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Roland Gesthuizen

Report Cards Are In: So Did the iPad in the Classroom Make the Grade? | Hack Education - 1 views

  • tablets — the hardware, the apps, the digital textbooks — will get more student-friendly in coming years
  • the Penn State English department views this fall’s iPad experiment “a success,” and Selber says that department instructors are interested in more iPad implementations.
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    Following the launch of the iPad last spring, many schools made headlines by announcing their plans to distribute the devices to teachers and students and to incorporate the iPad into coursework. Now that the fall term is over, several of those schools are reporting on what was, for many, the first full semester using iPads in the classroom. So does the iPad make the grade? If so, will it usher in a new wave of educational tablets as some analysts are predicting?
Roland Gesthuizen

'Dating' Site Imports 250,000 Facebook Profiles, Without Permission | Epicent... - 0 views

  • “Facebook, an endlessly cool place for so many people, becomes at the same time a goldmine for identity theft and dating — unfortunately, without the user’s control. But that’s the very nature of Facebook and social media in general. If we start to play with the concepts of identity theft and dating, we should be able to unveil how fragile a virtual identity given to a proprietary platform can be.”
  • Mark Zuckerberg, the company’s founder, made his name at Harvard in 2003 by scraping the names and photos of fellow classmates off school servers to feed a system called FaceMash. With the photos, Zuckerberg created a controversial system that pitted one co-ed against another, by allowing others to vote on which one was better looking.
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    "How does a unknown dating site, with the absurd intention of destroying Facebook, launch with 250,000 member profiles on the first day? Simple. .. an approach taken by two provocateurs who launched LovelyFaces.com this week, with profiles - names, locations and photos - scraped from publicly accessible Facebook pages."
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    Is scraping data off Facebook art or does this raise privacy issues? Interesting.
Roland Gesthuizen

CBA's NetBank, ATM, eftpos hit by glitch | Commonwealth Bank - 0 views

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    "Police have issued a warning after reports that more than 40 Commonwealth Bank ATMs have been dispensing large amounts of cash. Police are unsure at this stage what has caused the fault and are liaising with the Commonwealth Bank, which has been hit all day by a technical glitch that has disrupted its online banking, ATMs, and eftpos services."
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    Interesting programming bug for a machine to spit out cash.
Roland Gesthuizen

1 in 4 College Textbooks Will Be Digital By 2015 - 0 views

  • the success of the iPad has fueled the consumption of digital content in general. But the iPad has also spawned a number of new digital textbook companies
  • Washington State's Open Course Library project, a program that aims to make core college materials available on the Web for less than $30 per class
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    "we have reached the tipping point for e-textbooks, and the Xplana predicts that in the next five years digital textbook sales will surpass 25% of sales for the higher education and career education markets."
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    Interesting to read the move to make core college materials available on the web for minimal cost.
Roland Gesthuizen

Inside Mac OS X Snow Leopard: Exchange Support - RoughlyDrafted Magazine - 0 views

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    "Windows Enthusiasts like to spin Apple's support for Exchange on the iPhone and in Snow Leopard as endorsement of Microsoft in the server space. From another angle, Apple is reducing its dependance upon Microsoft's client software, weakening Microsoft's ability to hold back and dumb down its Mac offerings at Apple's expense."
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    Interesting breakdown comparing Exchange services from Apple and Microsoft.
Roland Gesthuizen

Hayastan Shakarian Cuts Internet Cable In Georgia - 0 views

  • Hayastan Shakarian, 75, severed a fibre-optic cable on March 28, shutting off the information highway in much of Georgia and all of Armenia for several hours. The cable ran parallel to a railroad track in eastern Georgia where she was allegedly scavenging.
  • "The incident forces our company to think about diversifying our channels."
  • Tbilisi, said that she had only been collecting firewood. "I have no idea what the internet is,"
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    "An elderly Georgian woman who allegedly shut off internet services in her country and neighbouring Armenia while scavenging for copper cable is facing charges that could lead to three years in prison. In an interview the woman tearfully insisted she was innocent and said she had never heard of the web."
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    Interesting disaster recover planning case study.
Roland Gesthuizen

Offshore cloud privacy may be "impossible," says commissioner | Delimiter - 1 views

  • cloud computing was being used “increasingly” by Victorian agencies, in order to reduce capital and operational costs.
  • Given that many cloud computing service providers are in jurisdictions which do not have similar privacy or data protection laws, if a security breach occurs, an individual in Victoria will be powerless to take action against the cloud service provider and will only be able to complain to the Victorian government organisation
  • large organisations need to look in a more granular fashion at what sort of data they are interested in storing in the cloud — arguing that some data could be harmlessly stored offshore — compared with sensitive data
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    "Victoria's privacy commissioner has issued a stark warning to government agencies about the use of cloud computing, warning that it may be "impossible" to protect personal information held about Australians when it was located offshore - or even just outside Victoria."
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