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anonymous

Time Management, Productivity, & Project Tracking Software (Mac/PC) | RescueTime - 0 views

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    Want to know how you spend your time on your computer? Or maybe you don't.  Anyway, heard about Rescuetime.com on NPR this afternoon. 
Joe Prempeh

MassCUE and M.A.S.S. 2010 Annual Technology Conference - 0 views

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    Oct 26-28 The Mass. Computer Using Educators conference, a large group of teachers in MA using computers to advance education
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    Thanks for posting this info. I seem to be way too tied up with HGSE this year but maybe next year when I'm a teacher I'll find the time. Good to know about.
Margaret O'Connell

Internet in 2020 (Graphical representation) - 2 views

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    It's interesting ... I don't like its view of hackers as all bad, however ... I like to think that more and more people will be hacking/programming and it won't be for bad intentions but, rather, for customizations -- software, hardware, and not necessarily full computers ...
Margaret O'Connell

LilyPad microcontroller's success in welcoming women to electronics - Boing Boing - 0 views

  • Our experience suggests a different approach, one we call Building New Clubhouses. Instead of trying to fit people into existing engineering cultures, it may be more constructive to try to spark and support new cultures, to build new clubhouses. Our experiences have led us to believe that the problem is not so much that communities are prejudiced or exclusive but that they're limited in breadth--both intellectually and culturally. Some of the most revealing research in diversity in STEM found that women and other minorities don't join STEM communities not because they are intimidated or unqualified but rather because they're simply uninterested in these disciplines. One of our current research goals is thus to question traditional disciplinary boundaries and to expand disciplines to make room for more diverse interests and passions. To show, for example, that it is possible to build complex, innovative, technological artifacts that are colorful, soft, and beautiful. We want to provide alternative pathways to the rich intellectual possibilities of computation and engineering. We hope that our research shows that disciplines can grow both technically and culturally when we re-envision and re-contextualize them. When we build new clubhouses, new, surprising, and valuable things happen. As our findings on shared LilyPad projects seem to support, a new female-dominated electrical engineering/computer science community may emerge.
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    The fascinating pdf from the researchers at MIT is linked to on Boing Boing. The comments on Boing Boing are also worth glancing at.
Yang Jiang

Smarter Than You Think - Aiming to Learn as We Do, A Machine Teaches Itself - NYTimes.com - 3 views

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    I think it is interesting because it is related to our online discussion about artificial intelligence. Can machines and computers be as smart as humans and read language?
Chris Dede

Blending Computers Into Classrooms - WSJ.com - 1 views

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    old tech in new bottles
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    What is old tech here? Just trying to understand your comment since this "blended learning" looks like exactly something I'd like to do in my classroom. Cool article!
Cameron Paterson

Maturity of technologies - 1 views

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    Media tablets, private cloud computing, and 3D flat-panel TVs and displays are some of the technologies that have moved into the Peak of Inflated Expectations, according to the 2010 Emerging Technologies Hype Cycle by Gartner, Inc.
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    Interesting to see public virtual worlds in the "trough of disillusionment," poised for "enlightenment," while augmented reality is nearing the "peak of inflated expectations," heading for a crash.
Chris Dede

1:1 Computing Programs on the Rise with Netbooks Leading Adoption -- THE Journal - 5 views

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    beyond laptops to other forms of mobile devices
Chris Dede

Microsoft's Ray Ozzie Envisions a 'Post-PC World' -- THE Journal - 2 views

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    information appliances and ubiquitous computing
Yang Jiang

QQ-360 Battle Escalates into War - China Real Time Report - WSJ - 0 views

  • A battle over alleged unfair business practices between Tencent, operator of the popular instant-messaging software QQ, and Qihoo 360, China’s biggest antivirus service provider, escalated this week when Tencent  stopped service to QQ  users whose computers are installed with  Qihoo 360’s software.
  • The conflict appears to have started two months ago when Qihoo 360, which has 300 million users, alleged that QQ was scanning the private data of its more than 600 million users and released software claiming to block plug-ins that could cause such privacy leaks.
  • In a statement sent to users Wednesday, Tencent said “Dear QQ users, this email is to inform you that we’ve just made a very difficult decision. Until Qihoo 360 removes the tag-on service and malicious slander against QQ software, we have decided to stop running QQ software on computers that have installed the 360 software. We are fully aware of the inconvenience this may cause you, and we sincerely apologize for it.”
Yang Jiang

Technology: Computer simulation is a growing reality for instruction - latimes.com - 2 views

  • Virtual patients for medical training are among the innovations being developed at the USC Institute for Creative Technologies. The military is using many of them to train troops.
Ashley Lee

New Class(room) War: Teacher vs. Technology - New York Times - 2 views

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    Conflicting attitudes toward students who "multi-task" with mobile devices in classroom. "All the advances schools and colleges have made to supposedly enhance learning - supplying students with laptops, equipping computer labs, creating wireless networks - have instead enabled distraction. Perhaps attendance records should include a new category: present but otherwise engaged."
Ashley Lee

The American Diet: 34 Gigabytes a Day - Bits Blog - NYTimes.com - 1 views

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    This article is not directly related to education, but it gives you a sense of how much information youth today might be consuming. An average American consumed 34 gigabytes per day in 2008. From the executive summary: 'In 2008, Americans consumed information for about 1.3 trillion hours, an average of almost 12 hours per day. Consumption totaled 3.6 zettabytes and 10,845 trillion words, corresponding to 100,500 words and 34 gigabytes for an average person on an average day. A zettabyte is 10 to the 21st power bytes, a million million gigabytes. These estimates are from an analysis of more than 20 different sources of information, from very old (newspapers and books) to very new (portable computer games, satellite radio, and Internet video). Information at work is not included.'
Michelle Chung

Student Orchestra Performs Music With iPhones | Gadget Lab | Wired.com - 1 views

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    The iphone brings together computer science and music at the University of Michigan. The course is titled "Building a Mobile Phone Ensemble"
Xavier Rozas

Education Week: Scholars Test Emotion-Sensitive Tutoring Software - 1 views

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    Computer programs that can detect and respond to students' feelings aim to enhance the educational potential of tutoring technology.
anonymous

Codeacademy - Learning to Code for Computers - 1 views

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    Great website that guides children through computer programming using Java in a really easy step by step way.
Uche Amaechi

Aussie Startup Brings Seamless Computing Across Devices | Gadget Lab | Wired.com - 1 views

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    This is not online what we saw in the microsoft video
Diego Vallejos

Mobile Magazine - 0 views

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    Over 7,000 students in Miami-Dade County Public Schools are enrolled in virtual classrooms, or e-learning labs. Core subjects are taken on computers, and instead of a teacher, there is a "facilitator" in the room who makes sure the students are actually doing their work. The facilitator also gives tech help.
anonymous

Children's Future Requests for Computers & the Internet - 1 views

shared by anonymous on 14 Sep 11 - No Cached
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    Interesting report
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    An amazing study that asked kids 12 and under to draw pictures of what they hope to see computer and the Internet do in the future. Should this be used as a guide to create emerging technologies?
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