Archive for April, 2006



Google Calendar and Google Page Creator

I’ve been playing a bit with both Google Calendar and Google Page Creator. The calendar is easy to use – it allows you to set up multiple calendars, display them in a browser, and has both iCalendar export and Atom feeds of events. Public calendar sharing is supported by exposing public URLs for the iCalendar and Atom data feeds. More granular sharing of permissions for editing and creating events or just seeing free/busy schedules can be granted to other Google Calendar user accounts. You can import events in iCalendar or comma-separated formats. There are lots of things that Google Calendar doesn’t currently support, most notably recurring events.

The Page Creator at this point is a fairly basic web-forms based system for creating and editing web pages hosted by Google. Nothing too revolutionary here, but easy to use.

One thing that surprised me is that there is no connection that I can find between these services. The first calendar that I created is a calendar for my son’s Pony baseball game schedule. I then thought I’d create a web page for his team (the mighty coach-pitch Pinto Cardinals of the North Seattle Baseball Association league), and of course the first thing I wanted to put on that page was the game schedule. I could find no way of accomplishing that, aside from retyping the schedule onto the page. Given the amount that these kinds of schedules change over the season, maintaining the schedule in two places is not an ideal solution.

I hope Google shows some more integration between these services as they move forward with these new offerings.

Jazz guitar clinic with John Stowell

I spent Sunday afternoon at a jazz guitar clinic conducted by John Stowell, a Portland (Oregon) based guitarist. The clinic was sponsored by the Seattle Jazz Guitar Society (a new group who don’t have a web site just yet).

John’s a wonderful player and a good teacher, with a real knack for analyzing and talking about how he approaches his playing. After taking some general questions and loosening up the group of about 10 guitarists and me, the lone bassist, with Jobim’s “If You Never Come To Me”, he spent most of the afternoon working us through the use of various modes of the melodic minor scale.

It’s been a number of years since I thought about jazz theory in any depth, so this was an afternoon well spent, as well as a chance to meet some new fellow jazz enthusiasts.

There’s a good video podcast of John playing solo on the very cool Portland Jazz Jams podcast site.

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David Morton’s Cyber Security blog

My colleague David Morton, who is the Director of Security Solutions here at UW Computing & Communications, is now writing a blog focusing on Cyber Security. David’s one of those rare creatures – a digital security expert with a lot of experience, and even more important, a whole lot of common sense.

I know I’ll be adding his blog to my list of feeds.

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HigherEdBlogCon happening now on the web

The Edubloggers link feed points out the online conference HigherEdBlogCon, which is now in its third day (it will be going on all during April). The conference is “an online event focused on how new online communications technologies and social tools are changing Higher Education.”

So far the schedule has included:

>>Monday, April 3, 2006: Podcasting and Screencasting
>>Tuesday, April 4, 2006: Blogging Examples
>>Wednesday, April 5, 2006: Blogging Studies

Looks like some interesting stuff happening here.

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Boot Camp – Dual boot Windows on your Mac

Apple has released a public beta of Boot Camp, allowing the new Intel-based Macs to dual-boot Windows as well as OS X.

But why would you want to?

Boot Camp – Dual boot Windows on your Mac

Apple has released a public beta of Boot Camp, allowing the new Intel-based Macs to dual-boot Windows as well as OS X.

But why would you want to?

Microsoft Says Malware Recovery Becoming Impossible

Mark McNair points this one out from Eweek. Not news to computing support people, but worth pointing out, especially when you couple it with how much time it actually takes to rebuild a Windows machine from scratch (assuming it’s not one you can just build from a stock image).

I recently spent an entire day (like eight hours) rebuilding my dad’s Windows XP laptop after he got infected from clicking on a link in an email that claimed to have been from McAfee – and he had the original disks. And I still don’t think all the right drivers are reinstalled. That’s not an effort that scales when you’ve got thousands of machines in an institution.

- Oren

1. News: Microsoft Says Malware Recovery Becoming Impossible

A MS security official at the InfoSec conference, who admits
the company is seeing over 2,000 attacks per hour, recommends
that big businesses invest in an automated process to wipe
hard drives and reinstall malware-infested operating systems.

http://ct.enews.eweek.com/rd/cts?d=186-3444-2-79-51488-405339-0-0-0-1

Podcasts at the UW – experiences so far

Scott Leslie, who writes the generally insightful EdTechPost blog up in BC, wrote a post the other day entitled The only post you’ll ever see me write about podcasts, where he derides podcasts in education as a fad of the moment.

What has really annoyed me, though, about podcasts as a phenomenom and as hype, especially in the context of podcasting ‘lectures’ or other ‘knowledge transfers,’ is that it replicates what is already not a very good model of how to distribute information/learning – the synchronous spoken lecture.

I dropped Scott a note to let him know about our experiences with course podcasts here at the UW, and Scott wrote back to ask whether we’ve let the larger community know about our work. That made me realize that I haven’t mentioned any of this here in this blog.

We’ve had a pilot project with some course podcasts going this year, starting with four courses in fall quarter, thirteen courses in winter, and more this spring. There’s an early report by my colleague Cara Lane of some research on some of the first quarter participants online in a pdf file at http://catalyst.washington.edu/projects/podcasting_report.pdf. This report is based on a small sample – 41 students out of 148 enrolled in a single course, but it’s at least interesting as an early indication of how some students enrolled in a course are making use of the audio recordings of the course.

The bottom line? Students find the audio recordings useful as supplementary material to enrich the course experience. Not exactly revolutionary, but certainly useful. One other finding is that the podcasts do not have a negative impact on course attendance. That’s something some faculty have worried about, so it’s good to have some data on the question – though to take Scott’s point up, perhaps it would be more interesting educationally if this technology enabled more independent learning without attending lectures.

From a larger point of view what’s attractive about capturing lectures, along with materials such as presentation slides, lecture notes, and syllabi is that it allows the University to share and publicize the wide array of expertise and knowledge of the faculty beyond the walls of the campus – which stands to be good both for the institution and for the faculty who participate.

While I agree theoretically that lectures are not generally the greatest way of imparting information or the best mode of learning, it’s certainly a technique that’s stood the test of time and there are many faculty in all disciplines who are very good at lecturing – and attending a really good lecture is a wonderful experience. Having technology to cost-effectively share those experiences isn’t transformational, perhaps, but it’s certainly worthwhile.

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It’s spring in Seattle

The cherry trees in the Quad have bloomed, Saturday was Mo’s (the coach-pitch Cardinals of the North Seattle Baseball Association) first baseball game of the season, and today we’re going to opening day for to see the Seattle Mariners take on the Los Angeles (or is that Anaheim?) Angels.

All this and there’s still well over 100 inches of snow at the local ski resorts – we’re heading to Whistler for a few days next week (Seattle Public Schools spring break) for some spring skiing.

Is this a great time of year or what?

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