IT spending dips: budgets are bigger at private colleges.Technology spending for higher ed is projected to decline 4 percent this year, according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. Market Data Retrieval. In its report, "The cortege technology review," MDR MDR, n See multidrug resistance. MDR, n the abbreviation for minimum daily requirement, specifically the Minimum Daily Requirements for Specific Nutrients compiled by the United States Food and Drug Administration. says that overall spending will come to a total of $5.15 billion for the 2004-05 academic year. The slight dip dip, in agriculture, method of treating animals (chiefly livestock) infested with skin parasites such as mites, ticks, and warbles. The animal is dipped into or forced to swim through a tank filled with an insecticide solution. in overall spending is the first drop reported by MDR in its eight years of tracking. The details reveal a good news/bad news picture. Private IHEs are spending more on IT. They will spend 28 percent more--accounting for a total of $996,319. That's the good news. Public universities, however, are cutting spending by 13 percent. MDR pegs their total at $1.3 million. Slightly more than 51 percent of the spending will be applied to administrative technology needs, while the remainder will be applied to academic IT. In all, $1.4 billion will be spent on computers, servers, networks and other academic IT needs. Most IHEs have budgeted about twice as much for hardware than for software. MDR's annual college technology survey is based on the responses from 5,400, accredited accredited recognition by an appropriate authority that the performance of a particular institution has satisfied a prestated set of criteria. accredited herds cattle herds which have achieved a low level of reactors to, e.g. two-year and four-year colleges and universities. Other key findings: * 79% of IHEs have wireless networks, up from 70% last year. * 36% of IHEs use mobile laptop Same as laptop computer. laptop - portable computer carts--long popular in K-12 education. * 50% provide internet access See how to access the Internet. in student residence halls. * 64% offer distance learning, down from 67% in 2004.
Average Technology Budgets (in thousands)
Academic Administrative Total
Small (under 2,500 students) $248,700 $216,200 $464,900
Medium (2,501-10,000) 653,000 569,300 $1,222,300
Large (10,001-25,000) 1,643,700 2,024,900 $3,668,600
Very large (over 25,000) 2,080,000 4,028,800 $6,108,800
Source: Market Data Retrieval
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