ALTOM: Technology projects require end-user input
As we used to say in a career I had long ago, you can hammer a nail with your shoe, but it’s not particularly efficient. Unfortunately, too many technology users are doing just that.
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As we used to say in a career I had long ago, you can hammer a nail with your shoe, but it’s not particularly efficient. Unfortunately, too many technology users are doing just that.
Real estate investor Chris Marten and his wife, Janice—a longtime Carmel jeweler—charge in a new federal lawsuit that investigators trampled on their constitutional rights during the inquiry, which resulted in 28 criminal charges.
Those of you have followed my ramblings over the years may be surprised to learn there are a few things on which I agree with former Indiana University basketball coach Bob Knight.
Administrators at Indiana University and IUPUI want to create a philanthropy-driven school in Indianapolis, and they might do away with another widely recognized school in the process.
Pink Ribbon Connection's mission is to provide support, information and resources to those touched by breast cancer in central Indiana.
No one has said right-to-work will be the immediate cure-all for what ails our economy (our struggles are largely due to national concerns). But it also won’t lower wages and threaten workers’ safety and health care, as opponents claimed.
It only makes sense that if students attend more than one school in a given year, there would be a funding system that counts students’ attendance more than once a year.
Gov. Daniels and the Indiana Legislature seized the brave choice to do what was right for residents and union workers and passed right-to-work legislation.
I have my own “principled” critique of the Affordable Care Act.
Mail operations in Bloomington, Kokomo, Lafayette, Muncie and Columbus will be moved to Indianapolis. Mail operations at Terre Haute will be divided between Indianapolis and Evansville, and mail operations at Gary will go to a processing center in Bedford Park, Ill.
Private clubs and private businesses are subject to all kinds of reasonable government measures. Why exclude smoking?
Phoenix Theater offers Indiana premiere of "August: Osage County," a sprawling, brutally intimate epic both intensely personal and apocalyptic.
Last in a month-long series of looks at new north-side restaurants.
I was pleased when the Hoosier State Press Association recently honored Shepard with a Frank O’Bannon Sunshine Award for his support of open government. I can’t think of a more deserving recipient.
TIF proponents argue that the new private-sector developments—from the JW Marriott downtown to the Dow AgroSciences expansion on the northwest side—wouldn’t happen without the incentives.
An additional $1 million is being put into a plan providing more money to victims of last summer's deadly stage collapse at the Indiana State Fair.
She rarely won. Her tantrums became old and tired. But the media and casual race fans loved Danica Patrick. So the big question remains, will the series be better or worse off without her?
Building permits filed in the nine-county Indianapolis metropolitan area totaled 194 in January, a 2-percent dip from the same time last year. But industry leaders are cautiously optimistic.
Nearly three dozen not-for-profits would have to stop selling their specialty license plates under a bill approved by an Indiana House panel Wednesday. The legislation would eliminate specialty plates approved this year and those that sold fewer than 1,000 in 2011. Indiana not-for-profits receive $25 from every $40 a motorist spends on a specialty plate. The state sold more than 420,000 such plates last year, netting more than $11 million for the organizations, but bill backers say there are too many plates and not enough oversight of how the money is spent. Groups that could be affected if the measure passes include the Indianapolis Zoo, Habitat for Humanity and Indiana Youth Group.
A northwest-side church day care center will be closed the rest of the week after a toddler drowned Wednesday in the baptismal font. Juan Cardenas, 1, was being cared for at Praise Fellowship Assembly of God when he apparently wandered into the church. He was pronounced dead at St. Vincent Hospital. The day care center, classified by the state as an "unlicensed registered ministry,” has a history of safety violations but no record of formal complaints from parents. Police are investigating.