Mia Millette was appointed CEO of
Skyline Technology Solutions, the first female in that position in the company’s history.
Prior to her appointment, Millette served as COO of the Maryland-based information technology company since 2018. She succeeds company founder, Brian Holsonbake, who will transition from CEO to chairman and now focus on advancing Skyline’s long-term strategic initiatives.
A Maryland transplant from the small Pennsylvania manufacturing town of Perryopolis, Millette knew from a young age she was destined for a career in technology. Her passion for the industry was ignited in second grade when she successfully coded a sequence that made a figure dance across the screen of her school’s early model Texas Instruments computer. She is very passionate about sharing her love of technology and inspiring others to pursue STEM as a career and loves that she was introduced to computers by a female, Carol McFarland, her second-grade teacher.
Chance meeting with Todd Haley led Philadelphia Eagles Nick Sirianni to NFL coaching career inquirer.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from inquirer.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
• A contract extension with Twisted Computing Inc. for technical advice at a rate of $ 200 per hour from January 1 to June 30.
• Purchase of 50 Chromebooks for up to $ 19,377.50. This purchase is paid for with both grant and district funds.
• The purchase of 10 SMART boards, at a cost of no more than $ 28,710, payable with grant funding.
The board also approved the purchase of the Remind communications system for no more than $ 6,875, paid by grant funding, as well as professional development consulting services from Ghost Solutions at a rate of $ 400 per day, no more than six days per month, also paid by grant Grant.
Researchers Announce Surprising Clue in the Evolution of Mammalian Middle Ear
News provided by
Share this article
PITTSBURGH, Jan. 27, 2021 /PRNewswire/ In a study published today in the journal
Nature, researchers from Carnegie Museum of Natural History (CMNH), Indiana University of Pennsylvania (IUP), and the Inner Mongolia Museum of Natural History in China announce a surprising clue in the puzzling evolution of the mammalian middle ear. John Wible, curator of mammals at CMNH, Sarah Shelley, a postdoctoral researcher at CMNH, and Shundong Bi, a professor at IUP and research associate at CMNH, describe a new fossil specimen of a haramiyidan (a now-extinct mammal group that thrived during the Mesozoic Era) from China s Middle Jurassic epoch that represents an evolutionary stepping stone between Mesozoic fossils and living mammals. This animal,
Tackling the Beast After 2020: Applying to Graduate School
Share1
Finishing my undergraduate experience during a pandemic is hard to put into words. Sometimes,
I feel as if my college experience ended during the last half of my junior year, which was almost a year ago. College wasn’t going to end how I thought it would. So, that’s when I decided I wanted to apply to graduate school. Graduate school was always presented as a great way to separate yourself in the job world, along with gaining professional experience that will make jumpstarting your career easier.
A year ago, I had no plans of pursuing my masters degree right away.