Image Tech That Keeps Wildcats Connected Wednesday Many people think alumni engagement is only about keeping graduates informed. At the University of Arizona, it’s about building lifelong relationships, and increasingly, technology is helping make those connections more personalized, strategic, and scalable than ever before. Read more
New U of A AI Resources Wednesday The university’s AI roadmap has reached some significant milestones, shared in a town hall opened by chief AI officer David Ebert. The biggest news is that campus community members now have access to U of A GenAI collection built on AWS Bedrock. This includes the generative AI platforms that can support teaching, learning, research and administrative work. All are private and FERPA compliant, though not HIPAA compliant. Read more
Image Student Interns for Hands-on Tech Experience May 13, 2026 What is the IT job market going to look like in three years? With the advances in technology, especially Artificial Intelligence, it’s difficult to know, which is especially challenging for students working towards their degrees. Luckily, researchers at the University of Arizona are engaged in numerous important projects, from machine learning to quantum computing to health sciences and health sciences engineering. Read more
Image New Era of AI Assistants at the University April 29, 2026 When the Compass Assistant and Resource Advisor (CARA) recently went live, it marked more than the launch of another chatbot. It represented something bigger: a growing, campus-wide movement to bring practical, secure, and deeply integrated AI tools into everyday work across the University of Arizona. Read more
Image Inside the ServiceNow Transition to a Unified Platform April 29, 2026 Across the University of Arizona’s IT ecosystem, a quiet yet transformative effort is nearing completion, one most campus users will experience firsthand, often with a single click to submit a ServiceNow ticket. Beneath that simplicity lies a complex, months-long effort to integrate dozens of independent systems and workflows into a unified platform. Read more
Image From CoSy to Teams: A Familiar Story of Collaboration April 20, 2026 In 1987, the University of Arizona stood at the edge of something new. Today, as Microsoft Teams becomes the hub of collaboration across campus, it’s easy to think we’re navigating uncharted territory. But for many in IT, especially those who remember the early days here at the university, the story feels strikingly familiar. Read more
Image Managing Security Risks April 20, 2026 Members of the campus community are relying on the university’s critical systems to be secure—preventing bad actors from sabotaging services or stealing information. The core of information security is risk management. The Information Security Risk Management Program (RMaP) provides Information Resource Owners a way to identify and minimize potential risks to university systems and information before a successful threat is realized. For 2026, the RMaP cycle is in its 7th year. The program runs every spring, with completion due by June 30. Read more
Microsoft is Removing Copilot AI from Select Office Apps on April 15 April 13, 2026 Beginning Wednesday, April 15, Microsoft will stop offering the embedded Copilot tool within Word, Excel, PowerPoint and OneNote. This change will affect University of Arizona students and employees. You don’t need to take any action. Read more
Image Evolving Together: A Journey from Slack to Teams April 13, 2026 Eight years ago, the university faced a moment of change. As Skype reached the end of its lifecycle, teams in UITS needed a new way to communicate. What followed was months of evaluation, testing, and discussion, ultimately leading to the decision to adopt Slack at a time when Microsoft Teams was still emerging and not yet fully mature. Read more
Image Picturing Research at Biosphere 2 April 6, 2026 What will happen to rainforests as global temperatures rise with climate change? Biosphere 2 has the hottest rainforest on the planet—there’s a huge temperature change from the shaded forest floor to the top of the tree canopy under the Arizona sun. That makes it the ideal place for postdoctoral researcher Justin Bestily to study resilience in plant life. Read more