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Draft:Anthony Pennings

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  • Comment: Large tracts of Pennings' career are unsupported by reliable, independent, secondary sources with reputations for accuracy and fact-checking. Most current citations are routine mentions or links to works by Pennings, not about him. If there is no significant coverage (more than fleeting mentions) in published sources, then he does not meet WP:GNG. Submitter might look at verification requirements per WP:NACADEMIC to explore how this could be improved. Paul W (talk) 10:46, 23 June 2024 (UTC)
  • Comment: Far too much unreferenced information for an article on a living person.
    And please don't cite Amazon as a source, it's just a retailer. DoubleGrazing (talk) 08:39, 30 May 2024 (UTC)

Anthony Pennings
Pennings in 2016
Born
Anthony J. Pennings

(1956-02-27) 27 February 1956 (age 68)
Austin, Texas, United States
NationalityUSA
CitizenshipUSA
EducationUniversity of Hawaii
Antioch University
SUNY Oswego
Alma mater University of Hawaii (MA)
University of Hawaii (PhD)
Children1
Scientific career
InstitutionsHannam University (global media and economics)
St. Edward's University
New York University
Victoria University of Wellington
East–West Center (a fellow)
ThesisSymbolic Economies and Politics of Global Cyberspace (1993)
WebsitePersonal Blog

Anthony J. Pennings is an American academic. A full professor at the State University of New York (located in Songdo, South Korea)[1] he is undergraduate program director for the BS in Technological Systems Management[2] that has a specialization in ICT4D.

Career[edit]

Pennings was an early pioneer of ICT4D, co-authoring a book, Computerization and Development in Southeast Asia (1987), with Syed A. Rahim while he was at the East-West Center's Communication Institute.[3] Pennings was a degree participant in the 1980s where he participated in the National Computerization Policy Program with Meheroo Jussawalla, a development economist.[citation needed] He taught global media and economics at Hannam University in South Korea.[citation needed]

Pennings was on the faculty of New York University from 2002 to 2012.[citation needed] He created the BS in Digital Media and Communications, and the BS in Information Systems Management when he was hired at NYU to redesign the previous BS in Communication Technology degree.[citation needed] At NYU he primarily taught Digital Economics, Comparative Political Economy, and Macroeconomics.[citation needed] He designed the FOMC Simulation which is still used today to help students to understand the Federal Reserve Bank and its monetary policy.[citation needed] He also taught at St. Edwards University in Austin, Texas.[citation needed]

Pennings took his first academic position at Victoria University in Wellington, New Zealand.where he researched privatization and participated in the development of an early Internet-based tele-learning system based on audio-graphics. The project connected students around several cities in New Zealand, and one course with graduate students at the University of Hawaii.[4][5]

Research interests[edit]

Pennings is primarily concerned with broadband policy and net neutrality stemming from a long history in telecommunications research. He is concerned with how net neutrality can affect different edge applications including AI, Connected Cars, and VPNs. He has also been investigating the digital spreadsheet since his PhD dissertation.[6]

Pennings is a blogger, building a substantial block of data for a future AI project on his work. The blog includes books and films, data analysis, digital media, financial technology, and global communication resources.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Korea, SUNY. "기술경영학과". Technology and Society. SUNY Korea. Retrieved 6 June 2024.
  2. ^ University, Stony Brook. "Technological Systems Management". www.stonybrook.edu. Stony Brook University. Retrieved 6 June 2024.
  3. ^ Rahim, Syed A.; Pennings, Anthony J. (1987). Computerization and development in Southeast Asia: a study of five ASEAN countries. Singapore, Republic of Singapore: Asian Mass Communication Research and Information Centre. p. 196. ISBN 9789971905279.
  4. ^ The Tri-Centre Project: Action Research and the Development of a National Tele-educational Network in New Zealand with John Tiffin, David Beattie Professor of Communications; Lalita Rajasingham, Chairperson, Dept. of Communications; and Anthony J. Pennings, Senior Lecturer, Communications Studies, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand
  5. ^ Proceedings, Pacific Telecommunications Council fifteenth annual conference, PTC '93: January 17 - 20, 1993, Honolulu, Hawaii. Vol. 2. Honolulu, Hawaii: Pacific Telecommunications Council. 1993. ISBN 1-880672-04-9.
  6. ^ Pennings, Anthony (1993). Symbolic Economies and the Politics of Global Cyberspaces (PhD thesis). University of Hawaii.