Summary: OIT provides Domain Name Service (DNS) name-hosting for domains other than uci.edu when doing so is both in keeping with the campus's academic mission and when a name outside the uci.edu domain is appropriate for use by the organization or group requesting the name-hosting.
ASSIST Coordination Site
820 University Tower
Irvine, CA 92697-1005
Contact: Eric Taggart, Director
email: eric@assist.org
phone: 949-824-4385
Mission: ASSIST is California's official repository of transfer information and operates at all public Community College, California State University and University of California campuses. The ASSIST Coordination Site provides daily operational support for ASSIST along with software development and maintenance, database coordination, training, technical support and other coordinative activities.
Usage: ASSIST is used by students, faculty, staff and others throughout California to identify how courses taken at one institution may be applied at another. The web servers under www.assist.org currently process about 1.5M hits per month.
CalSWIM
c/o Prof. Stanley Grant
Henry Samueli School of Engineering
University of California
Irvine, CA 92697
Contact: Prof. Cristina Lopes
email: lopes <at> uci <dot> edu
phone: 949-824-1525
Mission:This web site assists coastal wetland and watershed managers, planners, and engineers in making cost-effective and scientifically justifiable decisions regarding the monitoring, management, and alteration of coastal urban wetlands and their associated watersheds.
The Cancer Genetics Network
Department of Medicine, Epidemiology Division
Contact: Maureen Gildea-Schroeder
E-mail: megildea@uci.edu
Phone: 949-824-1344
Mission:The Cancer Genetics Network is a federally-funded cancer research program that performs research on the genetic basis of cancer. CancerGeneticsNetwork.org will assist individuals in volunteering to participate in this important program to investigate cancer genetics.
Rescue Project
4300 Cal-IT2 Building
University of California, Irvine 92697-2800
Contact: Chris Davison
E-mail: rescue-help@ics.uci.edu
Phone: 949-824-4750
Mission: Response to large-scale disaster depends on many information sources (e.g., news media, satellite imager, blogs, sensor and warning systems) to help assess its geographic extent and relative severity. We realize that a reliable, efficient portal system, can capture, process and track the evolution of crisis in real-time and can be an invaluable resource to both the emergency response organizations and the general public. The Rescue group (www.itr-rescue.org) proposes to build such a situational awareness portal: the Disaster Portal. This portal will be tailored to rapidly gather data from disparate online resources and to provide reliable, pertinent, and timely information in a disaster.
International Society of Cancer Chemoprevention
UCI CHAO Family Comprehensive Cancer Center
Attention Janis DeJohn
101 The City Drive
Orange, CA 92868
UC Irvine Calit2
Research & Graduate Studies
416 Engineering Tower
Irvine, CA 92697-2800
Contact: Lorrie Minkel
E-mail: lgminkel@uci.edu
Phone: 949-824-9074
Mission: ITR-Rescue.org: Information Technology Research in Responding to Crises and Unexpected Events. This project brings together a research team in various relevant areas of information technology, social sciences, organizational behavior and disaster management and a community of first-responders to address challenges of information collection, analysis, sharing and dissemination in the context of crisis response.
Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering
Center for Biomedical Engineering
4200 Engineering Gateway
University of California, Irvine 92697-3975
Contact: Dave Reinkensmeyer
E-mail: dreinken@uci.edu
Phone: 949-824-5218
Mission: The goal of the java therapy program is to provide a inexpensive method for the rehabilitation of the physically disabled. The program will consist of patient access to a web site designed with force feedback technology scripted within each page. The increased movement will benefit the patients as a type of physical therapy, and will be monitored by the java therapy team.
Usage: Feedback from the web site will allow patients to gage their own recovery without numerous trips to an expensive doctor.
Rescue Project
4300 Cal-IT2 Building
University of California, Irvine 92697-2800
Contact: Chris Davison
E-mail: rescue-help@ics.uci.edu
Phone: 949-824-4750
Mission:
Sigmoid Pathway Modeling Project
Contact: Eric Mjolsness
E-mail: emj@uci.edu
Phone: 949-824-3533
Mission: The SIGMOID project is intended to produce a database of cellular signaling pathways and models thereof, to marshall the major forms of data and knowledge required as input to cellular modeling software and also to organize the outputs. Such cellular signaling and regulatory pathways are commonly hand-drawn in biological literature as an aid to intuitive understanding. Pathway databases can provide the same assistance in the context of attempts to achieve a quantitative understanding of cellular processes by numerical simulation. They can also serve as an aid to capturing and querying both expert knowledge and heterogeneous data sets pertaining to pathways. Cell model databases are a subject of current research. SIGMOID works at the interface of these two areas.
The site is a front end of the Sigmoid database.
Rescue Project
4300 Cal-IT2 Building
University of California, Irvine 92697-2800
Contact: Chris Davison
E-mail: rescue-help@ics.uci.edu
Phone: 949-824-4750
Mission: UCREC.org: Urban Crisis Response Center. This project brings together a research team in various relevant areas of information technology, social sciences, organizational behavior and disaster management and a community of first-responders to address challenges of information collection, analysis, sharing and dissemination in the context of crisis response.
Rescue Project
4300 Cal-IT2 Building
University of California, Irvine 92697-2800
Contact: Chris Davison
E-mail: rescue-help@ics.uci.edu
Phone: 949-824-4750
Mission: URBANRESPONSE.org: Urban Crisis Response Center. This project brings together a research team in various relevant areas of information technology, social sciences, organizational behavior and disaster management and a community of first-responders to address challenges of information collection, analysis, sharing and dissemination in the context of crisis response.