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Vicki Davis

Project Red: 9 Technology Practices That Improve Education the Most - 2 views

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    Great presentation from project red. See slide for the "which technology practices improve learning the most." #1 Technology is integrated into EVERY intervention class.
Sam V

Gale World History In Context - Document - 1 views

    • Sam V
       
      Hey! Check out this document. I thought it was a good example of virtual communication affecting education.
  • this pioneering pair have used technology.
  • may have revolutionised the African classroom.
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  • resource-sharing project in a way that places their students in a classroom of the future.
  • a pilot broadband wireless schools network project being conducted in the Pretoria area.
  • This meeting sparked the birth of what is thought to be the firstvirtual classroom in Africa.
  • Beyers and another technology enthusiast, Richard Gerber, from the Department of Communications, came up with the concept about five years ago when they met at a conference in Morocco.
  • "It has been good for revising what we've been learning because it's with another teacher.
  • "I use the technology to focus on the content of the lesson, while subtly sneaking in information technology elements."
  • "This project is proving that it is possible to interconnect many schools simultaneously," said Beyers.
Mike tiani

Mobile technology - 1 views

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    "Mobile technology is exactly what the name implies - technology that is portable. Examples of mobile IT devices include: laptop and netbook computers palmtop computers or personal digital assistants mobile phones and 'smart phones' global positioning system (GPS) devices wireless debit/credit card payment terminals Mobile devices can be enabled to use a variety of communications technologies such as: wireless fidelity (Wi-Fi) - a type of wireless local area network technology Bluetooth - connects mobile devices wirelessly 'third generation' (3G), global system for mobile communications (GSM) and general packet radio service (GPRS) data services - data networking services for mobile phones dial-up services - data networking services using modems and telephone lines virtual private networks - secure access to a private network It is therefore possible to network the mobile device to a home office or the internet while travelling. Benefits Mobile computing can improve the service you offer your customers. For example, when meeting with customers you could access your customer relationship management system - over the internet - allowing you to update customer details whilst away from the office. Alternatively, you can enable customers to pay for services or goods without having to go to the till. For example, by using a wireless payment terminal diners can pay for their meal without leaving their table. More powerful solutions can link you directly into the office network while working off site, for instance to access your database or accounting systems. For example, you could: set up a new customer's account check prices and stock availability place an order online This leads to great flexibility in working - for example, enabling home working, or working while travelling. Increasingly, networking 'hot spots' are being provided in public areas that allow connection back to the office network or the internet.
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    gives examples of what types of products are mobile and the networks that they work on.
Matthew Cherry

Wireless connections begin creeping into daily life | The Japan Times - 0 views

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    Wireless technology has evolved. At first, the goal was to expedite the communications between humans. Now, however, the new wave  of wireless technology focuses on machine-to-machine(M2M) interactions. "The M2M phenomenon is part of the larger drive to create an "Internet of Things" - a global network that not only links computers, tablets and phones but that connects everything from bikes to washing machines to thermostats. Machina Research, a British firm, believes there will be 12.5 billion "smart" connected devices, excluding  phones, PCs and tablets, in the world in 2020, up from 1.3 billion today."
Ashley Martins

Globalization and Environmental Protection: a Global Governance Perspective - 0 views

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    This long article discusses ways that technology is beneficial and how it is detrimental to the environment. Also, it explains how people should try to not have technology have such a negative effect on the environment
sean kowalski

Grassley Stands By Threat To Hold Up FCC Nominees Over Wireless Network Concerns | Fox ... - 0 views

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    Will new wireless network technology cause a hindering problem that will possibly lead to a decrease in security? The military's high-tech wireless networks may be effected by these new technologies, and Senator Charles Grassley explains.
Angela Kouros

How has technology changed the entertainment industry? - Curiosity - 0 views

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    This article talks about all the ways that technology and software has influenced our daily lives. .
Joseph Pasquino

The Effect of the Internet on Modern Businesses & Corporations - 0 views

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    Information technology has transformed the way companies conduct business. Technology allows businesses to automate manual operations and process information much faster. While business technology often is used through personal computers, server storage and point-of-sale or cash register systems, another major technological advancement is the Internet, which has created new communication forms and other business methods that companies use when processing financial and business information.
Safaan Rahim

25 ways technology has changed our lives - 0 views

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    Technology has changed the world and, in doing so, has changed the way we live. Here are 25 things we no longer do, or do differently, because of technology.
brooke s

Cyberspace - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

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    "Cyberspace is the electronic medium of computer networks, in which online communication takes place.[1] It is readily identified with the interconnected information technology required to achieve the wide range of system capabilities associated with the transport of communication and control products and services. Current technology integrates a number of capabilities (sensors, signals, connections, transmissions, processors, and controllers) sufficient to generate a virtual interactive experience accessible regardless of a geographic location."
Ivy F.

ScienceDirect - Telematics and Informatics : Mobile computing and ubiquitous networking... - 0 views

  • With the rapidly increasing penetration of laptop computers, which are primarily used by mobile users to access Internet services, support of Internet services in a mobile environment become an increasing need. The opportunities emerging from these technologies give rise to new paradigms such as mobile computing and ubiquitous networking
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    "With the rapidly increasing penetration of laptop computers, which are primarily used by mobile users to access Internet services, support of Internet services in a mobile environment become an increasing need. The opportunities emerging from these technologies give rise to new paradigms such as mobile computing and ubiquitous networking"
Vicki Davis

Cool Cat Teacher Blog: The New Design for the Classroom that ROCKS MY WORLD!!! - 0 views

  • What you see are individual, microsoft surface enabled BOARDS in the upright position and individual, Microsoft Surface enabled DESKS in the background.
    • Vicki Davis
       
      Microsoft Surface is the next generation of computing. WE will no longer have computers but every surface around us will be intelligent.
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    Microsoft Surface is going to become part of devices around us. This is an important technology for where things are going to be moving are important to understand as you predict the future of technology.
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    People inventing and predicting in their videos should read about microsoft surface.
anonymous

Horizon Report 2010 K-12 Edition - 0 views

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    The Horizon Report series is the most visible outcome of the New Media Consortium's Horizon Project, an ongoing research effort established in 2002 that identifies and describes emerging technologies likely to have a large impact on teaching, learning, research, or creative expression within education around the globe. This volume, the 2010 Horizon Report: K-12 Edition, examines emerging technologies for their potential impact on and use in teaching, learning, and creative expression within the environment of pre-college education.
Steve Madsen

New improved Bluetooth is ten times faster - Technology - smh.com.au - 0 views

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    The next version of the Bluetooth wireless technology is expected to transfer data 10 times faster than the current incarnation.
Julie Lindsay

Top News - Survey shows barriers to Web 2.0 in schools - 0 views

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    Teachers and students are largely driving the adoption of Web 2.0 technologies in schools, but human and technological barriers are holding back the use of these as learning tools in many classrooms, according to a new study.
John Turner

7 Things You Should Know About Personal Learning Environments | EDUCAUSE - 0 views

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    "The term personal learning environment (PLE) describes the tools, communities, and services that constitute the individual educational platforms that learners use to direct their own learning and pursue educational goals. PLEs represent a shift away from the model in which students consume information through independent channels such as the library, a textbook, or an LMS, moving instead to a model where students draw connections from a growing matrix of resources that they select and organize. The use of PLEs may herald a greater emphasis on the role that metacognition plays in learning, enabling students to actively consider and reflect upon the specific tools and resources that lead to a deeper engagement with content to facilitate their learning.\n\nThe "7 Things You Should Know About..." series from the EDUCAUSE Learning Initiative (ELI) provides concise information on emerging learning technologies. Each brief focuses on a single technology and describes what it is, where it is going, and why it matters to teaching and learning. Use these briefs for a no-jargon, quick overview of a topic and share them with time-pressed colleagues."
Steve Madsen

WolframAlpha: the next big thing in search? - BizTech - Technology - smh.com.au - 0 views

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    When a free web service called WolframAlpha launches in the coming days, the general public will get to try a "computational knowledge engine" that has had technology insiders buzzing because of its oracle-like ability to spit out answers and make calculations.
Vicki Davis

HigherEdMorning.com » Blog Archive » The top 5 ways students use technology t... - 0 views

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    Modern Cheating
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    Top five ways students use technology to cheat -- of course, all of them involve the cell phone, which will certainly push many to continue to say they should be banned. To me, teachers should be vigilant and watchful. Also, who says you have to give the same test to all of your classes or a pop quiz on the same day? It is time to get smart!
Thomas H

Home - MSc Mobile and Ubiquitous Computing : Trinity College Dublin - 0 views

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    "Mobile computing allows people to make use of computing and information systems without being tied to a desktop computer located in their office, classroom, or home. People can now make use of computer systems while on the move, whether waiting for a flight in some airport departure lounge, drinking coffee in their favorite cafe, simply driving home, or even just walking down the street. Thanks to the improved portability and processing power of laptop computers, Personal Digital Assistants, and even mobile phones, as well as improved battery life and the near universal coverage of wireless data communications networks, mobile computer users can now make use of almost the same range of services as desktop users. While the use of current mobile computers often follows the traditional pattern of a single user interacting with their dedicated computer via its own display and keyboard, mobile computing is still at an early stage of development. In his seminal paper on the computer for the 21st century written in 1991†, Marc Weiser noted that "The most profound technologies are those that disappear. They weave themselves into the fabric of everyday life until they are indistinguishable from it." Weiser put forward a vision of future computer systems in which "computers themselves vanish into the background". In doing so he inspired a field of research known as ubiquitous computing . In the ubiquitous computing vision, interconnected (mobile) computers are embedded unobtrusively in everyday appliances and environments and co-operate to provide information and services on behalf of their users. The ubiquitous computing vision is now becoming a reality enabled by recent and expected developments in new sensor technologies - increasing the range of stimuli that can be effectively sensed, by wireless networking - allowing mobile computer systems to co-operate, by miniaturization of computational devices - allowing massive deployment of sensor-based systems in every
Ivy F.

flatclassroom09-3 - Mobile and Ubiquitous - 1 views

  • er chips."
    • Tyler R
       
      You need to add a citation here
  • peer to peer
  • Instant messaging
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  • , PDA.
  • making phone calls over the Internet
  • Skype
  • Skype
  • hen Skype
  • VoIP (Voice over Internet Protocal)
  • . Click here to go to the main article. Click here to have a look at my delicous.com acount to find what else i half got about ubiquitous technology.
    • Tyler R
       
      From Mrs. Davis - these need to be turned into contextual links and are an example of how we do not hyperlink.
  • Click Here to go to the main article.
  • According to some research, More than 740 billion text messages were sent in the US during the first half of 2009, a figure that breaks down to approximately 4.1 billion messages per day,
    • Mason J
       
      Source?
    •  Lisa Durff
       
      Where did you get this information? Was it biased information put out by a cell phone company? How does it compare to global averages?
  • GPS/GSM collars to track elephants
    • Mason J
       
      Find the source here.
  • A cell phone is a example of mobile and ubiquitous computing. A cell phone is mobile because it is able to be moved from one place to another. A cell phone is also ubiquitous because two people are able to communicate from different places by calling one another as well as SMS and video messaging. Lastly, a cell phone is classified as a computing device because it accepts input, processes that input into data that the cell phone can read, and produces output as information that a human can read.
  • Mobile and Ubiquitous Computing can be broken down into three separate words that can come together to make one topic. First, mobile means able to be moved. There are many technological mobile devices. There are cell phones, Ipods, portable DVD players, PDAs, laptops, and many other devices that can be moved or transported from one place to another. Second, ubiquitous means being present everywhere at once. Having the ability to stream live from a camera or cell phone to a website over the Internet makes that particular video ubiquitous.
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    "The second steroid involves instant messaging and file sharing. Being able to share files from peer to peer is considered ubiquitous because the files can be everywhere and mobile because the files can be moved. Instant messaging is a huge breakthrough in the technological world. People can send instant messaging via cell phone, computer , PDA. This steroid revolutionized communication."
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