Friday, March 29, 2013

Week 8: The Future of All Things Mobile


Thing #22 You become the computer!

Okay, bio implants may sound creepy to you, but there are some people who are totally into it. (http://thenextweb.com/mobile/2012/11/04/perpetually-connected-are-wearable-computers-and-bio-implants-the-future-of-mobile/).

If computers can be worn inside us and controlled by our brains, what does this mean for the potential of personal information getting out? Think about it. Warner Bros. even made a whole digital TV series on YouTube called "H+" that addresses this very issue.

But it might not be all bad . . . . Here's is Google's sunny view of what the technology might look like: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9c6W4CCU9M4&feature=player_embedded Makes me wonder how computer classes will be taught if people are the computers!

Thing #23 To infinity and beyond! Here are some things on the horizon for the foreseeable future:

http://mashable.com/2013/01/04/mobile-2013/ -- e-wallets, bendable phones, and again with the wearable computers


http://www.gizmag.com/future-mobile-technology/17554/ -- Check out The Body as Interface and Programmable matter. Whoa. They can already make a self-folding piece of paper, and this same technology could be applied to computers and robots. Recently, Stephanie said that the main things you need to know in life are how to follow directions and how to fold stuff -- you better get on board, people!

http://www.nbcnews.com/id/43015182/ns/technology_and_science-innovation/t/reasons-will-be-awesome-year/ -- Your life in the year 2020!

http://all-that-is-interesting.com/five-new-technologies-that-will-change-your-life-in-10 -- Holograms, and other "Star Trek" technologies we will soon have.

What are your ideas for what you’d like to see in the future? Be as creative and crazy as you want! How do you envision the future, and what things would help you personally? Invent new technologies, talk about robots, consider dystopia or defenestration – the sky is the limit!

Friday, March 22, 2013

Week 7: Other Types of Mobile


Thing #17 Cameras

You may already use your smartphone to take pictures and e-mail or post them to the Web, but many digital cameras are now able to use wireless connection to upload or e-mail photos and videos as well. They usually use a “Share” button so that you can go to your saved photos, click on the one you want to send, and hit the “Share” button to bring up options for e-mail and the Internet. Some examples are:



·         Nikon: http://imaging.nikon.com/lineup/coolpix/style/s5200/ (offers the option to transfer pictures to your wireless devices)

Thing #18 GPS and Mobile technology in cars

Your car might already have an auxiliary jack, which can be used to connect your mobile device to it and listen to music. But some cars also have touch screens right on the center console that act like little computers. Think about it: If you had a spare $100,000 or so lying around, you too could buy a sweet ride that includes Internet access and hands-free calling along with heated and ventilated seats!

What might this look like in the near future? http://www.howstuffworks.com/under-the-hood/trends-innovations/5-future-car-technologies.htm#page=0 -- Cars that communicate with each other on the road, self-driving cars, and self-stopping cars!

Thing #19 MP3 players

One of the oldest mobile devices is the MP3 player. The MP3 format was originally a CD format, a method of compression used to fit hundreds of songs onto a single disc. Nowadays, the MP3 player is smaller than your phone, and can hold several thousand songs, photos, and videos. Check out this site for an explanation of the types of players available: http://www.amazon.com/gp/feature.html?ie=UTF8&docId=1000263181

Thing #20 Smart Tables

Listen, people, every day I discover some inanimate object that’s smarter than I am! Smart phones, smart cameras, smart cars, and now smart tables! Actually, there are libraries that use the children’s versions of smart tables to promote interactive games, puzzles, or reading (http://smarttech.com/table). They can also be used in office environments and for conferencing (http://www.smarttable.org/), and in classrooms (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b_FRmYXtneQ).

Thing #21 Urban Gaming

As we’ve seen, mobile devices can be used for a variety of learning and fun activities. Urban Gaming is sort of the geek version of this – “gaming” but with real life, like LARPing (Live Action Role Play), is very big right now. Check out this link to get an idea of what this looks like: http://www.howstuffworks.com/outdoor-activities/urban-sports/urban-gaming3.htm. You may have heard of geocaching projects, which are ways to use GPS devices to go on a high-tech scavenger hunt. This is all a part of Urban Gaming.

Friday, March 15, 2013

Week 6: The World of Wireless


a.      Thing #14 Our wiring closet (just for the fun of it!)

Let's start the "wireless" discussion by talking about wires! Have you ever taken an exciting tour of our wiring closet? Well now’s your chance! Take a minute to go into the back part of the Book Nook and open up the black box that is our wiring closet. This contains all sorts of equipment for running our Internet, Polaris, and wireless services. The main things you need to know to make sense of this mess are:

·         The top row with the green cables coming out of it is our patch panel. Wires go from this panel into one of the others below.

·         The second row with the green cables is the OCPL switch (sometimes called Metronet). Cables going from the top row into this row are hooked up to the OCPL’s Internet and Polaris.

·         The giant black box at the bottom left is the UPS (Uninterruptible Power Supply). This is the battery that keeps the network running if the power goes out. This is also the machine that either I or technical services might ask you to reboot if there is a problem with our networks. You would simply hold down the button marked "Reset" until everything powers down and then back up again.

·         The silver box on the bottom right is our public Internet switch, and the blue box above it is our wireless router.

Thing #15 Data plan vs. wireless

Did you know that “The world's first wireless telephone conversation occurred in 1880, when Alexander Graham Bell and Charles Sumner Tainter invented and patented the photophone, a telephone that conducted audio conversations wirelessly over modulated light beams (which are narrow projections of electromagnetic waves)”? (This is from a Wikipedia page on wireless service, which mercifully I won’t make you read!) The term “wireless” really encompasses all sorts of devices and services in addition to Internet and cell phones.

Wireless service is broadcast from a router, which uses radio waves to send out and receive signals. Each signal that gets broadcast by an Internet or wireless connection has an IP Address, which is sort of like your home address. It's difficult to pin down exact location using this address, but you can get pretty close. The IP Address of Central’s computers that use Polaris always begins with 10.220.124, but the last numbers are within a range, so the complete number would look something like: 10.220.124.11 or 10.220.124.216 – not exactly the same for each computer, but the first three sets of numbers never changes. Most things on our Marcellus network starts with 192.167, and the last two or three numbers vary.

3G and 4G stand for “Third Generation” and “Fourth Generation.” It’s the shortened term for the standards put forth by the Internet Telecommunication Union that Internet and cell service providers must adhere to. Any company that advertises 3G or 4G service is really just telling you that they are contractually obligated to provide the most up-to-date and fastest service that is available. LTE stands for “Long Term Evolution,” and is part of another set of standards that can only be used across a 4G network, and basically has a goal of increasing service speed through digital processing. So if you’re thinking that this is just a bunch of technical jargon and that companies name their networks things like 3G just to trick you into thinking they are fancier, you’re correct! Signals are broadcast from cell towers owned by companies like AT&T and Verizon, but you have to pay for this service. When you buy a smartphone, you are required to buy a data plan to go with it, but service providers have levels of data service and some are cheaper than others or can be shared.

Thing #16 Wi-fi and Bluetooth peripherals

Okay, now we’re done with the technical mumbo-jumbo, so it’s on to the fun stuff you can do with all these signals in the air! Some other things that wireless technology is good for:

Wireless mouse and keyboard – Not only can you use a wireless keyboard or mouse with your laptop computer, you can also use it with a tablet through what they call “Bluetooth Pairing" (this is what we use for our catalog iPad). Bluetooth is similar to wireless, but it works over much shorter distances, so it’s best for things like keyboards and cell phone headsets that only need to be paired with one device. There are some cool types of Bluetooth keyboards available, like rubber (http://www.sizlopedia.com/2007/07/04/5-flexible-rubber-keyboards-for-your-computer/) and even holographic! (http://www.thinkgeek.com/product/e722/)

Printing and scanning – These devices are also available as either wireless or Bluetooth. You can use these printers to send documents from any wireless-enabled device – computers, laptops, phones, tablets, etc. Bluetooth printers were originally sold with digital cameras so you could make photo prints right from the camera, but now they are also used with smartphones.

Gaming devices – Game systems like Wii, PlayStation, and Xbox have what they call “wireless peripherals” for many of their games. You can get a guitar or microphone, the controllers are usually wireless, and even in a way you are a wireless peripheral for your gaming system! A camera detects your body movements and scores you accordingly, all without the need for pesky wires.

Friday, March 8, 2013

Week 5: The Mobile Web


Thing #12 Differences between the Internet and the Mobile Web

So, since tablets and mobile phones can e-mail, print, create documents, play games, and access the Internet, they’re just as good as computers now, right? Well . . . not really. Mobile devices do have the Internet, but it’s a limited version called the Mobile Web (you may notice this if you do a search for videos on YouTube on a computer and then do the same search on mobile YouTube – it’s probably not the same list). Mobile devices still have trouble loading and displaying full Internet pages. The Internet (a collection of connected computers around the world) has been around since the 1950s, but the World Wide Web (the collection of pages we see and know as the Internet) is relatively new, and already it’s morphing into the Mobile Web, which is really an entirely different kind of Web. For thing 12, read a couple articles about the differences between the full Internet and the Mobile Web.



Thing #13 The difference between apps and Mobile Sites

Now that you know all about the Internet vs. the Mobile Web, there’s another distinction: an app vs. a mobile site. A mobile website is similar to a regular Internet website: you access content through a browser (Internet Explorer, Safari, etc.), and load pages through the browser window with the ability to bookmark and type in website addresses. An app – which is short for “application” – is sort of like a mini-program. You download apps so they are saved on your phone, just like you would download a program to your computer, using your device’s app store. Some apps are free and some cost money, and you navigate through them using links to pages at the bottom of the screen. There is a hybrid as well called a Web app (this is what we use for our Marcellus app). Web apps are accessed initially through a website (for us, it’s http://mfl.mobapp.at), then downloaded and saved to the desktop as an app, rather than downloaded from an app store.

Friday, March 1, 2013

Week 4: Take it on in to Tablet Town!


Thing #9 One device to rule them all!

Since the explosion of the iPad, there has been a rush for developers to produce tablets – devices that are ultra-portable, easy to use, and basically contain the entire world and anything in it that might be useful to a person at the drop of a hat. This thing is easy – just read about different tablets and how they work: http://www.howstuffworks.com/tablets/tablet.htm.

 Thing #10 Explore one of our mixed media book apps on our iPad 

Lately, Cheryl and I have been dazzled – I mean, stopped in our tracks and watched a whole book app for about 20 minutes dazzled – by these book apps! Specifically anything from Moonbot Studios, who developed The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore, as well as The Numberlys. These are books that were developed as apps, although Morris Lessmore is also an Academy Award-winning short film and was made into a print book. The future of reading is in “mixed media,” or books that can contain links to websites, 3-D components, and ways to interact with the stories. The Moonbot Studios apps have activities on each page – with “The Numberlys” the reader has to help the characters hammer out and create the different letters of the alphabet. And an additional app called “Imag-No-Tron” is meant to be used along with the book – when you press “Play” and hold the iPad over a page in the print book, it turns the book 3-D.

For this thing, take a look at one of the apps in the “Books” folder on the iPad – any one you want – and let me know what you think.

Thing #11 Download an app to one of our iPads

Go to the App Store in the “Utilities” folder and download a free app to one of our iPads. You can choose any app you want as long as it’s free. Try searching for something you like to do, or take a look at one of the apps in the “featured” category and see if anything strikes your fancy. You can also do an Internet search for iPad apps you might like, then search those specific apps on the iPad and download them. Keep in mind that there are millions of apps out there, and not all of them are good. Let me know which one you downloaded, and what you thought of it.