Emmanuel Hill: Brief Biography
Emmanuel Hill is a graduate of Ambassador
University. Mr. Hill, recently nominated to the 2002 International Who's Who
for Information Technology, has more than 12 years working as a computing
professional having begun as a contract field technician providing service
to the City of Buffalo and numerous Western New York companies including Roswell
Park Cancer Institute and ParMed Pharmaceutical.
He began building his first networks at
Teachers College Columbia University and eventually built one of the first
fiber optic networks in a Harlem based High School using a new fiber concept
created by 3M Corporation for the United States Navy. Drawing upon grants
from Time Warner Corporation, New Visions for Public Schools, Columbia
University and 3M Corporation, Mr. Hill designed a fully interactive,
automated library system which featured an advanced media production center
and “classroom satellites” which brought the entire library experience into
the classroom. The center became the stage for numerous media events for
Governors and Senators wishing to establish community outreach in Harlem.
At Baruch College, Mr. Hill took a
collection of classrooms and designed them into a self-maintaining,
multi-lingual software development environment. He is an active Development
Partner and Beta-Tester for Microsoft since 1994 and has worked on such
projects as Windows 95, Windows 98 Second Edition, Windows 2003 Server and
Office 2003 (releasing to the public in later part of 2003). He has
designed a complete web-based calendar/scheduling system utilizing students
and volunteers which has served as the central scheduling tool for the past
two years. Recent work has been the installation of the City University of
New York’s only working and federally approved SEVIS tracking system for
batching and reporting student VISAS with the US Department of Homeland
Security.

This section highlights some of the many
web based projects currently being personally developed for Continuing and
Professional Studies, Baruch College, CUNY.
A snapshot in time, looking back to TMA in the year 2000. Scenes in the life of a high school in Harlem just days before graduation.
 
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