Posts tagged ‘iphone’
EdCampChicago – Recap, Review and Reflect
I’ve sat at the keyboard for the last five minutes trying to figure out the proper way to start this post. You see, I’m not an events guy. I mean, I love events, and I’m never short on ideas for events. But I’m not the most organized person in the world, and putting together something like an EdCamp was more than just a little stressful to me. However, now that the event has come and gone, I can take a step back and really appreciate just how incredible the day was. And before too much time has elapsed, I wanted to share some thoughts on the entire experience.
First of all, a few thank yous. Chad Lehman (@imcguy) was the co-organizer of the event. I’d say he volunteered, but that wouldn’t be quite factual. Way back on October 11th, I mentioned that I was thinking it’d be nice to have an education uncoference in the midwest. Chad replied that he’d be interested, to which I said “Thanks for volunteering! What date is it going to be?” And then I hounded him until he actually agreed to be the co-organizer (sucker). Time and again, we would chat on the phone, create a list of things that needed to be done, and then take the lion’s share of making sure they happened. The event wouldn’t have happened if it hadn’t been for his leadership, so for that I give him major props.
I also have to thank our volunteer crew. Not only did they raise their hands and say that they wanted to help, they took on a role and RAN with it. Naomi Harm not only volunteered to handle the livestreams from the event, she organized a small crew (including her husband) and had the archives up on the site within 24 hours. Brendan Murphy created the name badges, including QR codes and setting out a ton of materials for people to add their own little personal tweaks to them. Jodi Greenspan created and kept up with our Featured Attendee posts leading up to the event. Nancy Stewart made the connection at EdCampPhilly, which was happening the same day. Debbie Gleason gathered together all the materials we needed for the agenda board (including the sticky notes that everybody commented on). Anne Truger not only hounded companies for door prizes, but organized all the prizes on site as well. Stuart Ciske who also brought in a plethora of prizes to give away. Erica Roberts sacrificed some of her first session to get the agenda online right away. And last but certainly not least, Jim Gubbins, who tracked down door prizes, created the kick-butt QR code challenge, and archived very single tweet that was posted from the event… by hand. If I missed anybody, I humbly apologize. There were a ton of others that helped put up signs, check people in, set up food and so on. Every little bit was appreciated, believe me.
I also have to thank the good folks at Lenovo. We had a ton of sponsors that put up door prizes, but Lenovo picked up the bill for the site itself, provided breakfast and lunch for all attendees, and even gave away a ThinkCentre M90z (congrats @taml17!), the same computer I’ve written about and am using with Aiden. They were fantastic to work with, and are demonstrating a real commitment to educators by hosting days like this. Big ups for making this event happen!
The day itself was a blast, from top to bottom. Some personal highlights were watching that agenda board fill up, and having exactly the number of sessions that we had rooms for. Karma? Walking around during that first session and seeing such a huge variety of types of conversations going on was a real treat. The iOS apps session was packed and the list of apps shared would take people weeks to work through. Other rooms had far less people, but some incredibly passionate conversations were taking place. Five of us left the school building to do a quick round of GeoCaching, and wound up finding both caches we sought out! Upon returning, I jumped into a conversation about social bookmarking, and am now being forced to reconsider whether I should stick with Delicious or not. Finally, I saw that an impromptu “smackdown” was taking place in the atrium, which I sat in on for about 10 minutes. Heard about plenty of old favorites, as well as some new sites that I’m going to need to make time to explore.
There’s quite a bit I’d like to share about the process itself, what worked, what I think could have been done differently, but this post is going on long enough as it is. So I’ll wrap things up with some links to a few blog posts that stemmed from the event. I was a little surprised, and quite thrilled, at how many people told me this was their first unconference. It really demonstrated yet again how important it is that we keep reaching out and giving people opportunities to experience these life changing events for themselves. It’s still a new idea to the majority of educators out there.
- Twittert ID’s of EdCampChicago Attendees
- My First EdCamp Experience
- EdCamp Model – Perfect for PD Days
- So I survived My First EdCamp
- The Future Of EdTech is Bring Your Own Device
- My First Unconference and Mobile Learning Resources
- EdCampChicago 2011
- EdCampChicago
A huge thank you to everybody that attended the event. It’s a leap of faith to give up a Saturday for an event that doesn’t have any speakers, session titles, or agenda set in advance. I appreciate your taking that chance, and hope it provided you with a learning experience that not only met your needs, but provided you with inspiration that you could take back to your own buildings. Just remember, being inspired can make a difference in your classroom. But sharing that inspiration with others can make a difference in hundreds of classrooms.
SO…. who’s volunteering to organize the next one?

Dominate your classroom set of iPads
Check out this video about SyncPad, described as “a collaborative online whiteboard with web, iPhone and iPad applications that allow people to collaborate on sketches, wireframes or PDFs in real-time.”
I have to admit, it’s pretty impressive to see that many iPads in total sync with each other. But what would you use this for in the classrooom?

Your phone is listening to you.
Creepy or cool?
A new class of smartphone app has emerged that uses the microphone built into your phone as a covert listening device — a “bug,” in common parlance.
But according to app makers, it’s not a bug. It’s a feature!
The apps use ambient sounds to figure out what you’re paying attention to. It’s the next best thing to reading your mind.
Before you start getting weirded out, it’s worth reading the rest of the article. It focuses in on apps that use the noise in the room around you to make connections with others.
For example, the iPhone/Android app named Color. Ever go to a party/event/conference and see dozens of people all taking photos of the same thing at the same time? I’m sure it has occurred to you at least once that there really ought to be some way to gather all those images from everybody together into a single repository. So instead of being the 101st person to take a photo of the person up on stage, you can just snag a photo taken by someone else.
Color uses the microphone to take an auditory snapshot of what’s going on in the room. It compares that to other active Color users at the time, and if the sound patterns line up, it concludes that you’re both attending the same event at that moment. Once it makes that connection, it gives you the chance to see how the other people in the room are documenting things and to share what you’ve captured with them. Instant collaboration/sharing.
There are other ways to accomplish this. For example, if you’re all on the same Wifi network… but many phones will be using cell based networks. GPS could be a good way to go, but it’s too inaccurate, particularly when indoors. It couldn’t tell if you’re in one room or the room next door. So using the soundscape is a pretty creative way to do it.
While I love the idea, the firs thing that comes to mind for me is that I want to see it combined with a whiteboard/collaborative word processor type utility. Think about the potential for note taking, or for back channels. For apps to instantly know who else is in that room at that time, and for you to be able to connect up with them if you like.
Don’t worry, I’m sure it’s coming! Now if we could just scrape the ‘creepy’ feeling off of it.
Related articles
- New Color App for iPhone is Kind of Creepy (lockergnome.com)
- Snooping: It’s not a crime, it’s a feature – Computerworld (dccrowley.posterous.com)
- Snooping: It’s not a crime, it’s a feature (computerworld.com)

Calories via camera: MealSnap App
This is what’s beautiful to me about the iPhone (and iOS in general). Give people a simple platform that a large majority are using and you’ll get some hyper-creative people that will come up with ideas that blow your mind. Load up MealSnap, take a picture of what’s on the plate in front of you, and it will spit out the calories. More…
3 Days with the iPad part deux

- Image via CrunchBase
Well, got a lengthy comment from Russ Goerend regarding my initial thoughts about the iPad. I started replying as a comment… but the comment kept getting longer and longer. SO! A new post it has become.
Here’s the original comment from Russ:
Thanks for what feels like a realistic review. Overall, I agree. There seems to be potential for it to be an expensive, big iPod Touch. It is what it is. I’d love to watch a Twins game on it, of course that’s what the big TV is for. Or my laptop.
(I thought your choice of “boot” when talking about your laptop was interesting, though. Do you really shut down your laptop at home? And why would she have to leave the kitchen to look at your laptop? I have to guess we’re talking about single-digit seconds difference between me opening my Macbook and finding a recipe vs. unlocking the iPad and finding one. Not to mention, what if she wanted to use the recipe? Lay the iPad flat on the counter? I have my MacBook in the kitchen while we make dinner almost every night.)
I’m sure if I had one around the house it would get used. As someone who doesn’t have $500 of “fun money” to spend, I don’t see myself saving up for it, though. Besides, the only model that interest me is the 3G model (grandparents are each 2+ hours away) so now we’re talking $630 with data on top.
For me what it lacks — a has been beaten to death — is what really stands out. I have a two-month-old son. When we were visiting my parents this weekend, they asked my opinion on if they should look into an iPad. I asked what they wanted to do with it. First thing out of their mouth was “Skype!”
Typing on it for a few minutes at the Apple Store, I was instantly shocked that Apple still hasn’t implemented haptic feedback on the keyboard. Maybe it’s coming with OS 4.0, but wow.
Here’s my real problem: the iPad represents everything that’s gone wrong with Apple. It is the ultimate closed device. It’s “computer sized” (compared to the iPhone) and yet it is both literally and figuratively closed. There is no sense of ownership. I get to use what Apple permits on the only hardware Apple permits. It reminds me of how schools have gotten into the mess we’re currently in: close the classroom door, now open your brains, kids, while I fill you up with what I deem relevant.
I went into the Apple Store with my wife and son tonight and caught myself about 10 seconds after picking up an iPad with my mouth agape. Then I tried moving around the icons. The Apple Store had locked that down. I tried typing. Without feedback it wasn’t enjoyable. It’s not that it wasn’t doable, it wasn’t magical or astonishing or whatever Steve wanted it to be. It was frustrating. I opened up Pages so I could type and couldn’t figure out how to do anything to the document besides look at it. Turns out, I was in landscape and you can only edit in portrait. First time I’ve had to ask for help with an Apple product in my life — and I’ve been a geek since I was running Number Munchers on our IIgs when I was 6.
I’m sad. As someone who is still running a 1,1 MacBook and sold the Wii I stayed overnight in an Iowa December to get to buy a first generation iPhone for $400, I’m sad. The iPad is really disappointing to me. It’s a tiny evolution, but the culture around Jobs has allowed it to be the front runner in conversations it should not be in. The iPad in education? It’s a textbook! The iPad to replace my laptop? Give me a break!
And here goes my response:
1) Thanks for taking the time to chime in. There’s nothing cut and dry about this, and these discussions help refine my own thoughts on the topic.
2) re: Booting and the kitchen: We have our laptops in the living room. If I wanted to show her something, I’d call her over because I hate walking around with an open laptop. I wasn’t sharing that as an example of why one might NEED an iPad, rather a way that it’s already changing the way I use a computer and interact with it. This IS something that is truly portable, and usable while standing. Significant? Maybe not. But I thought it was worth mentioning.
3) Haptic response: I go back and forth on this. I tried it for the iPhone and didn’t like it. Wound up turning it off. While typing felt unnatural at first, as I got towards the end of the blog post I was feeling pretty good. We talk a lot about learning and unlearning, maybe it’s just a matter of getting used to a new format. I would say it’s impossible to tell based just on 5-10 minutes of testing, and difficult to determine even after 30 minutes. Will let you know after a few weeks.
4) Re: Cost. Personally, I’m giving it a test drive. I figure I can buy one, try it out, and if it’s a keeper great. If it isn’t, Apple devices retain their value incredibly well. I can likely re-sell it on eBay for just a small loss. But consider this: you’re looking at it as a 500 dollar toy, not a computing device. This is a new niche. I’m just about of the opinion that this will be my home computer. I’ll have a cheap media server somewhere in the house (mine cost $300) and then use this as my daily device away from work. Is it as powerful as a computer? No. But it also does some things better. This isn’t a decision to be made solely on cost. Heck, what is? It’s about what it does.
5) And speaking of… You’re lamenting the closed community. Yes it is… sort of. There are over 3,000 apps for the iPad already, and that number will top 10,000 within a month (more likely a week). That’s an awfully big closed community. And yes, there are some things that it won’t do, but there are also a LOT of things that it will. To call it a textbook is the only thing you said that I think is absolutely ridiculous. It allows you to interact with content in a more direct way than any computing device prior. And in part, that’s due to it being closed down. Believe me, I prefer open communities. My iPhone is jailbroken and I’ll likely jailbreak the iPad too. But when I compare the iPhone experience to the Android experience, there’s no question. The iPhone is cleaner, simpler, more elegant and accessible to the average user. And that’s not a bad thing. It’s something Apple figured out a long time ago. Sometimes it’s worth it to give up a few features to make it a better overall experience.
To close this response-turned-blog-post, the key to the iPad is the same as the iPhone: the Apps. In the end, the real innovation behind the iPhone was giving a simple seamless way for people to access, browse and install applications. And despite the restrictions, the things people have come up with are nothing short of amazing. The same thing will happen with the iPad. Until Saturday, developers couldn’t hold it in their hand. They couldn’t see/feel what the experience was with it. Now they can and the developers will be going crazy turning ideas into reality. And in the end, that’s what is going to turn the iPad into a success. And that success will lead more people to develop innovative programs for the iPad.
Believe me, I can critique it just as much as anyone. The fact that I can’t use Prezi on it, or Polleverywhere, or Glogster with it drives me crazy. But when weighed on the scale against all the things it CAN do and will be able to do in the near future… well, it’s not even a fair fight. Yes, it’s Apple bullying people around. But people will comply. It’s just too big a market for them not to. it’s unfortunate for those developers that have committed to technologies like Flash, but if they want to be in the game they’ll have to play ball. And from the consumer perspective, the net result is a clean, positive experience.
So forgive the rant here. And if any of you disagree, please feel free to chime in. I’d love to hear your thoughts on the topic. But as skeptical as I was (and still am in some ways), I think the iPad is here for the long haul.
Related articles by Zemanta
- Apple iPad: The Early User Complaints Are In (blogs.wsj.com)
- 10 Things We Love And Hate About The iPad (businessinsider.com)
- iPad Early Review and Reactions (fiveyearstoolate.wordpress.com)
- iPad vs iPhone (yewknee.com)
Day 17: Mobilize Your Blog
Raise your hand if you’re within reach of a a device capable of connecting to the internet for about 90% of your waking hours. Ok ok, all of you put your hands down. Between gaming devices, handhelds and mobile phones all being able to connect to the internet, there are so many ways for people to soak up the good stuff you write on your blog… besides just through your computer’s browser! However, do you have any idea what your blog looks like on a mobile device? Have you considered the potential for you to have a mobile audience, now and in the future?
Today’s challenge is going to be to prepare your blog to be viewed via mobile devices. Trust me, I understand if this isn’t a priority for everybody. But you never know how many people may be visiting you while on the move, why not make it easy for them to do so? I know my blog tends to attract a more high tech geeky audience (you know who you are), so maybe it’s not too surprising that I had over 400 hits from Symbian based mobile phones and Sony PlayStation Portables in September. Don’t worry, it’s much easier to make your blog mobile compliant than you might think.
While there are dozens of ways to make your blog mobile, we’re going to focus on three: 1) Taking advantage of plugins (if compatible with your blog) 2) Using a third party site to display your RSS content in a mobile compliant manner and 3) Using MoFuse to create a mobile mirror.
If you happen to be using WordPress, you have some extremely simple choices that will ensure that your blog is able to be read by anybody on the go. Alex King and Andy Moore have both created plugins that you can use by just installing them and clicking “Activate”. There’s even a plugin specifically for making your site iPhone compliant. The nice thing about using these plugins is that when mobile users come visit your blog, they’ll automatically be shifted over to the version of the site that is optimized for them.
The other two solutions require setting something up and then letting people know about it. You’ll have to provide a link somewhere that says “View the mobile version of this site” and shuffle people over to what you’ve created. Not a big deal, but not quite as elegant.
The easiest way to do this is to take advantage of a couple of Google tools designed for parsing web pages for mobile consumption. If you visit this tiny little Google application, it will generate a mobile compatible version of your site. Punch in your domain name, and you’re in business. Grab that URL, and make it available somewhere on your blog. Mine looks like this. Alternatively, you can use the mobile version of Google Reader to massage your RSS feed and make it available to mobile users. To do this, just take the following address and add your RSS feed to the end of it.
http://www.google.com/reader/m/view/feed/ + http://feeds.feedburner.com/teach42/weblog = http://www.google.com/reader/m/view/feed/http://feeds.feedburner.com/teach42/weblog. Once again, provide a link to that page somewhere on your site and people can get to a mobile version of your blog with a single click. And it doesn’t look half bad at all!
Looking for something with a few more power user features? Then you’ll love MoFuse.com. Sign up for an account, put in your blog URL and RSS feed, and within minutes you have a custom mirror of your site. You can take a look at Teach42′s MoFuse here. You can very easily just do the same thing the previous tip recommended, which is providing a link to your MoFuse mobile page. However, you can also make available all sorts of uber-geeky options that mobile users will freak out over. Things like adding a widget into your sidebar where people can enter their mobile number and have a link to your blog sent to them via SMS. Or display a QR code that links to your blog. Or add a chicklet that links to it. Or any combination of those. If you’re using a WordPress blog, or have the ability to add PHP code to your header (you know who you are), you can even provide automatic re-direction for any mobile visitors that visit your site. And yes, you have the ability to create a special iPhone version for all you Apple fan boys and girls!
One last advanced tip for all of you who host your own blog and want to get really geeky. If you want to go the extra mile, you can even create your own mobile URL, using the standard m.Example.com formula. It’s really not that hard. You just need to add a cname record that links m.yoursite.com to whatever link you’re using for your mobile site. This page by Google has tips for doing so for a great many common hosts. MoFuse provides some instructions for connecting up your own domain in this way. Once you make a change like this, it takes about 24-48 hours for the change to actually go through, so be patient. I’m making m.teach42.com point to a mobile version of this site tonight.
So there’s a few possible solutions for mobilizing your blog. And this doesn’t even touch POSTING to your blog via your mobile device! That’s a story for another day (won’t be a part of this challenge).
Have you ever visited any blogs from your mobile phone? Did you check out your own? Do you anticipate having any mobile readers, now or in the near future? Any tips for using mobile devices for accessing the internet? Share your tips in the comments below!

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