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I Am Venue Management: Darren Davis

January 18, 2017
by admin
membership
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You, as an IAVM member, are our most important asset. Without your commitment to the association and to the venue management industry, we wouldn’t be here. Because of your support, we are featuring member profiles in our I Am Venue Management series. If you are interested in participating in the I Am Venue Management series, please visit http://www.iavm.org/i-am-venue-management-share-your-story.

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Sustainability Glossary – By MTS Seating

January 17, 2017
by Guest Author
sustainability
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We all need to be sensitive to the impact manufacturing has on the world around us. The world of sustainability has its own lexicon of terms that everyone may not fully grasp. Here is a glossary of terms that will help you better understand sustainability.
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Convention Center Industry Veteran Lynn Thompson Passes Away

January 17, 2017
by R.V. Baugus
#lynnthompson, #renosparksconventioncenter
1 Comment

Industry veteran Lynn Thompson, one of the supporters and volunteers in the formative early days of the International Convention Center Conference, passed away on January 4 after a decades-long battle with cancer. Thompson, 72, retired from the Reno-Sparks Convention Center in 2007 and had been residing in Palm City, Florida with his wife, Elaine.

Thompson began his career where he retired, starting in 1972 in Orlando where he worked for the mayor and had responsibility for leading a five-venue complex called Centroplex.

“My first encounter with Lynn was in Orlando in the late ‘70s and early ‘80s,” said long-time colleague and friend Frank Poe. “He reached out to me in a new role that I had there. I always found Lynn to be an encourager and someone you could go to for sound advice and information. He was truly a wonderful professional and friend.”

Ted Lewis is another industry veteran who is retired and living in Florida who also came to know Thompson around 1980 in Orlando when Thompson hired Lewis and the two had offices next to each other.

“The department he hired me for was a new department that had been in existence for a couple of years,” Lewis said. “He was managing a beautiful, refurbished arts theater, the Tangerine Bowl football stadium and Tinker Field, a baseball field next door to the football stadium that was the spring training home for the Minnesota Twins.

“I remember that Lynn was out a lot because he had all these other responsibilities for the city. He was actually doing a lot of work for the mayor but over time became more involved and motivated in managing facilities.”

Thompson moved to Anaheim, California, in 1986 to manage that city’s convention center and to help it through an expansion, one of four that took place under Thompson’s guidance. 

“By that time I was working in Arlington, Texas, and had bought some land to build a house when I saw Lynn at a conference and he said he was looking for an assistant in Anaheim,” Lewis said. “He told me that he wanted me to apply. He kept after me to at least come out. I did and ended up moving. The more I worked with Lynn the more I realized I always saw he had strengths I didn’t have and that there were some things that maybe I did better only because he didn’t enjoy doing them.

“We became good friends as well as he was my boss and mentor. I saw Lynn handle the political side of our business, which we all have to do. He became a master at that.”

Lewis said that Thompson’s first cancer diagnosis showed up during the Anaheim years. “He told me recently that he and Elaine had a serious conversation and that they were going to live life the way they wanted to and not worry about other things, so to speak. He dealt with the cancer the last 20-something years the way he wanted to. He did a lot of things and enjoyed life.”

Thompson moved to Honolulu for one year in 1996-97 as the first general manager of the Hawaii Convention Center. From there, he moved to Reno, Nevada, as the general manager of the Reno-Sparks Convention Center before retiring in 2007.

Charlton Northington, general manager of the SMG/Shreveport Convention Center and Shreveport Municipal Auditorium, is another who calls Thompson a friend and mentor after working together in Reno.

“Lynn had a lot of fun,” Northington said. “He was concerned about teamwork and team building but at the same time he was not afraid to cut straight to the point. You learn the good things with how you want to have fun but have to draw a line for handling business. I loved to see him interact with other people.”

Northington said that he spoke with Elaine Thompson the day before her husband passed away. “He had prostate cancer for many years and fought it off holistically through medicine,” he said. “He managed his levels to take care of himself for a long time.”

Rhonda Leach also worked with Thompson in Reno and has fond memories. “I have known Lynn since 1999 when I started here at the convention and visitor’s authority,” she said. “He convinced me to move over to the operational side of the convention center that we own and operate. He walked me through the world of convention centers and how instrumental they are in our industry. It got in my blood and sucked me in.

“Lynn has always been there for me, even after he retired. I would see him annually when he would come back to Reno to one of his properties that he kept. His work ethic and values sat at the top in everything he did.”

Fellow SMG colleague and friend Thom Connors called Thompson, a “valued mentor, esteemed colleague and trusted friend. My thoughts are with his wife, Elaine. Theirs was an unbreakable bond of love which made them inseparable.”

Northington recalled a tidbit of Thompson’s past that made him not only a strong leader but someone who carried an aura and presence.

“Lynn was a reporter for a TV news station in Orlando early in his career,” Northington said. “He was quite articulate because of that. He actually covered several of the Apollo launches at Cape Canaveral. He certainly didn’t mind getting up in front of a crowd.”

Several interviewed indicated that a memorial service is expected in early February, although no details have yet been provided by the family.

A Warm Welcome to Our Newest Members

January 17, 2017
by Gina Brydson
membership
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Please welcome our newest members who joined IAVM in December 2016. Thank you for being a part of the association!

Also, let us get to know you better by participating in the I Am Venue Management series. Please visit http://www.iavm.org/i-am-venue-management-share-your-story to share your story and photo.

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BeyondTrust Gives Cybersecurity Technology Predictions For 2017 And Beyond

January 16, 2017
by R.V. Baugus
#cybersecurity
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The Venue Safety & Security Committee has established a cyber working group available to answer any questions from IAVM members. As the blog below discusses, cybersecurity is one of the hot topics for 2017 as these types of attacks continue as legitimate threats. We urge anyone with a question in this area to contact the committee’s Russ Simons at russ.simons@venuesolutionsgroup.com or 816-352-6494. The committee is working diligently in this area and Russ looks forward to helping answer your questions and to share what the committee is doing in the cybersecurity world.

By Brianna Crandall
 
BeyondTrust, a cybersecurity company dedicated to preventing privilege misuse and stopping unauthorized access, recently announced its top 10 technology predictions for 2017, along with five technology events to watch for in the next five years. The cybersecurity threat landscape continuously grows in complexity and scope, leading to new attacks, innovations, regulations and security measures every year, points out the company.

As the Internet of Things continues to change the world and the way people live, it will also continue to open threat possibilities for all connected devices, whether they be consumer products or industrial systems. BeyondTrust expects 2017 to be no different — a year of change, growth, and advancement.

And in the next five years, technological threats and innovation may drive us to a world we scarcely recognize, for good and for bad, says the company. Imagine the implications of compromised self-driving cars. Consider embedded identification technology, powered by the human body in which it resides, giving two-factor identification new meaning. Five years could bring the end of privacy laws, operating systems and anti-virus software, with even the possibility of a video game taking down a repressive regime.

Following are BeyondTrust’s top 10 technology predictions for 2017:

  • The first state cyberattack will be conducted and acknowledged as an act of war. 2017 will see the first large-scale attack by one nation against another, and be acknowledged as an attack and the techniques used considered as weapons.
  • Password reuse will fade, out of necessity. Reusing passwords, one of the most dangerous user practices, will take center stage amid large security breaches, convincing more people to use unique passwords.
  • The Internet of Things (IoT) will come under government scrutiny and require manufacturers to tighten security. Manufacturers will be forced to tighten security, including patchable firmware/software, secured authentication, and controlled privilege access, driven by large-scale attacks using IoT.
  • Commercialized anti-DDoS will emerge. Following constant DDoS attacks above the 500GB mark, a new startup that directly attacks and patches botnet systems will launch in an unregulated country, and patch a hundred million hosts.
  • Behavioral technologies will be embedded into new technologies. Pressure, typing speed and fingerprints will be used to advance biometric recognition to protect devices from cybercrime.
  • Adaptive and behavior-based authentication will grow in importance. Mobility, cloud deployments and increased regulation will drive innovation in identity verification.
  • Tor v2 will come online. Since the government has infiltrated the Tor network, companies will start to set up cross-country file transfer networks, moving toward a fully encrypted, clear text network.
  • Compliance concerns will drive growth in the endpoint and device market. A hard stance on outdated software accessing banking systems will knock user acceptance down 40 percent, but increase the purchase of new computers, Chrome books, mobile devices, and tablets that are more secure than older systems.
  • Known vulnerabilities will continue to be exploited. Most attacks will begin with an exploit taking advantage of a known vulnerability where a patch has been readily available.
  • Cloud vendors will increase security measures. Attacks on cloud platforms, workloads, and enterprise software-as-a-service (SaaS) applications convince organizations to expand their privileged access management.

Read more on the 2017 cybersecurity predictions and the  2022 predictions on the BeyondTrust Web site.

Brianna Crandall is the editor of FMLink, the online publication for facilities managers.

 

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