many IS services are billed to users to
recover costs, IS must ensure that the rates for those services
align with Institute goals. These rates must recover the appropriate
costs while encouraging users to take advantage of IS services.
In order to meet our objectives, IS will work with senior management
and DLCs to deploy a new, comprehensive, and intelligible rate
structure.
- Continue to assist DLCs and central
offices to assess their information technology assets and to determine
the extent of their Year 2000 system problems. Support work to
bring all Institute systems into compliance before the end of
FY 1999.
Partnerships with vendors for products and services
- Hardware/software to support
infrastructure
- Continue to work with Microsoft
to incorporate MIT's I/T infrastructure requirements into
Windows NT, beginning with Release 5.0. Develop MIT-integrated
security, file system, and software distribution infrastructure
for NT as part of Project Pismere. Deploy the first scaleable,
remotely-managed, serially-reusable workstations running NT in
a test cluster in September 1998; deploy in a public Athena cluster
in calendar 1999. While Project Pismere is focused on the desktop,
it is also the first step for deploying Windows NT as a server
in FY 2000.
- Combine efforts with other university
and user groups, including EDUCOM, Cause, and their affiliates,
the IVY+ Universities, the Common Solutions Group, and Cartel,
to help MIT leverage common issues with vendors.
- Track developments with the Macintosh and Rhapsody
operating systems. Influence Apple to develop transparent access
to central, location-independent file space.
- Security-related infrastructure
- Influence current
and potential vendors and users of MIT's security system,
Kerberos, by hosting a Kerberos Developers Workshop at MIT again
this year.
- Deploy an MIT-wide calendaring and scheduling
application. Continue to work with the selected vendor to enhance
the software package's security infrastructure with Kerberos.
- Continue work at IETF meetings
to influence security standards, as well as standards for calendaring
and scheduling. Participate in development of standards for key-serving.
- Track advancements in secure
Java development environments; select vendors to influence.
- Deploy SAP's Internet Transaction Server (ITS) development toolkit. In a joint project with SAP, IS will work to incorporate certificate technology directly into the ITS. Use of the ITS toolkit will permit MIT to develop applications to make essentially all of SAP's functionality to be made securely available from the web.
- Work to ensure
that MIT's strategic I/T directions are considered in plans
of vendors of current common solutions such as Qualcomm for e-mail;
Netscape for web browser with certificates; Oracle for relational
database and secure middleware; as well as Sun, SGI, Macintosh,
and Microsoft for operating systems.
Employees as key resources
- Mentoring Program
- Continue to encourage and develop
a mentoring culture in IS, providing additional opportunities
for staff to take charge of their careers and support their individual
development. This culture would encourage individual staff members
to consult with colleagues for guidance on difficult projects,
career direction, and problem solving.
- Outside IS Training Initiatives
- Continue to develop additional
training oriented toward needs of professionals in the broader
I/T community, including support for certifying NT administrators.
- Within IS, continue upgrading
I/T staff capabilities with training in technical and behavioral
skills
- Depending on market maturity
and best practices, begin Object-Oriented (OO) training for developers
with OO Design. Object-Oriented development has a high investment
in training with a delayed payback from the reuse of software
and improved software maintainability.
- Expand training opportunities
for all employees in behavioral competencies for I/T professionals
- applying expertise, aligning with MIT objectives, bias
for action, problem-solving ability, building relationships, serving
customers, collaborating with others, organizational awareness,
ability to influence, strategic orientation, team-building, holding
people accountable, and talent development.
- Emphasize use of behavioral competencies
and tools in all work.
- Expand use of competency-based
position descriptions and competency-based interviewing techniques
in future IS searches.
- Provide training and support
of teams to improve performance. Continue to develop a culture
of high-performing teams as the way work is done in IS.
- Hardware/Software for staff
use
- Continue to upgrade IS desktop
equipment and acquire necessary software and hardware for technology
exploration and tracking.
- Find space to house staff and
equipment - including the machine room - that remain
in Building E40 after the move to N42. This must be a high priority
for FY 1999. Ideally, these staff will join IS staff located
in E19 for increased synergy.
- Recognition, rewards, and
retention
- Continue to explore and implement
retention methods, including selective equity adjustments, challenging
projects and assignments, recognizing and rewarding work formally
and informally, celebrating the uniqueness of IS culture and environment.
- Finish the reengineering of
IS.
- To date, this has focused first
on the organization and second on teams working in the five IS
work processes. Work to build high-performance teams has not
been completed and now is a priority.
Policies, Procedures, and Standards
- Codify the policies, procedures, and standards
that IS has developed and put in place regarding the installation,
acquisition, and use of information technology assets. These
codes are unevenly documented, and the MIT community is not generally
knowledgeable of their existence. IS will work to create a set
of I/T Policies, Procedures, and Standards by the end of FY 1999.
- Building and Wiring Standards
- Work with Physical Plant and others to update
standards for building infrastructure and cabling systems.
- Application and Infrastructure Standards
- Continue work with developers of Institute-wide
and departmental applications to ensure data, design, and security
standards are incorporated into new and updated applications.
Developers should also consider issues of scale, reliability,
maintainability, supportability, serviceability, and the use of
common components in their work.
- Continue lunch time seminars for system architects
and broaden group to include system developers.
- Develop standards and guidelines
for departmental LANs for naming, printing, and file sharing.
- Web Standards
- Influence user interfaces for all
web-based development. As champion and coordinator of web-based
activities at MIT, IS will work with and influence the community
to create scaleable, supportable web environments for both academic
and administrative purposes.
- Platforms, Operating Systems,
and Desktop Applications
- Review software distribution and installation
standards for the Macintosh, Windows, and UNIX desktops. Develop
a system for automated distribution, management, and tracking
of MIT-wide licensed software. Meet frequently with users to
ensure that licensed software meets customer needs: easy to install,
update, and support; interoperates with other applications;
and complies with vendor licenses.
- Continue negotiations
with Microsoft on operating system and office software site licenses.
- Establish consistent metrics that
will gauge the business value added to the Institute by its information
technology initiatives, and IS's progress towards its goal
of operational excellence. These metrics will also provide meaningful
linkages between our strategic plan, tactical approaches, and
periodic reporting.
Effective use of resources
As IS reaches towards operational
excellence, it will rely on continuous improvement and performance
measurement efforts. IS must ensure that MIT's resource
allocations are guided by the overarching goal of supporting the
continued improvement of education and administration at MIT.
Initiatives should be consistent, as much as possible, with these
central principles:
- Serve many, rather than few;
- Seek innovation and creativity, rather than simple
automation of traditional approaches to education and administration;
- Increase technological equity
among departments, laboratories, and centers, rather than decrease
it.
V. Issues
As we look ahead to FY 1999 and beyond, IS faces these issues:
- IS MUST DO THE RIGHT THINGS TO HAVE THE RIGHT STAFF. I/T
staff at all levels of experience and expertise are in short supply
across the country and particularly in New England. As IS work
ramps up to address not only the recommendations of the Council
on Educational Technology, but also MIT's need for a state-of-the-art
computing environment, it becomes more critical that we adjust
our salary structure to reflect market realities. Our world-class
experts are simply not replaceable in the market-place. Keeping
and training our current staff is less expensive than recruiting
and training new staff, or filling empty slots by retaining consultants.
IS must continuously work to retain its existing staff by providing
challenging projects, as well as recognizing and rewarding their
work. IS must also work to reskill staff in the technical and
behavioral skills required by MIT's culture and the nature
of I/T work today and tomorrow.
- IS MUST MEET THE DEMANDS OF HIGHER EDUCATION
AT MIT. To respond adequately to the recommendations and directions
described by the Council on Educational Technology and the Task
Force on Student Life and Learning, we must continue to invest
in the academic computing environment. We must develop new resources
and rethink our infrastructure to achieve a systemic approach
to integrating information technology more deeply into MIT's
educational experience. To build on its position of leadership
in the academic uses of technology, MIT must renew its emphasis
on strengthening the commons and leveraging the application of
shared resources.
- WE MUST CONTINUE TO INVEST IN THE ADMINISTRATIVE
COMPUTING ENVIRONMENT. We must keep legacy systems running until
their functionality is replaced. Over the past 18 months, many
new products and services have been introduced but no systems
have been retired. The increased load on staff is clearly visible.
In order for MIT to have the administrative computing environment
it requires, IS must continue to:
- Rapidly implement new applications campus-wide.
- Coordinate projects to create an environment
that is easy and effective to use, run, and support.
- Plan projects to ensure that replaced legacy
systems are shutdown.
- EXTERNAL CHANGES CONTINUE TO GENERATE UNCERTAINTY
FOR OUR COMMUNICATIONS STRATEGIES. While the Telecommunications
Act of 1996 was expected to increase competition and innovation,
its impact is still unclear. Rates in previously competitive
areas, such as long distance telephone service, continue to fall;
however, other service areas have yet to show price movement.
New services are still on the horizon but have not become available
as the industry realigns itself with possibilities enabled by
the Telecommunications Act. The bandwidth required for data is
rapidly outgrowing that used by voice service, the Internet market
is still maturing, and future rates are not yet predictable.
Internet 2 hopes to jump-start the move to higher bandwidth networks.
However, the costs of sustaining these capabilities are not understood
though likely to be large. Today our Internet access cost is
about $50,000 per year, and the Institute spends about $1 million
annually on long distance telephone calls. In a few years, we
will likely see a comparable or larger expense for our Internet
service.
- OUR RELIANCE ON "OFF-THE-SHELF"
SOLUTIONS MAY CREATE NEW PROBLEMS. Generally, packaged software
and hardware have two problems, requiring us to:
- Change significantly the way we do work to accommodate
a solution that does not meet all our needs or does things differently;
- Integrate several solutions which, when taken
together (e.g., SAP and iXOS), do not always interoperate well
within MIT's I/T infrastructure.
However, we cannot build and maintain everything
we need for our environment. Staff time spent influencing vendors
is dramatically increasing. We are currently working through
major issues with several of our current vendors: e.g., SGI hardware
and software for Athena, IBM's support of the Andrew File
System (AFS) for Athena, and Sybase Powersoft's developer
tool PowerBuilder. Although our plan is to continue support for
Apple Macintoshes at MIT, we may not be able to continue recommending
them for office desktops as key software - e.g., security
tools from Oracle - is not available for future system
releases.
- MOST PROBLEMS CAUSED BY THE YEAR 2000 TWO-DIGIT
DATE PROBLEM MUST BE RESOLVED IN FY 1999, IF NOT EARLIER. Work
to identify I/T assets and the steps needed to achieve "Year
2000 Compliance" for each of those assets began in FY 1997.
This issue affects not only IS, but all of MIT. It is each system
owner's responsibility to ensure that the appropriate priorities
are set and that resources are assigned to address this issue
properly. Work on most central systems is proceeding; however,
work on department, laboratory, and center systems may lag.
- IS'S MOVE TO BUILDING N42 REPRESENTS A LONG, SOMETIMES DIFFICULT, TRANSITION. IS is looking forward to aligning staff along team and process lines in N42. However, logistical concerns about the move's impact on customers and on staff interaction with customers, as well as the need for uninterrupted service and support during and after the move itself, continue to generate uncertainty and unease.
- WE MUST READY CAMPUS FACILITIES FOR INTENSIVE
USE OF INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY. IS must continue to involve itself
in the construction and renovation of academic and administrative
buildings so that planning for both adheres to a set of I/T standards.
For example, classroom design does not routinely provide for
projection facilities, or electrical power and network drops at
seats. Technology features are often among the casualties of
construction budgeting. Yet building occupants typically want
those features later, when installing them costs MIT more.
- WE MUST READY STAFF FOR INTENSIVE USE OF INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY. IS must continue to advocate for and offer core and advanced technology training for all staff to enable them to use these tools more effectively in performing their work. Further, IS must work with system owners to provide introductory, remedial, and advanced training in the use of I/T-based business applications.