NII Awards

National Information Infrastructure Awards
Presented by Access Media Inc. / Ziff-Davis
Country United States of America
First awarded 1995
Official website http://www.gii.com/winners.html

The NII Awards was an international awards program designed to recognize excellence and innovation in use of the Internet. The National Information Infrastructure Awards program, later known as the Global Information Infrastructure (GII) Awards, was a non-partisan, private-sector initiative made possible through a collaborative relationship with private and public-sector leaders. The mission of the program was to help the global community realize the potential of a networked society by identifying examples of excellence and helping others learn from those examples.[1]

The NII Awards were created in 1995 by Access Media Inc. (based in Santa Monica, California), with James Hake as Chairman.[2][3] By 1999 Melanie McMullen was General Manager of the GII Awards.[4] The Awards were supported by more than 70 Corporate, Media, Government and Public sponsors.[5] Businesses, community organizations, government agencies and individuals were all eligible to submit entries to the competition. Winners of the GII Awards include Yahoo!, The Schwab WebSite/Charles Schwab & Co., ThinkQuest and The Wall Street Journal Interactive Edition.[6] Even being nominated as a Semi-Finalist or Finalist is still considered an accomplishment.[7][8]

All category judges were recognized experts in their respective fields. The Awards Dinner was a prestigious "black-tie" evening with high-profile MCs, speakers and presenters. Winners were highlighted in a national media and education campaign. Their input was sought by the White House.[9] An oft-repeated quotation from USA Today described the Awards as "a cross between the Oscars and the Baldrige Awards of the Internet".[10]

"The winners of the NII Awards represent real-life benefits delivered through the NII and give us an encouraging look at what is possible in the future," said Vice President Al Gore. "These examples help all Americans understand the promise and potential of the information superhighway."[1]

Contents

First annual awards (1995)

The 1995 NII Awards attracted more than 550 entries and 180 judges.[1] Entries were submitted from February to May,[12] and the winners were announced on July 12, 1995.[13] The Awards were presented in Washington, D.C. at a dinner emceed by talk show personality Dick Cavett.

Second annual awards (1996)

The 1996 NII Awards attracted more than 850 entries and 200 judges. From 60 finalists, the winners' Awards were presented on December 3 1996 in Washington, D.C.[5]

Third annual awards (1997/98)

The deadline for entries was originally July 7 - August 27, 1997[21], but was extended to November 24, 1997. From over 800 entries from 41 states, an average of 31 semi-finalists advanced in each of the eleven categories, with 68 entries announced as Finalists on March 6, 1998.[22] Recipients of the 1997 GII Awards were expected be announced at the annual GII Awards Ceremony scheduled for December 2, or in the spring of 1998, in New York City.[23] In fact, Winners presentations were held during the Comdex show in Chicago, on April 20, 1998 in the Grand Ballroom at the Chicago Hilton and Towers, emceeed by Gene Siskel and Roger Ebert.[24] [25]

Note: Mark Stephen Meadows aka "Pighed" lists the 1997 NII Award for Arts & Entertainment on his website.[26]

Fourth annual awards (1999)

More than 500 total entries were received, from which 60 finalists were selected by a panel of 350 judges.[28]

Semi-finalists were announced on October 27, 1999.[29] The 1999 Awards were presented at the Westin, St. Francis Hotel in San Francisco on the evening of December 14, 1999, emceed by comedienne Paula Poundstone. They were held in conjunction with the ZD Studios Nextravaganza conference.[30]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Two NII Award Winners Serve as Examples of Outstanding Use of the Information Highway
  2. ^ James D. "Jim" Hake - SourceWatch
  3. ^ Jim Hake: Lest We Forget
  4. ^ a b Library of Congress Wins GII Award for Best Education Web Site
  5. ^ a b NII Awards Program Announces Finalists in Second Annual Competition to Recognize Outstanding Uses OF Communications Technologies
  6. ^ Floss.com Named Semifinalist for Prestigious GII Award
  7. ^ Semi-finalist - Health Category 3rd Annual Global Information Infrastructure (GII) Awards
  8. ^ Mayo Clinic Awards
  9. ^ a b Press Release-COMDEX: GII award winners, finalists, judges featured at the White House internet summit
  10. ^ UUNET Technologies To Sponsor Prestigious Global Information Infrastructure (GII) Awards
  11. ^ [1]
  12. ^ CCNet Named NII Awards Finalist
  13. ^ NII Awards Showcase Information Superhighway Potential Six Winners Named as Champions of Cyberspace
  14. ^ Benchmarks On The Internet
  15. ^ Transcript of The MicroMUSE Award letter and Certificate
  16. ^ Visiting Nurse Service of New York recognized with National Information Infrastructure Award
  17. ^ Lucent Technologies to Sponsor GII Next-Generation Award
  18. ^ ECI'c NII Award 1996
  19. ^ a b Awards Received ISOC Org Members Win GII Awards
  20. ^ Smart City Links
  21. ^ GII Awards Call for Entries & Judges
  22. ^ Global Information Infrastructure (GII) Awards Program - Ask the Dietitian
  23. ^ Lucent Technologies to Sponsor GII Next-Generation Award
  24. ^ The Kent School District GII Awards Finalists
  25. ^ Dia Center For The Arts Honored as Global Information Infrastructure (GII) Award Winner
  26. ^ Mark Stephen Meadows Bio
  27. ^ The Turing Game (Amy Bruckman)
  28. ^ AEGiS Honored as a Best of The Web Finalists for the 4th Annual GII Awards
  29. ^ FinAid Reviews and Awards
  30. ^ Global Information Infrastructure Awards Recognize Outstanding Achievement

External links