An Information Technology Teaming Outreach Event will be held on Thursday, 18 August 2016 at the Wake Technical Community College Western campus in Cary, NC. This event is sponsored by Carolina Advanced Digital, The North Carolina Military Business Center (NCMBC), and Wake Technical Community College Small Business Center.
Who should attend?
IT businesses including any IT related activities such as staffing, cable installation, etc who:
- Could benefit from hearing the “lessons learned” of a successful SB contractor who has endured the challenges and pitfalls of federal contracting.
- Could use a “contract vehicle” to ease how a potential customer can contract with your company, speed the acquisition process, and reduce competition.
- Would like the chance to network with other potential teammates and competitors “competi-mates”
When. Thursday, 18 August 2016 from 9:30 AM – 2:00 PM
09:30-10:00 Check in & Networking
10:00-11:00 Lessons Learned as a SB entering the Federal Market
11:00-12:00 CAD Contracts – SEWP V Overview; Subcontractor Requirements
12:00-12:15 Break & Grab Lunch (provided)
12:15- 1:00 (Working Lunch) General Q& A Session
1:00 – 2:00 One on One discussions with CAD
Where. WakeTechnical Community College, Western Wake Campus, 3434 Kildaire Farm Road, Cary, NC 27518
Registration. This is a free event; however, registration is required, and we will limit to the first 100 who sign up.
To register or for more information, visit: http://www.ncmbc.us/information-technology-teaming-outreach-event/
Presentation at NCHICA’s annual conference.
Expert Mobility: Managing Wifi, Wearables, Sensors & IoT for Availability, Quality & Security for Availability, Quality & Security (Tuesday 10:15-11:15 am)
Today’s connected hospital relies on mobility for everything from guest services to tracking patients and administering medications. As trends in mHealth and IoHT (Internet of Healthcare Things) grow, the requirements of your network morph to a mobile-first environment where availability, security, and quality are key to patient care and privacy. Learn about the underlying technologies and trends including:
- Today’s and tomorrow’s mobile technology trends
- Specific considerations for healthcare
- Managing the logical and physical aspects of mobility
- Considerations for planning, managing, and securing your mobile environments
- Best practices in design and implementation
Session Objectives:
- Discuss current and future mobile trends in healthcare.
- Describe best practices for managing the availability, quality, and security of mobile environments.
- Describe threats and vulnerabilities of mobile technology and mitigation techniques.
Jennifer Minella (Carolina Advanced Digital)
VP of Engineering, Jennifer Minella is a member of the RSAC Program Committee, and will be speaking at the RSA Conference.
https://www.rsaconference.com/speakers/jennifer-minella
Presenting “Expert Mobility: Managing the Wi-Fi World of Wearables, Sensors and IoT”
February 16, 2017 | 2:45 pm – 3:30 pm | Moscone West | 2004 – Interested? We have you covered! This popular session will also be streamed live in Room 2000.
https://www.rsaconference.com/events/us17/agenda/sessions/7239-expert-mobility-managing-wi-fi-wearables-sensors
Hosting the first ever “Securing Diversity: Women in Cybersecurity” event at RSAC
February 13, 2017 | 2:00 pm – 5:00 pm | Moscone West | 2001
https://www.rsaconference.com/events/us17/agenda/sessions/7076-Securing-Diversity-Women-in-Cybersecurity
RSAC TV Interview with Jennifer Minella
https://www.rsaconference.com/videos/rsac-tv-jennifer-minella-interview
Presentation and exhibiting sponsor at NCHICA’s annual conference.
Why Your NAC Projects Keep Failing (Tuesday 11:15-12:00)
with Jennifer Minella and Wayne Gaudette
About the conference
The NCHICA Annual Conference provides an excellent opportunity to learn about the latest developments and best practices in healthcare IT. The theme of this year’s conference is Securing the Future of Healthcare through Collaboration, and the agenda is packed with 4 plenary sessions, 21 breakout sessions, and 3 half-day forums. Special events include a Tailgate Party in the exhibit hall and a Durham Gourmet Restaurant Tour on Monday evening. Click on the links below for further details:
VP of Engineering, Jennifer Minella is a member of the RSAC Program Committee, and will be speaking at the RSA Conference.
https://www.rsaconference.com/speakers/jennifer-minella
Presenting “Why Your NAC Projects Keep Failing: Addressing Products, People, Processes”
Wednesday, Apr 18 | 03:00 p.m. – 03:45 p.m. | Moscone South 207
A vendor-neutral look at resolving the three main pitfalls of NAC projects: products, people and processes. This session will look at architectures that dictate product success or failure in an environment and mapping to today’s products, followed by a look at the processes and people topics that can’t be ignored for successful NAC projects. Presented by a NAC SME based on 10+ years and hundreds of client projects.
Watch the recording at: https://bit.ly/2K2Ye0g
RSAC TV Interview with Jennifer Minella
https://www.rsaconference.com/videos/rsac-tv-jennifer-minella-interview
Presentation and exhibiting sponsor at NCHICA’s annual conference.
About the conference
The NCHICA Annual Conference provides an excellent opportunity to learn about the latest developments and best practices in healthcare IT. The theme of this year’s conference is Securing the Future of Healthcare through Collaboration, and the agenda is packed with 4 plenary sessions, 21 breakout sessions, and 3 half-day forums. Special events include a Tailgate Party in the exhibit hall and a Durham Gourmet Restaurant Tour on Monday evening. Click on the links below for further details:
VP of Engineering, Jennifer Minella is a member of the RSAC Program Committee, and will be speaking at the RSA Conference.
https://www.rsaconference.com/speakers/jennifer-minella
2028 Future State: Long Live the Firewall?”
Tuesday, Mar 05 | 01:00 p.m. – 01:50 p.m. | Moscone West 3001
The threat landscape has changed since the invention of the firewall 30 years ago, but not because threat actors or their motivations have changed; our networks and how we need to protect them have changed. Not only do we need to start developing tools that adapt to the threats of today, but we need to threat model in a more sophisticated way and ask more questions about what can go wrong.
Learning Objectives:
1: Understand what the firewall of 2028 will look like, and if it will even exist as we know it today.
2: Examine the commercial tools market to see what best adapts to shifts in attack tactics and surface.
3: Learn how to adapt threat modeling to accommodate the actual threat landscape.