Skip to main content

Home/ HGSET545/ Group items tagged hardware

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Kim Frumin

Hardware makes a comeback - 0 views

  •  
    This article provides a great overview of the new technologies profiled at SXSW and makes the case that it's now cheaper than ever before to bring prototypes to market. The author notes, "The dropping costs of designing and building inventive new hardware products has prompted a wave of creativity and innovation that echoes the software boom a decade or two ago in Silicon Valley." Makes me wonder... what's next?
Jen Dick

Intel Studybook Hands-On: The Indestructible Education Tablet [Tablets] - 1 views

  •  
    "Intel won't actually manufacturer the product, but it will offer the design license for free to any company interested in making it." Maybe the first open source hardware example I've seen. Will be interesting to see what, if any, effect this has on the ed tech tablet market.
Jackie Iger

iPad Textbooks: Reality Less Revolutionary Than Hardware | Wired Science | Wired.com - 2 views

  •  
    An interesting article that explores the question of whether kids will learn more and better on tablets.
  •  
    Thanks for sharing! I think many of the strongest proponents of "tablets for all" would benefit from this more balanced perspective.
Kinga Petrovai

Raspberry Pi goes on general sale - 3 views

  •  
    Interesting article and video about a new way of teaching children to program. A credit-card sized computer designed to help teach children to code has gone on sale for the first time. The Raspberry Pi is a bare-bones, low-cost computer created by volunteers mostly drawn from academia and the UK tech industry.
  •  
    I just heard about this from a friend and then stumbled across your link - and then wound up on the Raspberry Pi website to try to find out more about the education component of it (which is supposedly the whole motivation). Right now, the website is focused on showcasing the capabilities of the device and the hardware/software choices that they made. I was disappointed to find, when looking through their FAQ, that there is only one small blurb about educational material in which they vaguely state that support resources are currently under development. No doubt they are allowing a greater number of people access to a cheap Linux machine, but that does not mean those people are going to use it to learn to program. I'll be interested to see if the focus really does shift to education as the resources come together... right now it just seems like a cool new toy for a Linux geek (with the potential to be so much more!)
Xavier Rozas

Real fear in a virtual world - SciTechBlog - CNN.com Blogs - 0 views

  • Somewhere deep down in my rational brain, I knew the hole wasn't real - that it was a virtual reality scenario in a cramped office at Stanford University, where the floor seemed completely pit-free until I put on a clunky piece of hardware called a "headmount." But that headmount changed everything.
1 - 5 of 5
Showing 20 items per page