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September, 2008 - The UK Higher Education Blog - Site Home - MSDN Blogs
The HE Blog
News and views from the Microsoft UK Education Team
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September, 2008

  • The UK Higher Education Blog

    What do you do when students arrive with their laptops

    • 1 Comments

    Talking with the University of Aberdeen, they thought that hey had one of the biggest student wireless networks in Europe. There to allow their students to connect to the VLE and the Internet, wherever they are on campus – from their own laptops. The drive to provide ever-improving services to students has been on for a while, and continues to accelerate. Looking outside the UK is often useful – the demand-led, student-as-a-customer mindset has been around on US campuses for years longer than here.

    There’s no doubt that there are increasing expectations from students about the connectivity and services you’ll offer them through your ICT services (I read that Nottingham University are just about to experiment with WiMax), and if it isn’t already, it’s likely to end up on your IT development plan.

    Whilst searching for something else, I came across the La Trobe University case study from Australia, where they have implemented Network Access Protection, a feature of Windows Server 2008, to detect and manage the health of systems connecting to their network – including Windows, Linux and Apple computers. And that allows them to safely manage student laptops connecting to their network. If you’re interested in the subject, you may want to read their case study, or better still, watch the video

    You can read their full case study here, and read more about Network Access Protection (NAP) here

  • The UK Higher Education Blog

    Microsoft education links

    • 0 Comments

    I've pinched this from my colleague Mark A'Bear, some of it's perhaps more focused on schools but it shows a sample of how some of the web work Microsoft is doing can be relevant to education. Mark has summarised some of our education links below with a very brief description of each technology. They might not all seem like obvious areas of technology and education but with some imagination we are already seeing some fabulous teaching resources being built around this. The one thing you will need in most cases is a Windows Live ID. If you haven’t got one already …. why not?

    I'm starting with my current favourite, Worldwide Telescope – this community resource is another example of applications in the cloud that could be made available as part of a curriculum. The guided tours and ability to explore planets and astrological features are well worth the investment of a few minutes if you haven't tried it yet, please do.

    http://www.worldwidetelescope.org/

    Auto Collage – as the name suggests this product takes a collection of images and blends them together into an attractive collage. The user can specify the number of images, save thye collection, email to a colleague, etc

    http://research.microsoft.com/AutoCollage/

    Films for Learning – think of this as U-Tube for Education, offering a range of ‘lessons’ prepared and submitted for teachers.

    http://www.filmsforlearning.org

    Homework Helper – this small tool uses drop-down boxes – key stage, subject, topic - to create a granular search for particular information. Try GCSE, Geography, Volcanoes and then search for Etna. The results are educationally relevant as opposed to random.

    http://www.livehomeworkhelper.co.uk/

    Live Mesh – this cool technology automatically synchronises information across different devices. PCs are currently supported with Mac and Mobile support imminent. Members can be invited to join a Mesh so this technology is perfect for collaboration and group learning scenarios.

    http://www.mesh.com

    Photosynth – this great tool stitches together a series of related pictures into a panoramic 3D view that users can zoom in and out of to see the detail. The site contains a wealth of examples to explore whilst the technology itself is perfect for presenting to a group, submitting as course work or just providing an innovative presentation of homework.

    http://labs.live.com/photosynth/

    Popfly – try a mashup for yourself, or look at the examples at: http://dev.live.com/mashups/default.aspx. This is where users can merge multiple applications together such as images from Flickr and Virtual Earth to see the geographic location of those images. THis is just the tip of the iceberg though.

    http://www.popfly.ms/

    Silverlight – more and more application providers are developing in sliverlight. It is a great way of creating rich and engaging content as well as streaming video content. The site has some great examples and you can install Silverlight yourself. The Showcase has a number of great examples such as the Hard Rock Cafe: http://silverlight.net/showcase/

    http://www.microsoft.com/silverlight/

    Surface – this we think is the ‘next generation’ whiteboard. Take a look at the videos and imagine how this technology could be used in education to support Special Education Needs, Group working, class teaching, parents’ evenings, etc, etc. We now have a device in the offices at TVP so we’ll try and make one available first hand at the next partner event.

    http://www.microsoft.com/surface

    Worldwide Telescope – this community resource is another example of applications in the cloud that could be made available as part of a curriculum. The guided tours and ability to explore planets and astrological features are well worth the investment of a few minutes.

    http://www.worldwidetelescope.org/

  • The UK Higher Education Blog

    Wii Presenter

    • 0 Comments

    All over the UK this week tens of thousands of new students will be arriving into lecture theatres full of expectation and a desire to learn.  The vast majority of these students will have had more exposure to technology than any previous intake and, frankly, it's going to be difficult to impress many of them with a handful of powerpoint slides.  You may have seen my pptFlex posting the other day which, with some thought, can bring a great deal of flexibility to using powerpoint based content for teaching and learning.  Now, I've discovered Wii Presenter on CodePlex.  Essentially, you can use a Wii controller to navigate through PowerPoint,

    A short video explaining what is capable is here:

     

  • The UK Higher Education Blog

    Cray’s deskside supercomputer running Windows

    • 0 Comments

    According to Jack Schofield, on the Guardian’s Technology Blog,  Cray have just announced a deskside supercomputer, running Windows HPC (the high performance computing version of Windows Server 2008).


    This took me by surprise for a number of reasons:

      Cray_CX1

    • “Deskside Supercomputer” – Wow. I still remember seeing my first Cray supercomputer at CERN in the late 80’s, with a picnic bench around the outside. Now we’ve gone “deskside”
    • Jack calls it “cheap” –at $25,000 (approx £14,000) it might be cheap for a supercomputer, but not quite in the same league as a normal “deskside” computer
    • It’s available on amazon.com – That’s really game-shifting – buying supercomputers from the same place I buy books, games, CDs and ironing boards (yes, we really did get our last ironing board on amazon.co.uk)

    Anyway, I’m not planning to buy one just yet, but thought it was worth sharing! Read more on Jack’s blog

  • The UK Higher Education Blog

    A chance to get up to speed – with Steve Ballmer in London

    • 0 Comments

    At the end of this month, Steve Ballmer will be in the UK, and providing the opening keynote for our UK conference “Technologies to Change your Business”. As well as the usual slew of new product announcements, I noticed that Microsoft Research will be showing off some of the future technologies. At many events, these can make the highlights, as the team from Cambridge (and elsewhere globally) talk about what’s going on behind the closed doors of the research labs.

    If you’d like to come along for the afternoon, there are still some (free!) places available – you can register on the links below


    image“The fifth [computing] revolution is about more than personal empowerment and social interaction; we literally will get the tools to help us better understand and address global issues that affect billions of people, including education, healthcare, science, and environmental change.”
    CeBIT, March 3, 2008

    Technologies to Change Your Business:  How Customers Are Implementing Tomorrow’s Strategies Today

    The Microsoft Launch Event for IT Managers & Executives with Steve Ballmer, CEO, Microsoft and Chris Ingle, Consulting & Research Director, IDC

    12.30pm – 5pm.  1 October 2008.  Royal Festival Hall South Bank Complex

    Some organisations see new products as an incremental improvement to what they do today – others look for the opportunity to make a step change in the way they deliver services & value to customers.  IT initiatives such as virtualisation, consolidation & hosted services are not in themselves new, and yet many customers still only scratch the surface of their potential – few are yet to embrace these strategies and use them extensively to deliver new value. 

    At the upcoming launch event, “Technologies to Change your Business”, we will not only be introducing the latest in the line up of Server technologies from Microsoft, Hyper-V and SQL Server 2008, but more importantly, showcasing customers who are taking these products and using them as the catalyst for significant change in their business. Additionally, we will be showcasing some of the future emerging technologies to come from Microsoft Research.

    Agenda
    12:15 Registration and Lunch
    13:00 Introduction – Martin Veitch, CIO Magazine
    13:15 Opening Keynote by Steve Ballmer: Microsoft's Vision for Software Delivered as a Service
    14:00 Taking Virtualisation to the Next Level: Achieving a Dynamic IT Infrastructure.
               Bruce Lynn, Microsoft
    14:40 Virtualisation vNext: Customer Case Study and Q&A
    15:00 Break
    15:30 Planning for the next wave of Technologies: Chris Ingle, IDC
    16:00 From Database to Data Platform. Delivering New Value to the Business.
              Keith Burns and Andrew Fryer, Microsoft
    16:30 Deriving New Value from Data and SQL Server 2008: Customer Case Study and Q&A
    16:50 Summary
    17:00 Close

    Register Now to join us for an afternoon of innovation, debate & insight as we launch the next wave of technologies to help you deliver new value to your organisation.


  • The UK Higher Education Blog

    Back to school - maybe it's time to take a fresh look at Powerpoint with pptPlex

    • 0 Comments

    Try itI've been playing around with a new Office add-in for several months now.  pptPlex introduces a fresh look at how Powerpoint can be used for presentations and teaching.  Have you ever been frustrated with the typical linear format of a powerpoint presentation?  Would it be useful to think of your content as being on a great big canvas that allows you to focus in on the relevant content at the appropriate time and re-visit it quickly and simply.

    I could go on, but if you are looking at bringing a new style to your presentations, lectures, briefings and/or tutorials then pptPlex could be for you.  On the site there's access to the download, FAQ, Blog and discussions about pptPlex.  My favourite things about pptPlex are:

    1. Using live content (documents, spreadsheets etc)
    2. Zooming in and out of slides
    3. Organising presentations into sections for the "Tell them what you're going to tell them, tell them, tell them what you've told them"
    4. Navigating through the content the way I want to navigate - not just left to right

     

    Take a look at the video for a snapshot of what it does:

     

    I've also just read that some one is using a Nintendo Wii controller to navigate.

     

     

    There are more videos here.

     

    See more stuff here- www.officelabs.com, I'm also trying Email Prioritizer.

  • The UK Higher Education Blog

    Mobile Learning recognition from the University of Wolverhampton

    • 0 Comments

    I've just noticed this posting:

    http://blogs.msdn.com/jasonlan/archive/2008/09/10/dave-whyley-receives-honorary-doctorate-for-mobile-learning.aspx

    on my Colleague, Jason Langridge's, blog.  David Whyley has been awarded an honorary Doctorate from Wolverhampton University for his work n the field of learning.

  • The UK Higher Education Blog

    Ultimate Steal – Jersey, Guernsey and Isle of Man

    • 4 Comments

     

    Whoops – when I wrote about the Ultimate Steal (Office 2007 Ultimate Edition for £38.95, only for students) I said it was open to all UK students who have a .ac.uk email address (and staff too).

    Of course, I’d forgotten something – we have also added Jersey, Guernsey and Isle of Man students and staff from the beginning this year.

    So that means if you’re a student or staff member, and you meet the criteria (including having an email address that ends in '.ac.im', '.ac.gg', '.ac.je') then you’re in – part of the merry Ultimate Steal band!

    (I was reminded about this as I packed my suitcase for a trip to Jersey tomorrow. Normally, a trip to Jersey in September is nice and summery – but not this year I think!)

  • The UK Higher Education Blog

    The Large Hadron Collider and Windows Live

    • 0 Comments

    I found this button for my Windows Live Toolbar this evening and it gives a link directly from my toolbar to www.lhc.ac.uk

    image

    To access the button visit here.  It's great to see a toolbar promote access to a learning site.

  • The UK Higher Education Blog

    Creating my first Photosynth

    • 0 Comments

    Today, I’m in London, and inspired by Mike’s Aberdeen Photosynth yesterday, I thought I’d have a go. And I am astounded at how easy it turned out to be.

    image

    I took my photos of Westminster Cathedral, which is right outside of our office. Just before you say “But that’s not Westminster”, then re-read the last sentence. It’s the Roman Catholic Westminster Cathedral, not Westminster Abbey.

    Before I first worked in Victoria Street, I had no idea that this impressive building was a few hundreds yards from the Abbey. It is well described on its website: “Westminster Cathedral is one of the greatest secrets of London; people heading down Victoria Street on the well-trodden route to more famous sites are astonished to come across a piazza opening up the view to an extraordinary facade of towers, balconies and domes.”

    Anyway, I stood in front of it, and kept taking photos – 103 of them – including close ups of the statuary, and the left hand-side of the building, and then loaded them into the Photosynth software. I didn’t have to tag them, or arrange them, or shoot in any particular order – it did all of the work. And after about an hour (analysis, upload and display time, I guess) that was it – a 3D model of the cathedral was made.

    You can see a snapshot of a part of it on the right, and you can see my whole synth here.

    I tried a few tricks, to see how they would work:

    • Walking in the left-hand door, and you can too, but the lighting made it impossible to take photos inside - LINK
    • A close up of the notice board by the door – LINK spot the bargain!
    • And a view around the side, with a close up of the mosaic over the door – LINK

    I was astounded at the “3D dot” model it created, as it is an amazing trick from a few photos!

    Have a go at Photosynth yourself. I think this whole model took less than 30 minutes of my time (plus the background uploading)!

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