Edwin-Michael Cortez

Edwin-Michael Cortez (December 16, 1951 – October 6, 2018) was a library science professor and director of the School of Information Sciences at the University of Tennessee.[1][2]

Early life

Cortez was born in New York City the son of Michael and Cecilia (Vasquez) Cortez. He graduated from Wagner College in 1972, received his Master of Library Science from University of Arizona in 1973 and Doctor of Philosophy in Information Science and Management Communication from the University of Southern California in 1980.[2]

Professional life

Cortez was a professor at University of Wisconsin–Madison for 17 years and was acting dean of Catholic University of America. He joined the University of Tennessee faculty in 2005 where he served as professor and Director for 11 years, retiring at the end of 2016.[3]

He was an early automation consultant, helping library systems such as Ann Arbor Public Library, California State Library and the Connecticut State University System, evaluate and implement circulation, database and online catalog systems in the 1980s.[4]

Research

Dr. Cortez's worked on the overlapping of information technology, organizational communication, and organizational effectiveness. He used ethnographic and social network theories to inform information technology design and management. He was the principal investigator for three years on the USDA's project, the REEIS initiative (Research, Education & Economic Information Systems) which aimed to "build a comprehensive web-based information system in the field of agriculture."[1]

gollark: That might make sense (restricted to the relevant folders, not losg and random stuff, at least).
gollark: What's a good way to manage all my services and stuff in a reasonably centralized fashion (yes, I know this is pretty vague)? I run many random webservices (some run in docker, they're all behind a reverse proxy (caddy)), having manually installed them, configured configuration, and in some cases set up service files for them, but I'm worried about the hassle restoring all this stuff would be in case of server failure and backing up all of `/` just seems inelegant. What I eventually want is to be able to, if my server or drives fail, redownload some scripts/configs/whatever, run some simple commands, load a backup of the relevant data and restart things.
gollark: <@404675960663703552> Random kind of late interjection: Ryzen can do (not the registered kind) ECC memory, though probably not on all boards. There's an ASRock one with IPMI and stuff which supports it.
gollark: Just buy 5 MacBooks, then, obviously.
gollark: I don't think they are great NAS choices.

References

  1. "Selected Works of Edwin-Michael Cortez". Retrieved 16 October 2018.
  2. Silvey, Donna. "Information Sciences Former Director Ed Cortez Dies at Sixty-six". College of Communication and Information. University of Tennessee Knoxville. Retrieved 16 October 2018.
  3. "Ed Cortez". School of Information Sciences. University of Tennessee Knoxville. Archived from the original on 5 July 2018. Retrieved 16 October 2018.
  4. "CV of EDWIN MICHAEL CORTEZ School of Information Sciences University of Tennessee". Docplayer. Retrieved 16 October 2018.
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