Taking technology curbside and beyond: Wyndham's tech guru speeds things up so clients can slow down and relax.There are no long check in lines snaking through the lobby of Wyndham International Inc.'s upscale hotels and resorts, Instead, guests are met curbside by handheld-toting employees who use a wireless service to check them in and whisk them off to their rooms. Thank Lyndon A. Brown, 39, for making that seamless check-in--among other technological innovations--a reality for Dallas based Wyndham International, which created the service with its By Request club members in mind. As the hotel chain's manager of strategic support services support services Psychology Non-health care-related ancillary services–eg, transportation, financial aid, support groups, homemaker services, respite services, and other services . Brown, and his 10-person systems administrations department, brought the idea from concept to reality a few years ago. By investing roughly $l million in the project, Wyndham became the first U.S.-based hotel chain to implement seamless wireless curbside check-in. "When I travel, the last thing I want to see when I get to my destination is a long check-in line," says Brown, who joined Wyndham's IT strategic support services department seven years ago and manages an IT budget of $7 million. "To make sure our guests don't have to go through that, we've pioneered a technology that expedites check-ins, enhances their experiences at our properties, and hopefully turns them into repeat customers." Brown's technology contributions don't stop there. He also implemented a centralized cen·tral·ize v. cen·tral·ized, cen·tral·iz·ing, cen·tral·iz·es v.tr. 1. To draw into or toward a center; consolidate. 2. property management system for 30 of Wyndham's properties and oversees a high-speed Internet See broadband. technology system for more than 20,000 guest rooms and 500 meeting morns. Brown, who was nominated for USBE USBE US BioEnergy Corporation (stock symbol) & Information Technology magazine's 2003 Black Engineer of the Year award, also oversees an enterprise class e-mail system that main-rains a 98.5% uptime capability. Other recent projects include overseeing an infrastructure shift from Windows NT (Windows New Technology) A 32-bit operating system from Microsoft for Intel x86 CPUs. NT is the core technology in Windows 2000 and Windows XP (see Windows). Available in separate client and server versions, it includes built-in networking and preemptive multitasking. 4.0 to an Active Directory 2003 conversion and conducting a simultaneous conversion era large, multi-server Exchange 5.5 infrastructure to a centralized Exchange 2003 clustered environment. A University of Oklahoma University of Oklahoma, abbreviated OU, is a coeducational public research university located in the U.S. state of Oklahoma. Founded in 1890, it existed in Oklahoma Territory near Indian Territory 17 years before the two became the state of Oklahoma. graduate who earned a bachelor of science Noun 1. Bachelor of Science - a bachelor's degree in science BS, SB bachelor's degree, baccalaureate - an academic degree conferred on someone who has successfully completed undergraduate studies in business management, Brown started his career in the healthcare industry, handling employee benefits. He switched to the high tech field 15 years ago and says working in DOS- and UNIX-based environments in the early 1990s taught him the importance of staying up-to-date with the latest tech trends. "I learned quickly that you either sink or swim in this field," says Brown. "You've got to be able to adapt and learn quickly, or you won't make it." Brown also discovered that until about eight years ago, very few African Americans African American Multiculture A person having origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa. See Race. saw the technology sector as a career opportunity. "Company-wide, I would be the only one," says Brown. "I would go into a conference or meeting dealing with technology, and 2% of the attendees would be black, sometimes even less." Challenges aside, Brown sags he enjoys the sheer excitement that comes from immersing himself in technology for a living. To stay on top of trends in the rapidly-evolving sector, he attends conferences, reads technology trade journals and magazines, and participates in online newsgroups This is a list of newsgroups that are significant for their popularity or their position in Usenet history. As of October 2002, there are about 100,000 Usenet newsgroups, of which approximately a fifth are active. . When a new application or system hits the market, he's ready to test it out and--if it meets his company's needs--implement it quickly. "I've seen many people fall in love with a certain technology and try to stick with it, instead of upgrading and changing," says Brown. "Then they Fall behind the curve in their employer's eyes. It's not a favorable position Noun 1. favorable position - the quality of being at a competitive advantage favourable position, superiority advantage, vantage - the quality of having a superior or more favorable position; "the experience gave him the advantage over me" to be in." Deanne Phillips. spokesperson for e-mail security solutions provider MailFrontier in Palo Alto Palo Alto, city, California Palo Alto (păl`ō ăl`tō), city (1990 pop. 55,900), Santa Clara co., W Calif.; inc. 1894. Although primarily residential, Palo Alto has aerospace, electronics, and advanced research industries. . California, ranks Wyndham among the company's most "forward-thinking" customers and credits Brown for staying on top of new problems that come down the IT pike. Brown recently implemented MailFrontier's antispam application, which has successfully blocked unwanted e-mail at Wyndham. "Lyndon embraces whal's available," says Phillips, "'and stays well ahead of the curve." |
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