Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Fighting the Facebook Temptation

Something that is always brought up in school is how to keep our students off of Facebook or and social networking sites. And as they grow more and more like they are it keeps getting harder at an I.T. department. With ability to now post them to Facebook from your phones, iPod Touch, iPad's and most any other electronic devices it is really hard to block all of them. So is it now to the point where we should stop blocking and start teaching. Teaching responsibility on when and when not to be on these sites. I'm really, that's what we are suppose to be doing anyway, teaching our student responsibility. So how do we go about doing this? I think it all starts with the teacher working with our students on how and when to be on Facebook. So it might involve walking around the classroom as we teach and just check on what things are going on on their screens. Or get a monitoring software that lets you do that right at your desk like we are looking at. We will be using Intel's Classroom Management software that will come pre-installed on all of our students laptops. But that won't always catch what they are doing but it will do a very good jobs at what programs are running. Then it might be to where we get to just preaching to them that our work must be done and then the last few minutes of class is when we get to use that time to check our accounts, email, Facebook, ect... Maybe our classroom concepts need to start looking like that and maybe our students will start listening a little more during class if they know that they get time to Facebook after the first part of class. Now chatting, that is a whole different post but I need to gather some information and give it some thought on what I think about chatting.

Friday, March 11, 2011

Wireless Systems

A few months back I wrote a blog post on deploying your own wireless and not spending all the extra money for the "Cadillac". Well, I was wrong, we deployed a system that was at the time a very good system to use compared to our old Linksys access points that we had. It consisted of a controller, PoE, Gig connections and all the works, but as we used it more and more with more laptops the slower it got. So we decided to have Xirrus to come in and do a site survey and hoping to find answers. Well, we got them and the change is so extreme. We have now had Xirrus in place for only a few days but the change is so great. One thing I have noticed is our login times have been so much better, quicker that is, extremely quicker. We also did get the management software for it so it is so much easier to manage of coarse. So as we continue to learn what this system all does it get more exciting to me. I really enjoy learning more about networking since I didn't get to do a lot of it before since it was all set up when I came to the school here in Emmetsburg. So when our engineer got here and started talking numbers and network mask and things like that, I started getting confused. Muhammad, our Xirrus engineer explained everything so well to me and made me feel a little smarter on the networking side. So Tuesday night when he arrived we spent about 4 or 5 hours going through our network, deciding how we are going to setup our wireless infrastructure. After the night was of course we got to get a few hours of sleep, came in the next morning and we were ready to go. So we did our training as we waited for our arrays to arrive and then, they came. We were quite excited and ready for them as we were waiting for an hour or so and once the got here, it was work time. We starting un-boxing them and getting the software loaded on the server. So as soon as I got done installing the software, the other guys had them ready to go and labeled. So came the time to starting hanging and configuring them. Things went very smooth at the deployment and the rest is history. So if your looking for a great wireless system to consider in your district, look at Xirrus. From what I found, they are fast in more ways then one.