Martin Lake, a lecturer in Motor Vehicle Engineering explains how the Nintendo DSi is having an impact on his learners and how they are using the device.
Tag Archives: molenet
Sony enter the netbook market
Sony have entered the netbook market with their new W Series.
Sony are not new to making small laptops, I had the really nice SRX41P back when I worked for the Western Colleges Consortium, and currently have been playing with the P series.
However one thing you could always say about Sony VAIO small laptops was though they were small in size, they were big in price. The SRX41P was nearly £2000, whilst current small models are nearly as expensive.
However the W series is going to be much cheaper, currently $500 in the US, UK pricing has yet to be announced, but I would guess it would be in the £400 mark.
It’s not a netbook that is going to be a real powerhouse. Running Windows XP, 1GB of RAM and a 160GB HDD it’s no different to a lot of netbooks in the market. It has a 10.1″ screen with a 16:9 aspect ratio.
As well as the ubiquitous Sony Memory Stick Duo slot there is also (like the P series) a SD card slot. Alas like a lot of netbooks it only has a two hour battery life.
It doesn’t look a lot different to other netbooks (well except you can get it in pink) but Sony is a brand that a lot of people trust and therefore I expect it might sell quite well to people who like Sony stuff, get the feeling that they may be disappointed.
Does make you wonder though if Apple will now take the plunge and enter the netbook market?
Is mobile learning accessible?
Great video from TechDis.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0GJiDTZaCTM
St Austell
So here I am down in Cornwall for the Cornwall College ILT Fair. I am down here as a MoLeNET Mentor providing specialist support for Cornwall College. I have been asked to do four workshops on mobile learning with some Web 2.0 thrown in as well.
Rather than do four identical sessions I will be doing four different ones.
I have my bag of stuff so can show lots of things. Also have a case of PSPs with cameras that will be used. Hoping to stream some of the sessions using Qik or Ustream. Will be posting to Twitter as well.
Should be fun.
Using the PSP
Luke Fletcher from Gloucestershire College talks candidly about how he used the PSP with camera with his learners.
Luke was in the office for a chat, when a colleague (off camera) asked him how he found using the PSPs, luckily for I had a camera to hand, so I just picked it up and hit record and caught this wonderful natural narrative from Luke about using the PSP.
A battery life of days…
Though I do think netbooks have a future (even if Intel don’t) however what computer do I carry around with me to meetings, events and conferences?
My MacBook Pro!
So is it just that I prefer OS X over Linux and Windows?
Well not really, I do like OS X, but do like Xandros and Windows 7.
The main reason I don’t carry a netbook, is the battery life.
Now it is getting better than it was, but the three cell batteries most of the netbooks I have only last an hour or two, which isn’t good enough for a long train journey or a conference.
This is also an issue with learners having netbooks, they arrive at college at 9 am and most will be there until 4 or 5 pm. What’s the point of carrying a netbook, if well before lunch the battery has run out? Most colleges I am aware of, don’t allow non-college devices to be plugged in, so unless you have an enlightened institution with a sensible “personal applicance” policy, they won’t be able to charge up their netbook during the day.
So was quite pleased to hear from the Computex trade show via the BBC that:
some manufacturers are convinced cheap, low power computers with days of battery life are the future…
The new Tegra system has a lot of potential
Nvidia boss Jen-Hsun Huang claimed a Tegra system could play HD video for 10 hours, compared to 3 hours for a netbook powered by Intel’s rival Atom CPU, and an astonishing 25 days of MP3 playback, compared to 5 hours for current netbooks.
The key to embedding and transforming learning through the use of mobile technologies is dependent on many factors, decent battery life is certainly in there.
These new chips could make a difference.
Sony PSP Go
So is this the new PSP?
From the BBC
Video and photos of the PSP Go have been leaked online, revealing a smaller, more lightweight console that has dropped the failed UMD disk format.
Engadget has some leaked stats.
3.8-inch display (resolution is undisclosed)
43 percent lighter than the PSP-3000
16GB of Flash storage
Bluetooth built-in; supports handset tethering and BT headsets
No UMD drive
Memory Stick Micro slot
Full PlayStation Network support (movie and TV rentals / purchases)
Integration with PlayStation 3 (works the same as the PSP-3000 does)
From a learning perspective the 16GB of Flash storage is helpful as anyone who uses the PSP knows that the Memory Stick can sometimes go missing… generally to be found in the card reader of a PC. Alas it uses the small Memory Stick Micro format which means getting another adapter or ensuring that your current card reader can read that format.
Disappointed that there is no built in camera.
Shiny Dragon Boating
One of the key things about getting staff to use technology, is to remove barriers.
One of the barriers is a lack of familiarity.
When asked by a member of staff if they could use one of our Sanyo CA9 cameras to film themselves in the recent Gloucester Docks Dragon Boat race, the answer was of course, and here is the result.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3JduJ6bjNTI
The next stage will be to take that video and show the member of staff how mobile versions can be made. This will include tools we already have in college and possibly using MoLeTV.
As a result we now have a member of staff who will be confident in the use of video technologies and the use of video with mobile devices.
Oh and a video for use on our atrium’s Knowledge Tree.
Post first appeared on Shiny.
MoLeNET LIVE
A recording of the MoLeNET Live broadcast I did on the 1st May.
Transferring files between iPhones
So you want to move files between different iPhones?
Well how about doing it like this?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PO9erFSSSPA
The application is called Mover.
Found via TUAW.