About | Dr. Elliot King

Dr. Elliot KingI am currently a professor of communication at Loyola University Maryland where I established the first digital media lab at the university in 1995, the same year I started teaching Web development courses.

I have been reporting on information technology and computers since the beginning of the personal computer revolution in the early 1980s. After a short and unhappy stint as a political press secretary, I got a job at a start-up computer magazine and within a couple of months I was a technology reporter. I also freelanced for a wide range of publication including The Los Angeles Times and Ad Week.

During this time, largely to get more control of my writing, I entered a Ph.D. program at the University of California, San Diego. While still a Ph.D. candidate, I became the editor-in-chief of a monthly professional journal called Scientific Computing and Automation, which reported on the use of information technology in science and engineering. In that role, I attended the third World Human Genome conference, several fascinating meetings of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the largest general scientific association in the world, and covered significant projects such as the Grand Challenges in scientific computing, an effort to apply computing power to the largest scientific problems in the world. I was also a very early adapter to the Internet and then the World Wide Web. Those were good times.

After I received my Ph.D., I continued to be an active journalist, reporting extensively on large-scale information management issues, primarily for a magazine called Database Trends and Applications. I was also the lead researcher for an IT-oriented market research company.

In the mid-1990s, I co-authored a book about how journalists could use the Internet. My latest book, Free for All: The Internet’s Transformation of Journalism (Northwestern University Press, 2010) is the first comprehensive history of the development of online journalism and intertwines the development of computers as the third great communications platform with a history of the efforts to use that platform for journalism.

My interest in technology is three-fold. I study the diffusion of innovation–why certain new technologies win wide acceptance and why others don’t. I explore the practical application of information technology—who uses this “stuff,” for what ends and how effectively. And I explore the social ramifications of living in a digital environment. All three of those interests will be reflected in this blog.

A New Approach to Security

Wednesday, May 16, 2012 by Dr. Elliot King

A New Approach to Security

The day before the COMMON conference—IBM’s premier event for its midrange systems users--opened in Anaheim this month, IBM released a study reporting on the new role of security in many organizations and the new pressures on security officers.  According to the study, in most far-sighted companies, security is now seen as a business imperative rather than just a technological challenge.  As a result, security is now a regular topic of ongoing business discussions.

The...

Read More »

Less is More with Virtualization

Wednesday, May 9, 2012 by Dr. Elliot King

Less is More with Virtualization

If you think that the virtualization market is starting to mature, you may want to think again.  In fact, even though perhaps as many as 85 percent of large companies (and 67 percent of middle-sized companies) have implemented virtualization solutions to one degree or another, the market and the technology is developing rapidly and the potential ways to implement virtualization are growing. The key to understanding those trends is to think both bigger and...

Read More »

Smarter Planet? Think Local

Thursday, April 26, 2012 by Dr. Elliot King

Smarter Planet? Think Local

In the information technology arena, sometimes a marketing campaign can make a difference.  Intel’s Intel Inside program led consumers to actually realize that what was inside their devices counted.  Perhaps even more impressively, Apple’s Think Different fanned the embers of extreme loyalty among Macintosh users and we know where that ultimately led.

After four years, IBM’s Smarter Planet campaign has risen to the same level. When the IBM chairperson Sam Palmisano kicke...

Read More »

IBM's Next Step

Wednesday, April 25, 2012 by Dr. Elliot King

IBM’s Next Step

As anticipated, IBM has unveiled a major new architecture that some analysts say is on the scale of the historic IBM System/360 and the System/38 from days of yore.  Called PureSystems, IBM is touting the two packages unveiled as the first in a new category called “expert integrated systems.” 

There can be no doubt that IBM considers PureSystems a major step forward.  Over the past four years, Big Blue has acquired multiple companies and invested more than $2 billion in...

Read More »

Big Data is Getting Big Muscle

Tuesday, April 17, 2012 by Dr. Elliot King

As former President Bill Clinton might have said if he had campaigned to be president of IBM, “It’s the applications, stupid.” Since the beginning of the modern age of computing, the real value has not come from the technology itself, but what people can do with it.

And that is how you know that we are still at the very beginning of what promises to be a very significant revolution sparked by the application of Big Data. Over time, Big Data will be used to solve big problems; both ones we...

Read More »

Get Ready for IBM’s Next Generation Platform

Monday, April 9, 2012 by Dr. Elliot King

 

People with their eyes peeled to the blogosphere have picked up word that IBM is ready to unveil a major new server platform at a Webcast on April 11.  It’s dubbed internally as the Next Generation Platform and externally as an “expert integrated system”.  According to the invitation to the Webcast floating around the Internet,  the system will “integrate built-in expertise, integration by design and a simplified overall experience,” that will, once again, “change the economics of computing”.

Th...

Read More »

How to Think About Big Data

Tuesday, March 27, 2012 by Dr. Elliot King

For most of us, Big Data is pretty daunting. Everybody throws all those humongous numbers around - the amount of data will grow 800 percent in the next five years; 80 percent of the world’s data was created in the last two years; 80 percent of all data is unstructured; 30 billion pieces of information are shared on Facebook every month and so on - but in the trenches in many companies it is hard to see exactly how to capitalize on that data. 

So while in theory there is a lot more data out there,...

Read More »

Linux Powers On

Tuesday, March 13, 2012 by Dr. Elliot King

Last year, Linux turned 20. When Linux was created in 1991 as a sort of a hobby/social experiment/geek project by Linus Torvalds, it was little more than a curiosity. The whole concept of open source software was in its infancy as was the Internet itself, which became the key enabling technology for the whole open source movement.

When IBM decided to invest $1 billion in the platform in 2001, not only did Linux move to center stage of corporate computing, but all of it sudden it was seen as a...

Read More »

Computer Security’s High Stakes in Healthcare

Wednesday, March 7, 2012 by Dr. Elliot King

Computer and information security is a top priority in virtually every organization and venue. Reports of data and privacy breaches, identity and intellectual property theft and even espionage seem to be an almost daily occurrence.

But in healthcare, the security stakes are even higher than they are in many other industries. First, healthcare providers operate under strict federal regulations. The 1996 Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) mandate standards was designed...

Read More »

Big Gains for Big Data?

Tuesday, February 28, 2012 by Dr. Elliot King

You know that the concept of Big Data has gone mainstream when there is an article about it in The New York Times. Of course, going mainstream is a two-edged sword. The hype about what can be done now will grow and many people will ultimately be disappointed when the results don’t match the promise. The well-known Gartner Technology Hype Cycle is now officially in effect. On the other hand, with more people focused on the potential benefits of Big Data, more companies should be willing to...

Read More »

Adoption of Electronic Health Records Increases

Thursday, February 16, 2012 by Dr. Elliot King

Electronic Healthcare Records (EHR) are one of the essential lynchpins in Healthcare IT. In the long run, EHR will be the comprehensive record for patient care. Even a basic EHR will contain a listing of all of a patient’s diagnoses and help prevent harmful drug interactions. And if we’re lucky, EHRs will also eliminate the need to fill in all that nasty paperwork with complete health histories, every time we go to a specialist.

The good news is that the use of electronic health records grew more...

Read More »

Can IT Save Healthcare?

Friday, February 10, 2012 by Dr. Elliot King

In so many areas, the impact of computerization is now taken for granted. Foreign travelers expect that they can shove their ATM card into a machine anywhere in the world and money will pop out in seconds. Nobody thinks about all the processing that takes place to get that done. Ask an online search engine just about any question and it will produce an answer—though not always a correct answer—in a flash. And if you want to sort through terabytes of corporate data to identify trends or other...

Read More »

Your Mission, Should You Accept It

Monday, January 30, 2012 by Dr. Elliot King

Based on more than 3,000 interviews with CIOs around the world, in companies large and small, IBM’s 2011 research report The Essential CIO, is part of its C-Suite Studies series. This study is one of the more insightful and credible of its kind. The report provides an in-depth look at the changing role of the CIO within the enterprise and shifting demands on the IT organization.

From a 20,000 foot perspective, the report contends CIOs are faced with four different types of mandates—to leverage...

Read More »

Watson is the Real Deal

Monday, January 23, 2012 by Dr. Elliot King
When IBM’s new supercomputer Watson trounced Jeopardy champions Ken Jennings and Brad Rutter, after a three-night tournament last year, it was more than understandable that many people thought it was a cute stunt and good publicity but probably not much else. After all, we have been hearing about the impact artificial intelligence was going to have for as long as many of us have been alive. In the early 1950s, people were already arguing that computers would soon be able to accurately forecast the... Read More »

What the Cloud Still Needs

Thursday, January 12, 2012 by Dr. Elliot King

While many folks in the IT world are entranced by the Big Bang Theory and the Large Hadron Collider of technology innovation—some “killer app” will appear that revolutionizes everything—change in IT is usually incremental. Sure Time magazine may have named the personal computer the “machine of the year” in 1983. However, before PCs penetrated the corporate world, price points dropped dramatically, processing power went into overdrive and the graphical user interface became ubiquitous. Along the same...

Read More »

What is the CIO’s Role Now?

Wednesday, January 4, 2012 by Dr. Elliot King

In almost stealth fashion, the last five years have been a period of incredible innovation in corporate IT. The emergence of Cloud Computing, Software As A Service, the demand for mobility, the drive towards virtualization and the recognition of the importance of Big Data are leading to profound changes in the way organizations generate, communicate, apply and store data. And while the changes may not be as flashy and in-your-face as the previous IT revolutions launched by the personal computer...

Read More »

Last Set of Predictions

Wednesday, December 28, 2011 by Dr. Elliot King
The last week of December represents the perfect moment to review one last set of predictions for the New Year. After all, predictions can lead to resolutions and resolutions can lead to broken resolutions. Just kidding. Predictions can actually lead to setting the IT agenda; if not for this year, then for the next, or the year after that.

Perhaps the most extensive menu of predictions this year has come from the Gartner Group with 36 ideasabout what tomorrow might bring. The long list ensures...Read More »

Where Will IT Dollars be spent in 2012?

Wednesday, December 21, 2011 by Dr. Elliot King

With the New Year upon us, it is time to turn once again to one of our favorite past times—predictions. Where will you, your competitors (or your clients) be investing IT budgets next year?

The CIO Insight’s 2012 IT Investment Patterns Study forecasts that large enterprises will be increasing their budgets most significantly in mobile applications development, wireless equipment and network attached storage.  Mid-range companies, on the other hand, are stepping up their spending on ERP, sales...

Read More »

Don’t Blink

Wednesday, December 14, 2011 by Dr. Elliot King

In 2007, Malcolm Gladwell, perhaps the best-selling author on the planet today, now that J.K. Rowling is taking a breather, published the intriguing book Blink. The beguiling thesis of the book was that snap judgments made by the right person can be good - very, very good actually. Many people walked away from the book with perhaps the oversimplified or even wrong message that they should just go with their gut since it is usually as good as other methods of decision-making.

Well, don’t believe...

Read More »