The Chronicle of Higher Education
The Wired Campus

December 13, 2007

Universities Clean Up at Technology Collaboration Awards

Five universities were among the 10 winners of the Mellon Awards for Technology Collaboration, announced this week. They will share $650,000 in prize money for “leadership in the collaborative development of open-source software tools with application to scholarship in the arts and humanities.”

The university winners were:

Duke University for the OpenCroquet open-source 3-D virtual worlds environment.

Open Polytechnic of New Zealand for several projects, including the New Zealand Open Source Virtual Learning Environment.

Middlebury College for the Segue interactive-learning management system.

University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana for two projects: the Firefox Accessibility Extension and the OpenEAI enterprise application integration project.

University of Toronto for the ATutor learning content-management system.

Other winners included the American Museum of the Moving Image for a collections-management system, and the Participatory Culture Foundation for the Miro media player.

The winners were announced at the fall task-force meeting of the Coalition for Networked Information, and awards were presented by the World Wide Web pioneer Tim Berners-Lee. —Josh Fischman

Posted on Thursday December 13, 2007 | Permalink |

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