Showing posts with label cellphones. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cellphones. Show all posts

Monday, September 15, 2008

Go Ahead... Steal It!

When people lose their cellphones, they usually end up losing one-fourth of their lives or more. College students especially enjoy going onto Facebook and creating one of those "I lost my phone when I was drunk and now I need numbers" groups. But what if you didn't have to resort to such drastic measures? What if you could not only get your phone back, but find out who stole it?

Maverick Mobile Solutions has just invented an application to do just that. The application, called Maverick Secure Mobile, enables people to track the location of their phone, listen to phone calls, and play an obnoxious siren on the stolen phone. It does this through a technology called data encryption, which is activated when the theif replaces your sim card with his/hers.

Pretty cool! Want to know more? Click HERE!

Sunday, August 31, 2008

Make Sure to Turn Your Cellphones ON Before Class

Week of 09/01
Every day before class begins, your teacher tells you to turn your cellphone off or on silent so as not to distract the class. But now, with more and more children using cellphones, teachers are finding it difficult to keep students from using them from right under their noses. Educated as they are, teachers are now saying, "If you can't beat 'em, join 'em."

That's right, what students used to use as entertainment during 8-hour school days is now being used for learning exercises in the classroom. Teachers are embracing the use of cell phones as a learning gateway for hands-on/virtual activities.

Some high schools and universities believe in this concept so much that they are handing out Apple's 3G Iphones (or smartphones) to incoming freshman who do not already own one. Teachers can use these phones to record attendance, send out virtual/eco-friendly handouts, and create games to coincide with their lesson plans (through an HP application called Mediascape).

But has this technology gone too far? Or have we just opened up the doors to unlimited creativity?

Are we focusing too much on how to integrate technology into education that we have lost sight of the education itself? Or will students truly benefit from this new medium?
I guess the only way to find out is through observation and experience of the technologically-equipped generation. After all, experience told us that nuclear energy wasn't the brightest of ideas, but sending a man to the moon was extremely beneficial.