Albuquerque Journal

Data services for schools

CNM, Harmonix partner up to offer free network management

- BY KEVIN ROBINSON-AVILA JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

WE CAN PROVIDE RACK SPACE TO MAINTAIN AND SUPPORT SERVERS FOR ANY SCHOOL THAT NEEDS IT. FENG HOU, CNM CHIEF INFORMATIO­N OFFICER

Central New Mexico Community College is opening up its state-of-the-art data center to educationa­l institutio­ns around the state through a new joint venture with the Albuquerqu­e company Harmonix Technologi­es Inc.

The nonprofit organizati­on CNM Ingenuity, which manages commercial activities for the college, announced the new public-private partnershi­p on Monday. The partners will offer comprehens­ive network management services to schools across New Mexico through CNM’s existing 3,000 square-foot data center on its main campus in Albuquerqu­e. Services could include building and hosting cloud-based systems for schools, co-locating a school’s servers at CNM’s center if needed, and training opportunit­ies for students and IT workers.

The new venture means grade schools and higher-education institutio­ns can immediatel­y plug into existing, modern IT infrastruc­ture without footing the capital costs for building new systems, said CNM Chief Informatio­n Officer Feng Hou.

“It’s exciting, because we’re leveraging our technical capabiliti­es to allow other schools to enjoy the same modern informatio­n technology that we have,” Hou said. “CNM’s data center is state of the art. It’s one of the best in New Mexico.”

CNM partnered with Harmonix because it is a successful, homegrown New Mexico company with a stellar reputation for quality IT services, said CNM Ingenuity Executive Director Kyle Lee. The company, which launched in 2005, has a significan­t track record of working with schools and other public institutio­ns in New Mexico and elsewhere.

Its headquarte­rs are in Albuquerqu­e with a regional office in Dulce in northern New Mexico. It employs 30 people around the state, earning $6.5 million in revenue in 2016.

“Harmonix is a cutting-edge IT company that can help us create cost-effective opportunit­ies for the educationa­l community statewide,” Lee said. “As a private company, they can also help us keep up with the constant changes and evolution in the informatio­n technology market.”

The partnershi­p can save money for New Mexico’s cash-strapped schools, said Harmonix CEO Jack Vigil.

“We’ll help them design network infrastruc­ture without the huge capital expenditur­es normally required up front,” Vigil said. “We’ll work with manufactur­ers to incorporat­e best-of-breed products for virtual networks.”

Institutio­ns that have their own data centers and networks could also co-locate some servers at CNM.

“We can provide rack space to maintain and support servers for any school that needs it,” Hou said.

The partners will also jointly design an IT workforce training curriculum, allowing public entities to contract with CNM and Harmonix to send their employees through training before returning to their own institutio­ns. Credit and noncredit training will also be made available for the general public.

 ?? COURTESY OF CNM ?? Bob Halverson, Central New Mexico Community College’s executive director of Agile Services, checks out CNM’s state-of-the-art data center in Albuquerqu­e.
COURTESY OF CNM Bob Halverson, Central New Mexico Community College’s executive director of Agile Services, checks out CNM’s state-of-the-art data center in Albuquerqu­e.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States