1 / 7

Room 204 group

Room 204 group. William Green (UT - Austin) (networking, sometimes devices on network, 4K iPhones on network) John Spadaro ( Brown)(enterprise exchange, biggest service active sync; Blackberry)

seanna
Download Presentation

Room 204 group

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Room 204 group • William Green (UT-Austin) (networking, sometimes devices on network, 4K iPhones on network) • JohnSpadaro (Brown)(enterprise exchange, biggest service active sync; Blackberry) • Mairead Martin (PSU)(library applications on mobile devices, roaming reference for instruction, customization of applications for device) • Tim Sigmon(UVA)(no mobile app development, try to understand what we need to support vis-a-vis mobile devices, some work on mobile-device accessible websites) • Charlie Leonhardt(Georgetown)(not doing much in this area and need to) • Vijay Kumar (MIT) (how can we deliver good academic content on mobile devices) • Michael Gettes(MIT)(developing apps, SourceForge, laundry of apps, need to be enabled, have the money, need the talent) • Steven Sather (Princeton) (doing nothing, would like to be able to have MIT's calendars, maps, transferred to Princeton) • Sue Workman (Indiana)(in strategic plan, but don't have anything as yet; 9K iphone/ipodtouch, 1K blackberries; partnership coming in mobility space; want to get ERPs on mobile) • Ann Hill Duin (Minnesota) mobile initiative, what's our as-is architecture, look very closely at MIT, appreciated source code; my courses, system status • Deborah Keyek-Franssen (CU-Boulder) (no apps, support Windows Mobile and iPhone, some Blackberry for a while)

  2. Key themes • Importance of mobile needs to be stressed. • Tremendous implications for educational delivery, mResearch, outreach, student services... • The opportunity is right for a shared service. • Not entrenched yet. • Nascent service; opportunity to develop and share it collectively as well as cost effectively.

  3. Mobile “We” Proposal 1. Use MIT’s technical framework to bootstrap this effort collectively and locally • Source code is on sourceforge.net • Develop a cadre of expertise – Bootcamp this Fall (possible easy first win) 2. Develop a mobile working group (possible consortium) within higher ed; Mobile Education Services • Environmental scan • Architecture and roadmap • Infrastructure for enabling services and applications • Possible apps: library, registration, mobile CMS, campus maps, directory… • Possible models: membership subscription, outsourcing to pockets of expertise… • Vendor management

  4. Additional points • Create innovation pipeline • Focus on core missions • Access and distribution of content • Align wireless expertise • Product cycles; seamless work • Focus on assessment and analytics • Employ Google analytics • Leverage other groups • Educause constituent group; mLearning

  5. Points from large group discussion • many groups out there (ask Shel what they are); put this group together and create an app exchange, where students are developing the apps • if there was some consortial effort, would work with libraries to determine what apps to develop • differentiate apps that run a device vs. apps that run a service • Berkeley got out of mobile services for email, notify me service buy it as a service; need a notify.me for higher education

More Related