Modern ideas about the information society in Europe

Vágólapra másolva!
On October 20-21, a two-day international conference was held in Budapest, under the title of i2010 - A European Information Society for Growth and Employment, where the invited domestic and foreign lecturers expressed their opinion on the challenges and opportunities of the emerging information society in Europe.
Vágólapra másolva!
We need new plans to improve the competitiveness of the EU/en/20051106weneed.htmlInterview with Christian KirchnerA European Information Society for Growth and Employment/en/20050916aeuropean.htmlThe Program of the Conference

On Thursday, in the morning, Norbert Kroó, Vice President of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, former lecturer of ENCOMPASS, and György Csepeli, State Secretary of the Ministry of Informatics and Communications gave the opening address of the two-day event. Below, we give a short summary on the topics covered in the lectures delivered at the conference.

Andras Vertes

András Vértes

Ferenc Suba

Ferenc Suba

Stig Aga Aandstad

The European Network and Information Security Agency (ENISA) was established with the purpose of elaborating, in the framework of an international cooperation, effective rules for a wide-ranging protection of personal data. The first foreign lecturer of the conference was Stig Aga Aandstad, who spoke about the development and growth possibilities of the information society. In his presentation, providing a comprehensive overview, but raising new problems as well, he spoke among other things about the expected development trends in the European information area, without circumventing the basics of the new methodology approved in Lisbon. Aandstad also covered the steps due in the immediate future.

The lectures in the afternoon focused on more specific questions. From Poland, Monika Jaranowska spoke about the usability of ICT in education. Without illusions, she described the place of her country within the EU, with special regard to the lag in terms of the requirements of information society. According to her report, the only exception, giving some hope, is education, where next year, according to plans, there will be one computer for each 11 pupils (at present, this number is 30). From Slovakia, Tibor Papp investigated the interconnections between governmental and administrative tasks, on the one hand, and ICT, on the other. Having outlined the theoretical problems of the implementation and development of e-government, he explained that a fast exploitation of the potentials inherent in ICT is indispensable from now on. Attila Naszlady spoke about the relationship between ICT and the healthcare sector: after an overview of the problem's history, the lecturer focused on present and future issues. From Prague arrived Miroslav Zajicek, whose lecture closed the afternoon session. He imparted his audience with a critique of the insufficient legal background for telecommunications in his presentation.

On the second day of the conference, László Pap was the first in a series of lecturers dealing with the area of ICT. In a European environment of higher education, the tasks and the conditions of our universities keep changing and transforming; this is a fact that we cannot leave unmentioned. European examples can point the direction for Hungary in this respect, as well. Being a professor of the Technical University of Budapest, László Pap in his lecture dealt primarily with the problems of his own university.

Tatiana Kovacikova

Iván Major
Tatiana Kovacikova

Laszlo Sallai, Elek Straub, Wolrad Rommel



More pictures of the conference

Foto: Andras Mayer

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