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Thursday, January 28, 2010

iPad, Really?


I don't know that much about Apple's new hot product yet, the iPad. But I just can't get past the name. MadTV did a spoof of the iPod way back in 2005 that was called the iPad. I can't post it here, because it's not quite school appropriate (search YouTube for yourself) but needless to say it had to do with "female" things.


It may be that the iPad, with its iTouch features and its netbook features and its eBook Reader features will be a huge sucess. But the name is a complete joke. You can tell there were no women on the marketing team.


Would you pay $500-$800 for the iPad? If you have one, what cool things does it do?


I leave you with this quote from Steve Jobs, "It's so much more intimate than a laptop and so much more capable than a smart phone" Oh my!

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

What is this: &


In Visual Basic, you use the "&" sign to put two strings together. I was calling it the "ampersand" sign and noone knew what I was talking about. The students call it the "and" sign. They call the "+" sign the "plus" sign.


So just to show I'm not loosing my marbles, check out wikipedia and see that I'm not making this up.


What do you call this: &

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Avatar - iMax 3D


Finally got to see Avatar yesterday. I thoroughly enjoyed it. The iMax 3D experience was fantastic. I may never be satisfied with a regular movie again.


The special effects were special. You really felt you were there. You could feel the forest around you. It was a beautiful place. The characters and world were deeply developed. The premise, history, and interconnected-ness of all things was a message we can all use.


The story line was predictable, but aren't they all.


Avatar was a life dream of producer James Cameron, who spent 20 years and $250 million of his own money to make it. The total cost was somewhere around $500 million, but looks like they'll make their money back in no time. Viewer turn out has been, well, special.


Have you seen it? What did you think of the technology in it (cryogenics, aviation, cloning, "linking") or the technology to make it (3D movies, human animation, computing engineers)?

Monday, January 11, 2010

Which is your favorite Flash Movie

We have been learning Flash in my Web Design class. The students had a project to create a Flash movie of their own choosing. The minimum requirements were:
  • Recognizable scene
  • 5-10 seconds long
  • At least 2 different symbols
  • at least 1 guided motion twen
  • Stop action and Replay button
We'll be using this link to vote for our favorite on polleverywhere.

Which was your favorite and why?

Are you new? Rookie mistakes by Veterans

I found this very funny in my class today. This is the end of first semester. So we have had class for 90+ days together. And every day we work on programs and at the end of class we save our work onto our "home" drives. This is a networked drive different from the "C" drive. It gives students privacy, so others can't see their work.

One student must have saved his work on the "C" drive by mistake. But he was not sitting at the same computer today.

Another student said, "Are you new?" It was the funniest thing I heard all day. Thanks, Mason, for making my day.

Tuesday, January 5, 2010

Paper Wads and other high tech stuff


Today we were using polleverywhere to review for an exam. The students had worked out their answers to a multiple-choice worksheet and we were voting for the best answer and discussing the results.


Then the network went down.


So to continue the review and to keep it fun and engaging, we wrote the letters A,B,C,D on the board and threw paper wads at our answers!


It's a good thing the network came back up 10 mins later, because we were getting tired of throwing. Thanks, Matt, for the idea. And thanks, DJ, for tossing them back and then getting them in the garbage.

Google Chrome and Netbooks


Google takes another blow at Microsoft by putting their own operating system, Chrome, on their new netbook platform. Netbooks are the future and Google is poised to rule that future. Is Microsoft asleep?


Netbooks are very light and small computers that don't have much local power (so no gaming) but can do everything on the web. So if you're comfortable with working "in the cloud" (like your word processing documents), it's all you need. And they're priced around $100


Chrome is the operating system that replaces Windows and since it only has to do internet stuff, it is configured to work really fast over the net. Independent studies have confirmed it is faster than Internet Explorer and FoxFire


I guess the only question is whether people will become comfortable working "in the cloud". What about you? Are you ok with putting all your stuff out there? Are you worried about security? About privacy? About redundancy?