Skip to main content

Home/ Educational Technology and Change Journal/ Group items tagged back

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Reauthorization of ESEA - 1 views

started by Bonnie Sutton on 21 Oct 11 no follow-up yet
Bonnie Sutton liked it

Action in a Shared World - 1 views

started by Bonnie Sutton on 21 Oct 11 no follow-up yet

Subject: Teacher Depreciation Week | NationofChange - 1 views

started by Bonnie Sutton on 14 May 12 no follow-up yet

Teachers Resist High-Tech Push in Idaho Schools - 0 views

started by Bonnie Sutton on 04 Jan 12 no follow-up yet

Star Wars: The Old Republic's lead writer on good Sith, evil Jedi - 1 views

started by Bonnie Sutton on 10 Jun 11 no follow-up yet

Kohn: Why we have to save our schools - 1 views

started by Bonnie Sutton on 01 Aug 11 no follow-up yet

Is Affirmative Action Headed Back to the Supreme Court? - 1 views

started by Bonnie Sutton on 23 Jun 11 no follow-up yet

The War on Teachers, - 1 views

started by Bonnie Sutton on 12 Mar 12 no follow-up yet

The war on teachers: Why the public is watching it happen - 0 views

started by Bonnie Sutton on 12 Mar 12 no follow-up yet

From the River to the Sea Chesapeake Bay to the Ocean - 1 views

started by Bonnie Sutton on 10 Dec 11 no follow-up yet

Dear Michelle Rhee: About that teacher evaluation study - 2 views

started by Bonnie Sutton on 22 Jan 12 no follow-up yet

The Value of Teachers - 1 views

started by Bonnie Sutton on 12 Jan 12 no follow-up yet
2More

Make: Online | Walled Gardens vs. Makers - 0 views

  •  
    Cory Doctorow. Make. June 2011. "Consider the iPad for a moment. It's true that Apple's iTunes Store has inspired hundreds of thousands of apps, but every one of those apps is contingent on Apple's approval. If you want to make something for the iPad, you pay $99 to join the Developer Program, make it, then send it to Apple and pray. If Apple smiles on you, you can send your hack to the world. If Apple frowns on you, you cannot. What's more, Apple uses code signing to restrict which apps can run on the iPad (and iPhone): if your app isn't blessed by Apple, iPads will refuse to run it. Not that it's technically challenging to defeat this code signing, but doing so is illegal, thanks to the 1998 Digital Millennium Copyright Act, which makes it a crime to circumvent a copyright-protection technology. So the only app store - or free repository - that can legally exist for Apple's devices is the one that Apple runs for itself. Some people say the iPad is a new kind of device: an appliance instead of a computer. But because Apple chose to add a thin veneer of DRM to the iPad, the Digital Millennium Copyright Act applies here, something that's not true of any "appliance" you've ever seen. It's as if Apple built a toaster that you can only use Apple's bread in (or face a lawsuit), or a dishwasher that will only load Apple's plates. Apple fans will tell you that this doesn't matter. Hackers can simply hack their iPads or shell out $99 to get the developer license. But without a means of distributing (and receiving) hacks from all parties, we're back in the forbidden-knowledge Dark Ages - the poverty-stricken era in which a mere handful of ideas was counted as a fortune."
  •  
    We discussed this article in the forum of lascuolachefunziona.it. Someone objected that the iPad was a great tool and gave far more liberty to developers than traditional print publishers. I retorted that it was precisely because the iPad was such a great tool that its proprietariness about content for it was irritating. Then Elena Favaron made an illuminating comparison: "There are also people who make coffee machines that work only with dedicated coffee capsules, and there are folks who even buy them..."
1 - 20 of 72 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page