Wireless in every classroom

Government’s meddling in technology in education is overdue. Remember the “every classroom gets an interactive whiteboard” push, well, I think we’re due another and due to the Governments latest appointment it makes the most sense that you will be seeing a push for “every classroom gets wireless Internet connectivity.”

So what would a wirelessly connected room bring?

It would certainly tick one of Naace’s boxes of empowering pupils devices as they would be able to get online and access learning resources and have their device “updated” by the school either via purchased apps or via free apps online.

Who wins from a wirelessly connected school?

There are really 4 or so big hardware players in this market, namely Netgear, Cisco, Meru and Ruckus. Most other companies can’t compete as the residential grade wireless isn’t up to the job in high densities. Who wins from a services point of view? There are hundereds of wireless installation companies, the key ones that have the skills to do school specific deployments are Ergo, RM and Primary Technology.

Why would the government make a push for this?

It’s true that Gove doesn’t seem very interested in technology in education however with the new appointment of Phil Smith and his background at Cisco I can imagine he will want to put a stamp on things and what better/easier/more natural way than trying to improve the nations infrastructure by empowering pupils mobile learning devices and at the same time empowering “legacy” school owned equipment such as netbooks and laptops.

Future of Tech in Education: 60 second Naace review

Naace’s press release on the future of technology is a great read and I thought I’d summarize it for you and provide some links to resources that will enable you to adopt their vision of the future.

Our team at Primary Technology are going through each of these points of reference that Naace have indicated and looking at ways we can provide a web based service that will enable teachers to have an easier barrier to uptake an accomplish the goals set out.

References:

Naace press release
Twitter #ukedchat
Facebook
TES forums
Naace
Classdroid
ICT Leaders RSS feed [Blogs]
School Email
PrimaryBlogger
SWGFL Learning resource
BBC Learning
Primary Games Arena
BrainPOP

Also find more web based learning resources here

Remote / Off-site self hosted backup comparison

Every 2 years Primary Technology re-engineers all of it’s services and this year I have been tasked with re-engineering our School offsite / remote backup service. Our current service works well but there are a few things we would change and we feel our current provider isn’t really giving us the support we need to make these changes.

The first part of any successful re-engineering job is to gather a comparison of all the available products on the market.

I reviewed these products/pieces of software:

  • Ahsay
  • Attix
  • Bacula
  • Crashplan
  • Dropbox
  • iDrive Backup
  • Intronis
  • One Safe Place
  • Remote-Backup.com
  • Rysnc.net
  • SOS Online Backup
  • Vembu
  • XZBackup
  • Amanda/Zmanda

And I reviewed them based on this following requirements of functionality:

  • Can the client transfer data and config over HTTPS?
  • Does a Windows client Exist?
  • Is the software brandable?
  • Can I perform a system state backup on the clients?
  • Can it export database bricks / incremental / differential backups
  • Does the client have a scheduler?
  • Can the client stop itself at a specified time
  • Can the server push changes to the client backup set?
  • Can the client easily select which files to upload?
  • Does the server save old versions of files?
  • Is the software open source?
  • Does the server have overview reporting?

And my notes which probably contain the most important informative information:

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