KonnectUs cloud-based software makes easy cross-platform sharing a reality, we swoon (video)

Last year, we expressed a yearning for something we called the Continuous Client that would allow us to pick up on one device where we left off on another, and in less than a year we saw the advent of HP’s “Touch-to-share” technology, but our dreams weren’t fully fulfilled — we longed for a platform that would offer seamless sharing across all of our devices. Well, it’s like we rubbed a bottle and KonnectUs popped out. The cloud-based software is a collaborative effort between Sensus and Open Exhibits that enables you to transfer files and information across platforms — including Windows, iOS, and Android — with a simple swipe of your finger. As it turns out, KonnectUs was built with museums in mind, but the company is offering APIs for integration into third party applications — so maybe the perfect world isn’t that far off after all. Oh, that’s right — we still don’t have a robot to shake our martinis after a hard day at the office. Video after the break.

Continue reading KonnectUs cloud-based software makes easy cross-platform sharing a reality, we swoon (video)

KonnectUs cloud-based software makes easy cross-platform sharing a reality, we swoon (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 24 Mar 2011 12:40:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Twenty pilot programs to bring off-campus broadband to low-income school districts

The FCC announced on Wednesday the approval of a plan that will ramp up twenty pilot programs in fourteen states. The program — called Learning On-the-Go — will bring wireless broadband connections to students off campus. The devices will include mobile phones and laptops, enabling students to have internet connections when they’re not at school. Starting in the 2011-2012 school year, 35,000 elementary and secondary school students will be impacted in Colorado, Pennsylvania, New York, Florida, Ohio, Georgia, Texas, Michigan, North Carolina, Louisiana, Alabama, California, New Mexico and Iowa. The total cost of the program is estimated to be $9 million, but it’ll certainly be paid back in all those Facebook visits during off-school hours, right? Hit up the source link for the full document (warning: it’s a PDF).

Twenty pilot programs to bring off-campus broadband to low-income school districts originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 11 Mar 2011 15:47:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Teachers-in-training to get pointers, CIA updates via wireless headsets

Okay, so maybe there’s no actual guarantee that headset-wearing teachers will be able to tune into top secret broadcasts from the nation’s capitol, but once the infrastructure is in place, it’s just a matter of time before everyone’s moonlighting as an operative. As the story goes, a gaggle of teachers are volunteering to take part in a Teach for America campaign that puts a bug into their ear and a mentor on the other end. The idea would be to rapidly bring a teacher up to speed by correcting and shaping their technique as it happens, and the potential implications and applications are both vast and numerous. For example, PhDs in foreign nations could one day remotely tutor rural math teachers if Obama’s national broadband plan takes hold, and if they’re feeling a bit comical, they could throw question marks onto the end of each pointer à la Anchorman. The trial is being funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

Teachers-in-training to get pointers, CIA updates via wireless headsets originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 06 Mar 2011 01:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Anaheim school district handing out GPS trackers to chronically absent students

So, it’s like this — if you’re a California gang member, you’re assigned a GPS tracker. And if you’re on track to become a California gang member, you’re also assigned a GPS tracker. Lovely. According to The Orange County Register, the Anaheim Union High School District is handing out GPS trackers to chronically absent seventh and eighth graders, with the six-week pilot program expected to break the habit of skipping by nagging the ever-loving heck out of minors. The plan breaks down as such: if you’ve netted four unexcused absences this year, you and your parents (but mostly your parents) can “volunteer” to have a tracker assigned to the child in question. From there, they’ll need to enter a code five times per day in order to pass muster, and they’ll also be required to field at least three calls per week from a coach — someone who will be checking in on one’s “progress.” The school hopes that having more kids in school will result in fewer kids getting wrapped up in gang activity, and based on successful trials in San Antonio and Baltimore, hopes are understandably high. All told, around 75 students at Dale and South junior high schools are taking part in the pilot program, and district officials are expected to make an expansion decision in due time. Meanwhile, attendance in the weekly Hackers Club has risen significantly in recent weeks, solving the original issue in a very different, roundabout way.

Anaheim school district handing out GPS trackers to chronically absent students originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 21 Feb 2011 11:51:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Fox News, Switched  |  sourceThe Orange County Register (1), (2)  | Email this | Comments

Kno looking to sell off ambitious tablet hardware business, focus on software instead

Competition usually giveth, but sometimes it taketh away too. All Things D is reporting today that Kno, the company that aimed to deliver a most bodacious dual-screen tablet to students, is investigating the possibility of selling off its hardware venture and focusing exclusively on its software offering. Internal sources claim the “quicker-than-expected” move into tablets by big electronics makers has made the environment tougher for Kno, which is now said to be negotiating with a pair of companies about offloading its slate-selling business. Apparently, just a few hundred pre-orders of the Kno were fulfilled before the company stopped shipping them recently, which could be an indication that a deal may be close. We can only guess what a purchaser would want to do with the Kno tablet designs, but as for the company itself, it’ll look to the iPad and Android-based tablets for its new market of opportunity — no point in wasting all those textbook distribution partnerships.

Kno looking to sell off ambitious tablet hardware business, focus on software instead originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 21 Feb 2011 04:29:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Kno says some tablets will ship within 60 days, doesn’t explain pre-order delay

We were somewhat taken aback when Kno confirmed its textbook tablet had been delayed without a word on when production would resume, but the company now says pre-orders will experience up to two months’ delay before they ship out, and not all of them will. eBookNewser and CrunchGear report that shipments could be delayed until as late as April 14th, and that the first shipment will be restricted “to a limited number of students and teachers.” Kno still hasn’t provided a reason for the delay, but we think that the newly closed-off website says a lot. “You now need an invitation to get a Kno,” it reads, “There aren’t enough to go around.”

Kno says some tablets will ship within 60 days, doesn’t explain pre-order delay originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 17 Feb 2011 04:24:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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LeapFrog’s LeapPad Explorer tablet looks a little more durable than your iPad

LeapFrog's LeapPad Explorer tablet looks a little more durable than your iPad

Kids of all ages love tablets, but not every tablet is suitable for fingers covered in peanut butter and jelly. We’re thinking the latest from LeapFrog would handle that situation without complaint and, with its chunky construction, should make it home undamaged after show and tell. It’s the LeapPad Explorer, shipping this summer, a 5-inch color tablet will let kids draw, play games, and of course learn all about reading, writing, and arithmetic. There’s also a built-in camera and, while we’re guessing FaceTime support isn’t likely to be coming in a future update, there is an animation studio app that will let kids have fun with whatever video they record. It’s all enough to make one very jealous of Junior, and an MSRP of $99.99 doesn’t even sound that bad.

Continue reading LeapFrog’s LeapPad Explorer tablet looks a little more durable than your iPad

LeapFrog’s LeapPad Explorer tablet looks a little more durable than your iPad originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 15 Feb 2011 16:32:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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VTech’s InnoPad brings tablets to youngsters, floods their sponge-like brains with knowledge

Looking for a telltale sign that tablets have shot right past mainstream and into over-saturation? Fix your focus a few pixels up, and you’ll be staring at it. VTech has just pushed out its InnoPad, a learning tablet developed specifically for kids aged 4 to 104 (or 9, if you’re concerned with “facts”). Boasting a 5-inch touchpanel, a tilt-sensor for gaming control, microphone and interfaces for USB, an SD card and a headphone jack, it’s actually more like a MID than anything else. Of course, the “kid-tough” casing makes it far bulkier than most, but at least it’s designed to take a licking (and keep on ticking). Contrary to conventional tablets, this one will rely primarily on learning cartridges, but there is support for digital downloads for those who’d rather sync it up with their Mac or PC and transfer things to a memory card. You’ve got a slew of options when it comes to software, and once your kid’s done learning for the day, the InnoPad can double as an MP3 player, video player and datebook. It’ll ship this fall for $79.99, with each title priced at $24.99. Something tells us this thing’s got “iPad killer” written all over it. In Children’s Doodle font, but hey…

Continue reading VTech’s InnoPad brings tablets to youngsters, floods their sponge-like brains with knowledge

VTech’s InnoPad brings tablets to youngsters, floods their sponge-like brains with knowledge originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 12 Feb 2011 01:55:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Texas student sends robot to school in his place, can’t get it to do his homework

You may have recently seen telepresence robots played for laughs on The Big Bang Theory, but they do also have quite a few practical purposes, and high school student Lyndon Baty from Knox City, Texas is now using one to particularly great effect. He has a weakened immune system that prevents him from actually attending school, so he’s using a remotely-controlled Vgo telepresence “robot” that allows him to move from class to class and interact with teachers and other students using nothing more than his laptop and webcam at home. The bot itself is four-feet tall, self-balancing, and simply packs a basic video conferencing system up top that allows its operator to interact with their surroundings — at $5,000, it’s also considerably cheaper than some other similar options. As Popular Science notes, however, this isn’t the first time that a telepresence bot has gone to school — a student in Russia suffering from leukemia has also been using a similar bot since September of last year as part of a pilot project from the robot’s designers. Head on past the break for the local news report from Texas.

Continue reading Texas student sends robot to school in his place, can’t get it to do his homework

Texas student sends robot to school in his place, can’t get it to do his homework originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 03 Feb 2011 19:45:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Slashdot  |  sourceTexomasHomepage.com  | Email this | Comments

Sifteo Cubes get FCC teardown, not so cute anymore

Sifteo’s cute little gaming Cubes have grown up a lot over the past couple of months: they’ve undergone two name changes (from Siftables to Cubits to Cubes), experienced the gaming rites of passage at CES, and now these 1.5-inch full-color computers are making their FCC debut, including the ritual teardown. The not-so-cute internal photos show one of the Cubes, guts exposed, revealing a 32-bit ARM processor. Also buried in the FCC documents is evidence that the darling devices communicate with computers via a 2.4GHz USB dongle and sport a three-axis motion sensor. Sifteo’s already sold out of its first round of pre-orders, but we’re guessing we’ll be seeing more of the adorable little guys sometime real soon.

Sifteo Cubes get FCC teardown, not so cute anymore originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 02 Feb 2011 12:15:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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