Oh dear, how do I sum up this semester? It has truly been awful. By far the most awful and tragic part is the death of Deborah Street, our co-investigator on the project. Deb died on the 28th March, suddenly and unexpectedly. This has been a terrible personal sadness for us on the project team, as Deb was a great colleague to all of us, and a good personal friend of mine. Her enthusiasm for teaching and supporting students will be sadly missed by everyone.
On a more mundane note, the tablets have had several problems this year (see below) and we have realised that they are sadly lacking in memory now, as we increase the activities we want to use them for. This makes then very slow. We have experimented with putting 4Gb of memory in them and this helps enormously, so the remaining project money will go on doing this for all 21 of them.
We spent a whole day last summer planning what we would do this semester, based on the findings of the previous year. We planned on around 20 - 25 students. 5 days before the module started in January another 25 students were added to the cohort! This threw our plans out completely, and we really flew the module by the seat of our pants, as far as the tablet project was concerned. We couldn't do what we wanted to do as we had such a big class to manage, and this is reflected in the responses to the questionnaires and focus groups - much more negative than last year.
All in all, a semester I would never wish to repeat :-(
Friday, 29 May 2009
Thursday, 5 March 2009
A heads up on battery management
Just for information, we hit a problem in Dec/Jan with the tablet battery charging. For no apparent reason they stopped charging, even though they were all plugged into the charging trolley and everything seemed to be working normally. On checking each of the computers we realised that the problem was with battery management, and in many cases the computer had stopped seeing both the batteries. It turned out that this was the result of missing a BIOS update, together with missing a whole set of Vista updates as the computers hadn't been used for a couple of months over the summer. Quite why it should raise its head when it did, and why it should have the bizarre effect of making the batteries appear missing isn't clear, but at least we know that updating the BIOS and Vista solves the problem. Just a heads up for anyone out there experiencing the same problem.
Practising research interviews in Second Life

Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)