Cloud Computing and mobility Part 2.

Cloud Computing and mobility Part 2.


In part one we looked at how computing may just become a service utility in the same sense as electricity or water, and be accessible anywhere via wireless technologies.

Not accessible on a desktop PC you can�t lug anywhere. And available to devices that don�t have the processing power of decent laptops. But is this what we see happening around us?

There are at least two ways in which I believe you can see the beginnings of this happening - all of them outside the corporate, big server IT industry where cloud computing is usually talked about due to its potential to reduce the cost of running in-house IT departments.

The first is the availability of devices designed for this whole new category - a class that has only appeared in the last 18 months. Sometimes known as MID�s (Mobile Internet Devices), there are now major examples being sold by none other than Nokia, Sony and Apple. Certainly the iPhone and iPod Touch you�ve heard of, devices which boasts desktop-class browsing abilities as a major selling point.

The Nokia n810 tablet, though larger with its button keyboard and bigger screen, is still portable and configured primarily to access the internet. Likewise the smaller (and yet to prove itself) Sony Mylo resembles a PSP, but is built for messaging and VOIP rather than gaming.

The recent CES tech conference saw a plethora of other such devices from LG, Intel and Asus unveiled as well. Apart from the iPhone, none of the above contain phone functionality, but instead assume that easy access to the web is the new killer app.

Alongside this new found rush to supply consumers with �always-on� wireless devices capable of accessing the internet as �cloud�, comes a push now to have the experience enhanced by having the �heavy-lifting� of processing web data conducted by remote servers so as to enhance the mobile experience.

Introduced as a beta just recently, the Skyfire browser is an example of just this, supplying to mobile devices only an easily processed image file of any web page, thus making zooming and panning of content almost simultaneous. Available for windows mobile devices, it significantly lowers load times, all thanks to work being done �off-device�, the very model that cloud computing allows, albeit in a mobile access focused way.

This kind of service combined with Google Docs (and similar online �Office�-like suites) offering of free online use of productivity and business software, means that the ability to leave behind expensive and over powerful computers for sleek and accessible devices is becoming a possibility for many.

So will these trends impact mobile learning? Well, there�s dozens of new mobile devices becoming available, check. There�s access to the total of human gathered information and online software such as Word processors, Photoshop and video editing, check. There�s much greater interactive communication than just the txting, non-connected programs or basic web pages that many mobile learning projects have relied on so far, check. That seems like a winner.

Just watch and wait for them to be banned but still turn up at a school near you!







Training Top 125 2008: Winners- Congrats to my team #38

Training Top 125 2008: Winners- Congrats to my team #38

Training Top 125 2008: Winners

Congrats to my team, ranked 38- and in the top 125 for eight years in a row!



For the seventh year in a row, Training tackled the task of ranking the top
companies of employer-sponsored workforce training and development. Each Top 125 company was measured on quantitative (75 percent to total score) and qualitative (25 percent to total score) data.What factors influenced the rankings? Training tied to business objectives. Number of trainers. Employee turnover and retention. Leadership development. Tuition assistance. Corporate university. Certification. Dollars spent on training. Percentage of payroll. And, much, much more.

An outside research and statistical data company, under the guidance of Training magazine, scored companies on this data supplied by applicants. Then, our editors subjectively reviewed each application. This year, there were 37 newcomers to the list, including five in the Top 50. All of these Top 125 companies invested tremendous time, dedication, commitment, and resources in learning and development excellence�and had the business results to show for
it.


Best Practices and Outstanding Training Initiatives also are recognized in this issue. Learn about Aetna Inc.'s Generational Diversity initiative, QUALCOMM's Online Employee Tradeshow, AlliedBarton's Leadership Boot Camp, ADP's SBS Sales Leadership Academy, Best Buy's Women's Leadership Forum, Lockheed Martin's Safety Award for Team Excellence, and more.








Cloud Computing: money and mobilty

Cloud Computing: money and mobilty


by Jonathan Nalder
mLearnxyz.net

So what does mobile learning have to do with �cloud computing�? And just what is �cloud computing�?

Anyone who has been into tech for even 10 years will remember the big step it was to buy that first PC. Mine was via my parents in 1988 - the screen was CGA with wait for it - 3 colours! It cost over $2500 at the time. So did our next PC - a 386. So did the next, a Pentium IV. My latest machine, a Macbook Pro also cost just over this same $2500 line. What�s with that?

Doing the sums (and adding in a 2004 iBook - cheap at $1800) shows that just on PC hardware, thats more than $12000 - admittedly this has been over nearly 20 years. But something has been happening that might just end this cycle for ever. More on that shortly.

But first, just imagine I wasn�t just one guy, but a large organisation that needed 100 computers, like my school. Multiply the average PC costs by that many with a replacement every 3-4 years and the costs really start to add up. And we haven�t even added software and printers, routers etc. Now imagine that computing power and the software it runs could be available not from your own expensive and energy sucking tower, but from the air.

From the air you say? Well, �wirelessly� might be a better way of putting it - because its the development of the wireless internet that is making this rather fanciful sounding idea a very real possibility as the tech industry goes forward. Its starting in small ways, from two different angles, but could soon just rise up and overturn the accepted computing model we have always lived with.

The first angle its coming from has nothing to do with mobile technology, but I�ll detail it briefly in this mLearning blog just for context. It stems very much from the money side of things we�ve already discussed. Keeping up to date with computing power is expensive! Not to mention the waste the industry generates (National Geographic article). So now that large amounts of networking and productivity software via the Web 2.0 have arrived, a machine capable of running a good browser is all that many people, including large business looking to save on hardware costs, may need.

With Yahoo!, Google, Amazon, .Mac etc online storage options reaching the many gigabytes now, many users may not even need much more now than a cheap usb drive and internet connection - all the rest is supplied as a service. Cloud computing then (also called utility computing) foresees that supplying this service will eventually look much like the other utility service providers we take for granted - such as power, electricity and water. Instead of $2500+ every few years, you�ll just have a bundled monthly fee.

The one problem with this model is that its only as good as where you can access it. 3G, wi-fi and wimax technologies however mean that staying in contact with ones online files and software can now be deployed anywhere. This is where mobile devices come in. One doesn�t have to lug a PC tower or even laptop around to still be able to perform desktop-class tasks - even Photoshop is being brought online by Adobe soon.

The next part of this article will examine just which mobile devices are leading this change, and what it means for mobile learning... until then, go here for further reading:

WIRED �The Information Factories�

MIT Review �Computer in the Cloud: Online desktop systems could bridge the digital divide�.