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Manchester's Silicon Mountain aims for the tech summit

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  • Manchester's Silicon Mountain aims for the tech summit

    ...I'Man it seems your Digital Yard project is ideally positioned...doan tap atall... Silicon Mountain tuh di Werl!!

    Manchester explores knowledge based options

    Observer Central
    BY RHOMA TOMLINSON Observer writer
    Monday, July 02, 2012



    MANDEVILLE, Manchester — Mandeville-based Northern Caribbean University (NCU), which has gained international acclaim for its student work in technology, and respect as one of the country's premier tertiary institutions, is continuing its drive for Mandeville to be transformed into an internationally recognised university town.

    The institution called together a number of Manchester's business, political and civic leaders to discuss the way forward, following calls for the central Manchester town to be made into an information technology and knowledge-based hub akin to Silicon Valley.

    Located in northern California, Silicon Valley is home to many of the world's largest technology corporations and is synonymous with high-tech innovation.

    Both the presenters and members of the public who were on hand to ask questions and make suggestions about the future of Mandeville agreed that NCU had a major role to play in pushing the long-desired transformation.

    Member of Parliament Peter Bunting said given NCU's worldwide recognition — especially in information technology — coupled with its academic offerings and those of other tertiary and secondary institutions, Mandeville could become a centre of excellence not just for ICT, but for knowledge- and health-based industries.

    "With knowledge and technology being the centrepiece of economic advantage and global competitiveness, many countries have invested in the so-called knowledge
    cities to increase their competitiveness and attract investment," he said, noting that cities such as Barcelona in Spain and Melbourne in Australia, have pushed their resources into scientific research and innovative technological development.

    Bunting said education, health services and information and communication technologies (ICT), would form the hub of this centre
    of excellence.
    "If we get these up and running, many other industries would come out of them...," the MP said.

    In addition to Mandeville having some of the island's top high schools and tertiary institutions, Bunting said he was moving to upgrade the Mandeville Regional Hospital from a Type B to a Type A facility.
    "We're not far off. We have most of the services and specialties required. We need an intensive care unit...all these are within relative reach, I believe, in the medium term," he said.

    The Manchester Central MP said he has written to the Transport Ministry requesting that it allocate a parcel of land it now owns to the hospital, to accommodate an extension of its services.

    But even as the MP pushes for Mandeville's economic transformation, Mayor Brenda Ramsay says it cannot be business as usual. She said though Mandeville has much to be proud of, it has still not solved its water woes. She said the parish council would be pushing the National Water Commission to commission the Number Four Well at Pepper into service. The Well, which is expected to pump millions of gallons of additional of water up the Spur Tree Hill and into Mandeville, has met with numerous legal and financial snags.

    "If I'm to be very honest, some of the delays have been caused by a lack of will to have this done and done in a timely manner...this falls under the purview of the National Water Commission but we at the Council feel that we have such a vested interest that we're not going to leave it to them and their timelines... This has to happen if we really are to have the level of development which we are all aiming for," she said.

    The Mayor also called for changes to be made to some of the archaic legislation still on the books. "If we are able to do all of this, not only will we be able to capture the investment, but the citizens will be able to enjoy a better quality of life... and then and only then can we truly boast that Manchester is the place of choice to live, work, play and learn.," she said.

    Meanwhile, President of the Manchester Chamber of Commerce Wendy Freckleton said her organisation is making itself even more visible among the communities in the parish. She told the gathering that the Chamber has tackled the problem of illiteracy among some students, as
    it has a direct co-relation to development.

    Manchester is one of the few parishes in the country, which has a completed Parish Development Plan and an active Parish Development Committee. The committee along with parish stakeholders sought and received funding from the Canadian government to design a comprehensive parish development plan for the parish, to fuel growth over the next several years. The plan, the first of its kind in Jamaica, was completed in 2008.

    This central Jamaica parish is seen as one of the more affluent in the country, with a number of prominent businesses and institutions either originating there, or opening branches there. It is replete with sprawling houses and high-end apartment complexes and continues to attract returning residents. A number of the island's government officials and heads of prominent organizations call the parish home. The country's fourth Mega mart store is scheduled to open its doors in the parish by December.


    Read more: http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/news/...#ixzz1zTnQDyyM
    TIVOLI: THE DESTRUCTION OF JAMAICA'S EVIL EMPIRE

    Recognizing the victims of Jamaica's horrendous criminality and exposing the Dummies like Dippy supporting criminals by their deeds.. or their silence.

    D1 - Xposing Dummies since 2007

  • #2
    Me a go try visit NCU next time I am in JA. Never been there before. Look like them a try do some interesting things.

    Don't know if you saw this article on the new President :

    http://jamaica-gleaner.com/gleaner/2...ews/news3.html
    "‎It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men" - Frederick Douglass

    Comment


    • #3
      No had not seen that... it's a good read... my key takeaway:


      "We must move technology out from the campus into the rest of the nation
      I believe we have an app for that
      TIVOLI: THE DESTRUCTION OF JAMAICA'S EVIL EMPIRE

      Recognizing the victims of Jamaica's horrendous criminality and exposing the Dummies like Dippy supporting criminals by their deeds.. or their silence.

      D1 - Xposing Dummies since 2007

      Comment


      • #4
        LOL. So true.
        "‎It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men" - Frederick Douglass

        Comment


        • #5
          In praise of NCU

          Monday, July 02, 2012

          THE recent formal installation of its new president, Dr Trevor Gardner, reminds us of the wonderful contribution Northern Caribbean University (NCU) is making to Jamaica and more particularly to the south central town of Mandeville, the parish of Manchester and the nation’s central region.

          A century ago — give or take a few years — when the initial training school was first started by the Seventh-day Adventists few would have envisioned its transformation to its pivotal place in modern Jamaica.

          Quietly, without fanfare, the institution evolved through the decades athletically embracing and adjusting to changing realities to achieve university status in 1999.

          If anything NCU’s growth since then has been even more admirable. The Planning Institute of Jamaica’s Economic & Social Survey tells us that at the end of 2011, NCU offered 87 undergraduate programmes and 15 at the graduate level.

          Undergraduate programmes started in 2011 included Bachelor of Music in Performance, Bachelor of Science in Music, and Bachelor of Science in Industrial and Organisational Counselling; Bachelor of Science in Computer Science, Bachelor of Science in Computer Information Science; Associate of Science in Mechanical Engineering, Associate of Science in Electrical Engineering and Associate of Science in Computer Systems Engineering.

          At the graduate level, programmes introduced last year include PhDs in Counselling Psychology, Biology, Public Health, Master of Science in Information Systems, Master of Science in Environmental Science and Post-Graduiate Diploma in Education.

          Global respect and admiration have come to NCU for work in new technologies — not least because of the extraordinary achievement of students from its Department of Computer and Information Sciences in winning at the world finals of the Microsoft Imagine Cup competition in 2010.

          New technologies apart, the university is playing a lead role in research with an eye to the traditional — farming, for example.

          Enrolment at NCU is now said to be over 6,000 students and the university employs 1,700 people. Some reports suggest that as much as $6 billion is pumped into the Jamaican economy each year as a direct result of NCU’s activities.

          Physical infrastructure has grown to match academic expansion. The 200-acre main campus, two miles south of the Mandeville town centre, is rapidly filling out and there are also extension campuses in Kingston, Montego Bay and Runaway Bay.

          Aware of its social responsibilities to the wider community, NCU’s outreach programmes have been exemplary — its Community Counselling and Restorative Justice programme being among the more acclaimed.

          Dr Gardner takes control of the university at a time of growing expectation that the institution will play a lead role as Mandeville and Manchester strive to build knowledgebased industries in the post-bauxite era.

          Dr Gardner’s own vision of Mandeville as Jamaica’s silicon mountain is encouraging. We are equally buoyed by his promise of even more rapid growth and change for NCU over the next few years.

          Without growth, as we should all be aware, there is inevitable stagnation and, ultimately, regression.

          We wish Dr Gardner and the NCU well



          Read more: http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/edito...#ixzz1zZjfhSuW
          "‎It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men" - Frederick Douglass

          Comment


          • #6
            Noice!!
            TIVOLI: THE DESTRUCTION OF JAMAICA'S EVIL EMPIRE

            Recognizing the victims of Jamaica's horrendous criminality and exposing the Dummies like Dippy supporting criminals by their deeds.. or their silence.

            D1 - Xposing Dummies since 2007

            Comment

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