ComputerWeekly: A review by CESG concluded that iOS6, the latest operating system (OS) for iPhones and iPads, is now secure enough to handle restricted government information, providing departments build in additional security controls. CESG has warned that security on iO6 requires organisations to extend their network monitoring and security systems and relies on users correctly … Continue reading “UK GOV: There is an urgent requirement to find an alternative to BlackBerry”
A review by CESG concluded that iOS6, the latest operating system (OS) for iPhones and iPads, is now secure enough to handle restricted government information, providing departments build in additional security controls.
CESG has warned that security on iO6 requires organisations to extend their network monitoring and security systems and relies on users correctly using the iPhone security features. Failure to follow any of these controls could compromise information security, said the guidelines.
…the government ought to be able to enforce the same policy on Apple iO6 devices as RIM’s BlackBerry 7 OS, including full device encryption, the ability to remote wipe, and locking down apps to ensure no further ones could be added to the device if necessary.
It was only a matter of time. I’m guessing that a lot of government types will keep their Blackberry devices. A lot might mean 20% of the 20,000 devices out there.
MarketingCharts.com During the 3-month average ending in September 2012, 51% of the 234 million Americans aged 13 and older using a mobile device owned a smartphone (119.3 million). That’s the result of steady linear growth over the previous 12 months: in October 2011, 38.5% of the mobile market (or 90 million) owned a smartphone. Techcrunch.com … Continue reading “Smartphones: not a Flash in the pan”
During the 3-month average ending in September 2012, 51% of the 234 million Americans aged 13 and older using a mobile device owned a smartphone (119.3 million). That’s the result of steady linear growth over the previous 12 months: in October 2011, 38.5% of the mobile market (or 90 million) owned a smartphone.
(Or: How to spot a lazy pundit in one easy step) How many column inches and ad impressions have been used to say that the iPad mini is a response to the Google Nexus 7? Before the Nexus 7, the 7″ tablet market was a bit of a wasteland Littered with the corpses of failed … Continue reading “By far the worst thing about the technology industry is the Journalism”
(Or: How to spot a lazy pundit in one easy step)
How many column inches and ad impressions have been used to say that the iPad mini is a response to the Google Nexus 7?
Before the Nexus 7, the 7″ tablet market was a bit of a wasteland Littered with the corpses of failed no-name tablets. Even the Amazon Kindle Fire (with some hard-to-substantiate numbers) failed to make a dent.
It is fair to say that the Nexus 7 proved the market. It showed that it is possible to make some gorgeous hardware in a smaller form factor.
I don’t expect journalists to be experts but I do expect them to do some research. I would love to know how Apple managed to make a response to the Nexus 7 in less than four months. If they managed to design it from nothing in less than a year I’d also be interested (especially as Steve Jobs was still around). The reaction from the press has been all about how this is a reaction, how competition is heating up.
Bottom line, the Nexus 7, the iPad mini and the Kindle Fire are all excellent tablets with their very distinct niches due to their differing ecosystems. The manufacturers will sell millions of the things this Christmas. All of them will do well this season. The only people who should be worried are folk still selling plain ol’ laptops and desktops.
Until we get this right, advanced education will be restricted to the curious. This isn’t much different to the way things have always been. But the stakes are obviously higher because knowledge-based economies are the only way forward for developed countries as their manufacturing industries are squeezed. Related posts: Catering for the Power User The … Continue reading “A Digital Tutor for Everyone”
Until we get this right, advanced education will be restricted to the curious.
This isn’t much different to the way things have always been. But the stakes are obviously higher because knowledge-based economies are the only way forward for developed countries as their manufacturing industries are squeezed.
Watch out if you’re looking for a starter book for the Raspberry Pi. Both of these books are just the free starter book relabelled and released on the Kindle Store. There’s no special content in there, they’re just rip-offs. Related posts: Google: I don’t trust them. iPhone vs Android: software lock-in and halo effect Raspberry … Continue reading “Raspberry Pi books: Caveat Emptor”
Watch out if you’re looking for a starter book for the Raspberry Pi. Both of these books are just the free starter book relabelled and released on the Kindle Store. There’s no special content in there, they’re just rip-offs.
Miranda Sawyer at the Guardian: Everyone wants a slice of Raspberry Pi The £25 programmable computer invented by British scientists has turned into a global sensation. Will it encourage kids to teach themselves code, or just end up in the hands of nerds? Kit Buchan at the Guardian: 12 things to do with a Raspberry … Continue reading “Raspberry Pi: some useful links for doing more than playing around.”
Everyone wants a slice of Raspberry Pi
The £25 programmable computer invented by British scientists has turned into a global sensation. Will it encourage kids to teach themselves code, or just end up in the hands of nerds?
Use Python to make your first game on Raspberry Pi in our easy to follow step by step tutorial
In this tutorial we’re going to be remaking the classic game, Pong. To do this, we’ll be using a Python module called Pygame. Pygame is great, because it allows the programmer to create 2D games without having to worry about things such as rendering the graphics in too much detail. The main portion of the code will be the code that makes up the game’s structure and logic.
Build your very own media centre out of a Raspberry Pi to save on space and money using XBMC
One of the great things about the Raspberry Pi is that it not only has plenty of power to play back high definition video, but it also has the HDMI output to allow you to do so. This would naturally lead the media enthusiasts among you to think of the possibilities for using the RasPi as a media centre, but the list of advantages don’t stop there. It has network support to stream video, has a ridiculously small form factor so you can tuck it out the way, and of course the low price doesn’t hurt.
I love this stuff. Stuff done for the art and worth a million eyeballs. This would be worth a CIIF project in my opinion. …and he seems to have taken it down, but look out for “Pingu meets The Thing” Related posts: Where does he get those wonderful toys…. The Creative Industries Innovation Fund CIIF: … Continue reading “Eyeballs”
I love this stuff. Stuff done for the art and worth a million eyeballs. This would be worth a CIIF project in my opinion.
…and he seems to have taken it down, but look out for “Pingu meets The Thing”
Wikipedia entry on Marshall McLuhan …content had little effect on society—in other words, it did not matter if television broadcasts children’s shows or violent programming, to illustrate one example—the effect of television on society would be identical. The point I would take away from this is that ‘television’ has had a much greater impact on … Continue reading “The Medium is the Message: Pedagogy, Paper and Politics”
…content had little effect on society—in other words, it did not matter if television broadcasts children’s shows or violent programming, to illustrate one example—the effect of television on society would be identical.
The point I would take away from this is that ‘television’ has had a much greater impact on society than any content created upon it. Of course, as an enabling technology it can rely on the full gamut of visual programming over decades to enforce the effect.
As an Internet denizen for over 20 years now, I wonder how much we consider this when attempting to communicate with other sections of society.
PEDAGOGY
Education lags behind society because it must. The role of the teacher is to prepare the student for the world brut it is a very rare individual who can prepare another for a future that does not yet exist. We tie teachers up in a curriculum they must address, we check on their progress by subjecting students to exams which only serve to reinforce an ageing curriculum and we punish those who do not meet the arbitrary standards set by individuals who did not grow up in this world. Education prepares students to understand the past.
My son was diagnosed with ADHD and the response from the school was that his choices were medication or expulsion. His inability to focus on a task was disruptive to the class yet this same child can display razor-sharp focus to a task when it is presented in a different format.
The content (message) is much the same (the presentation of concepts, numbers, formulae) but the medium is entirely different. And the medium is more powerful and becomes an enabler, maybe even an amplifier) for the delivery of the message.
If our children are living in the most stimulating and distracting era in history, it is because they are being distracted by the medium, not the message.
PAPER
I love books. My library at home is brimming with them. And despite what many may think, I am yet to read a single book on an electronic device. But the Gutenberg press is nearly 600 years old and despite our advancements in technology, the printed book remains the standard in education media. I would imagine that the data created in audio, video and interactive forms far outweighs the data created in printed books – yet printed books are what we demand our children use.
Sir Ken Robinson:
Our children are living in the most intensely stimulating period in history, besieged by stimuli that distract them but we penalise them for being distracted – we want them to conform instead, to keep them bored, so we anesthetise them rather than release and harness their energy.
When a child has access to a device like an iPad which provides stimulation of multiple senses, of multiple regions of the brain, to entertain, to educate, to answer queries and foster curiosity, is it any wonder that teachers may have difficulties engaging with them using paper and a HB pencil? They’re used to exploring 3D interactive worlds, touching screens of light that make music, rearing dragons in fantasy lands and defeating goblin and skeleton hordes. Giving them a piece of blank paper and expecting them to tell a story is almost cruel.
It becomes equally nonsensical that our schools still use slips of printed paper to communicate with parents. And if you want further proof, why is it that so many ‘education’ technology tools model themselves after outdated technology (see ‘Blackboard’ – how many school children today have even seen a blackboard?).
POLITICS
I am faced with attempting to communicate the future to government. There is a cruel dichotomy in the way the digital industry works and the way government works. I was asked to describe the development of the marketplace up to the year 2030. Similarly, we have to respond to an industry that considers next year to be the far future.
Dealing with students who are forced to comply with paper is easy as they grasp new concepts easily and even as I stand in a class, charged with delivering a guest lecture on digital, trying to inspire a response from the sullen faces, I know they are texting and messaging and dreaming of being somewhere else. It’s why I often ask the students to turn their mobiles on and take them off silent.
But if education is lagging behind society, then politics remains in the Stone Age. This is an environment that lives on paper, whose establishment thrives on tradition, whose operations are restricted from embracing digital. How else can we explain the resistance of local government to open data? How else can we explain the continued investment in construction, agriculture and other dying industries (compared to under-investment in knowledge economy sectors). Dealing with government remains a paper-bound process and their selection of medium is their message.
Series premieres Autumn 2012: http://TheClandestine.TV A Banjax / Video Hacker Production Written by Kieran Doherty Produced and Directed by Joseph Campo Executive Producer – Darryl Collins Related posts: Jonathan Gems on the abolition of the UKFC London, City of the Future cultureTECH: What I did… Since when are geeks the only creative folk?
Nintendo CEO Satoru Iwata
“no dedicated gaming systems are worthy of existence unless our games give consumers unparalleled fun.”
I think we’re beyond the tipping point for many consumers. Their new devices, whether those be from Apple, Google or Amazon (or any of the minor manufacturers), are multi-function. They write emails, they surf the web, they facilitate art and music, they provide a medium for education and they also play games.
Pecking on a DS touchscreen while also trying to use the console buttons is an exercise for frustration. I reckon we may be seeing the last generation of dedicated handheld gaming platforms.