the future of mobile teaching & learning
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the future of Mobile teaching & learning [www.ictcenter.org]
Mike [email protected]://q-ontech.blogspot.comwww.twitter.com/mqaissauneewww.slideshare.net/mqaissaunee
Gordon F. Snyder [email protected]://ictcenter.blogspot.comwww.twitter.com/gsnyderwww.slideshare.net/gordonfsnyder
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ICT Center Primary Goal
Create a comprehensive and sustainable national education system for the Information and Communications Technologies (ICT) and ICT Enabled industries.
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Three Challenges
1. How can ICT pedagogy - both content and means of delivery - be kept current?
2. How can a group of highest quality subject matter experts be readily engaged?
3. How can the best of this knowledge be shared and disseminated across the nation quickly?
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Connecting TechnologiesConnecting Technologies» Second Life
(http://slurl.com/secondlife/NCTT/128/128)
» iTunesUpart of the National ScienceDigital Library (NSDL) and AMSER
» Web 2.0 @ictcenter.org• Blogging• Podcasting• YouTube• Moodle
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2009 Trends1. Smaller Device Adoption Accelerates
Smart Phones, Netbooks2. Built-in Wireless Broadband Usages
Widens Portable devices (smart phones, computers,
etc)3. Cell Phones Get more Software
iPhone, Android, Nokia Ovi, Blackberry, Microsoft
[reference: http://smallbiztrends.com/2009/01/top-ten-technology-trends-for-small-businesses-2009.html/]
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4. Unified Communications Increase Integration of telephone, CRM, chat,
address book, calendar Watch Microsoft, Avaya, Cisco
5. Online Apps and Data Backups Proliferate
Cloud computing and backup solutions – iWork, Yahoo, GDrive(?)
6. Social Media Becomes Strategic Enhancing your use of social media in order
to network with associates, find new customers and better communicate with existing customers.
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7. Online Video gets Cheaper and More Widespread
YouTube, Flickr, Vimeo and Blip.tv) we can leverage video as a powerful marketing tool. Video can complement a blog, email newsletter or Facebook
8. Video Conference Solutions Expand Better than simply email, telephone or instant
messaging. Check out Skype and Sightspeed 9. Hosted Software Applications Go on the Fast
Track Hosted applications, or software as a service (SaaS),
removes installed app complications. All you need is a web browser to access the hosted application. The downside? If you lose access to the Internet you lose access to your application.
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10.Online Presence Gap Widens Conversation has moved from web sites and
email marketing to blogs and social media for business. Those that strategically use online media to communicate and market themselves will have more loyal customers and can better attract prospective customers.
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Industry Eco-Footprint Stats
• From Business Week:– 8.9 pounds of emissions per book.– 30 million trees consumed per year by the
industry.– Recycled paper is now used for 13% of
book pages.
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An Industry in Transition• From Yahoo News:
– New annual releases keep increasing (more than 276,000, according to researchers R.R. Bowker)
– While the number of books purchased is expected to drop, according to a report by the Book Industry Study Group, an industry-supported organization.
– In addition, core American Booksellers Association (ABA) membership dropped to 1,524 as of this spring, 56 fewer than the year before, and booksellers filled less than half of the roughly 500 chairs set up for a meeting at the Expo.
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The Amazon Kindle• 6" diagonal, 4-level (1st gen) or 16-level (2nd gen)
grayscale electrophoretic display (E Ink material).• Both weigh approx 10 ounces.• Second generation device holds approximately 1500
books.
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Storage, battery life, ports and connectors
• Internal memory.• Battery an last weeks.• A USB 2.0 port (mini-B connector) is available for
connecting to a computer (where it acts as a USB flash drive).
• The device runs on a modified version of Linux based on the 2.6.10 kernel.
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How do you use it?• On startup you go to the Home menu. The
Home menu lists all the books, magazines, and newspapers you've bought or transferred to your Kindle.
• To read a book, use the select wheel to move the silver selection next to the book's name, and press the select wheel. You can return to your Home menu at any time by pressing the Home key.
• Use the Next Page and Previous Page on the sides of the Kindle.
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Navigation• If you want to move forward (or backward) in
larger steps than a page, hold down the Alt key while you press the Next Page or Previous Page buttons to move 5% of the way forward or back in the book.
• On the bottom of the screen, just below the last line of text, is a line of dots. This is the ruler, which shows you how far along you are in the book.
• You can bookmark a page (to return to it quickly later) by scrolling up to the top of the page and pressing the select wheel (or by pressing Alt B). You can also do this using the menu.
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Content on the Kindle
• The easiest way to get books onto your Kindle is to buy them directly from Amazon.com and have them transferred wirelessly. New content is being added each day.
• You can also get books from one of the many websites that offer ebooks.
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Some Other Places to Get Books• Some of the most popular among Kindle owners
are:– http://www.manybooks.net– http://www.feedbooks.com/– http://www.wowio.com/– http://www.gutenberg.org/
• Example: Feedbooks offers a book catalog that you can put directly onto your Kindle, from which you can immediately download books.
• You can also transfer books using the USB cable.– Find your book files and drag them to the “documents”
folder.– This will work for .azw, .txt, .prc, and .mobi files.
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DOCs and PDFs• If you want to read .doc or .pdf files, you can email
them as attachments to <your Kindle name>@free.kindle.com and you'll
get a reply with the document file converted into .azw format. The .azw format is proprietary from Amazon.
• If you want the converted file sent directly to your Kindle, email it as an attachment to
<your Kindle name>@kindle.com (note the absence of “free”).
• Your Amazon account will be charged 10 cents and the converted file will be sent wirelessly to your Kindle.
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What else can you do?• You can highlight text on your Kindle—which
really just draws a box around it.– Select a line that you want to use as the beginning
or end of your highlighted section. – On the menu, select Add Highlight. Select any
other line on the page, and a box will be drawn around the text starting at the first line you selected.
• Selecting the same line will just draw a box around that line.
• To delete a highlight, just select any line in the box, then from the menu, select Delete Highlight.
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Adding Notes• You can also add your own notes to any
book, creating your own personal footnotes and information scribbled in the margins.– Using the select wheel, select a line, then from the
menu, select Add Note. Type in your note, and select Done.
– A small note icon will appear to the right of that line. If you select that line again, you can Edit the Note (thus seeing what you wrote), or Delete it.
• You can also see your notes by selecting the Menu on a page, then selecting My Notes & Marks.
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Saving Text• You can also save a piece of text to use it
outside the Kindle. – On any page, select Menu, then select Save Page
as Clipping at the end. – This will save a plain-text document called My
Clippings in your Home menu. • The next time you connect your Kindle to your
computer with the USB cable, check out the clippings folder and you'll see text files with the pages you saved. Unfortunately, you can only save one page at a time.
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Searching• You can also search through your Kindles
library. – Just press the SEARCH button at the bottom of
the keyboard, type anything, and select Go. – You'll be presented with a list of every document
on your Kindle that contains the exact phrase you typed in.
• If you select a document, your Kindle will display all the places in that document where the phrase shows up; selecting any of the matches will jump to that place in the document.
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Dictionary
• The Kindle comes with the New Oxford American Dictionary and you can buy others.– While reading, select a line of text. In the
menu that appears, select Lookup. – Each uncommon word on that line will be
displayed with a brief definition. • Select a brief definition, and a full
definition will be displayed.
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Reference:
The Kindle Fan Guide - An unofficial handbook for Amazon's awesome e-book reader by Brent P. Newhall under a Creative
Commons Attribution (by) license.
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What is the iPhone?• Apple’s Smartphone• More than a Phone?
• Built in Accelerometer• GPS or Position Triangulation • Multi Touch Interface• Sensors• Keyboard• Safari• Mail• Calendar• Wide Screen Display
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iPhone Overview• Smart Phone +
– iPod (Widescreen) – Wireless Internet Communication Device
– Wifi 802.11 b/g
– PDA – Computer (OS X)– Camera – App Store
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iPhone Development• Development done with the help of
iPhone SDK (requires an Intel MAC)– Uses Objective-C– XCODE + Other tools– Can submit your application to App Store
– $99 membership– Review your application + code
– Revenue model– You set your price (free, 99 cents, $9.99, etc)– 70% developer (you) and 30% Apple
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iPhone Economics
• 30 Million Touch devices• Assume $1.99 application• Popular app - 10% of devices (3 Million)
– $6 Million = $4.2 Million to Developer!• Less popular - 1% of devices (300,000)
– $600,000 = $420,000 to Developer!54
iPhone SDKiPhone SDK includes five powerful iPhone programming tools
1.XCODE• Professional text editor• Debugger• GCC compiler
2.Interface Builder• For creating user interface
3.Instruments• For optimizing application
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Cocoa Touch Layer– Application management– Graphics and windowing support– Event-handling support– User interface management– Objects representing the standard
system views and controls– Support for text and web content– Accelerometer data– The built-in camera– The photo library– Device-specific information
the basic tools to implement graphical, event-driven applications
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Media Layer
– Graphics Technologies– Core Audio– OpenAL– Video Technologies
provides graphics and media technologies for creating advanced multimedia experiences
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Core Services
– Address Book– Core Location– CFNetwork– Security– SQLite
Provides fundamental or core system services that all applications use
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Core OS
– Threading (POSIX threads)
– Networking (BSD sockets)
– File-system access– Standard I/O– Bonjour and DNS
services– Location information– Memory allocation
• encompasses the kernel environment, drivers, and basic interfaces of the operating system
• Provides access to low-level features of the operating system
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iPhone Hardware and Software Features Available to Applications
• Accelerometer– iPhone and iPod touch have 3 accelerometers to
measure/detect movement along each of the primary (x, y, and z) axes in three-dimensional space
– The system uses the accelerometers to monitor a device’s current orientation and to notify applications when that orientation changes
– Applications can access accelerometer data directly
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iPhone Hardware and Software Features Available to Applications
• Core Location– Core Location monitors signals from cell towers
and Wi-Fi hotspots to triangulate the user’s current position
– Accuracy of location information and threshold for reporting location changes can be specified
– Use sparingly – drains battery
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iPhone Hardware and Software Features Available to Applications
• Contacts– The Phone, Mail, and SMS Text applications use
contact list to identify contacts and to facilitate basic interactions such as starting a phone call, email, or text message
– Your applications can access contacts for similar purposes or to get other information relevant to your application
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iPhone Hardware and Software Features Available to Applications
• The Camera and Photo Library– iPhone has a camera and photo library -- iPod
Touch has no camera– iPhone OS provides access to both of these
features– You can incorporate system-provided picker
interfaces into your application– These interfaces provide standard system views
for selecting a photo from the user’s photo library or taking a picture using the camera
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App DistributionThree methods of distribution:
– App Store• Wi-Fi/EDGE/HSDPA on iPhone• Desktop syncing via iTunes
– Enterprise• Proprietary in-house apps• Requires 500+ employees
– Ad-hoc• Provide users with app via email/website• Requires users to register their device ID
with the developer• 100 device limit per app
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Downloading Apps
App Store distribution method determined by size:– Apps < 10 MB can be downloaded over
the cellular network– Apps > 10 MB require WiFi connectivity
or side loading via iTunes
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Classes of iPhone Applications
• We can define three types of iPhone applications:– Productivity– Utility– Immersive
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What’s Different About Programming for the iPhone?
• Only one running application• Only one window• Limited access - sandbox• Limited response time - 5 seconds• Limited screen size - 480 x 320 pixels• Limited system resources (RAM + storage)
• No keyboard or mouse70
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iPhone Developer University Program
a free program designed for higher education institutions looking to introduce curriculum for developing iPhone or iPod touch applications. The University Program provides a wealth of development resources, sophisticated tools for testing and debugging, and the ability to share applications within the same development team. Institutions can also submit applications for distribution in the App Store.
http://developer.apple.com/iphone/program/university.html
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iPhone Developer University Program
Student Development TeamThe iPhone Developer University Program allows instructors and professors to create a development team with up to 200 students.
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iPhone Developer University Program
The iPhone Developer University Program includes:
• iPhone SDK• iPhone Dev Center Resources
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iPhone/SDK Recommendations
– Optimize Web Site for Mobile Devices– Computer Science iPhone University Developer
Program– Create iPhone App for Marketing– Create iPhone App for Registration/Student
Services– Integrate iPhone into Classroom Activities– Also Investigate Google’s Android App Store and
RIM’s Blackberry App Store
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