isaac Mao's personal annotations on this page
-
One of the things that emerged again as a strong contender for inclusion was cloud computing - which also made last year’s list of 1-2 years to adoption. Without doubt, cloud computing is making its mark across the wider spectre of business as well - and so I was interested to read this week a post by Dion Hinchcliffe on ZNet titled “8 Ways That Cloud Computing with Change Business“.
This link has been bookmarked by 16 people . It was first bookmarked on 09 Jun 2009, by someone privately.
-
-

-
for too long we’ve limited our view of ICT in schools to what happens at the installed desktops in schools (often in labs). Increasingly staff and students are requiring (demanding?) ubiquitous access to their files, applications and social connections – any time, any place, any device. Cloud computing provides a powerful way of achieving this.
- 2 more annotations...
-
-
Ted SakshaugCloud computing and schools
-
-
One of the things that emerged again as a strong contender for inclusion was cloud computing - which also made last year’s list of 1-2 years to adoption. Without doubt, cloud computing is making its mark across the wider spectre of business as well - and so I was interested to read this week a post by Dion Hinchcliffe on ZNet titled “8 Ways That Cloud Computing with Change Business“.
-
-
Neil WintonIn considering the 8 statements that Dion has shared from a business perspective, I thought I’d have a crack at presenting some thoughts on how I see cloud computing changing education - in particular, schools - in the near future. (note - I am aware that in some of the ideas represented here I am blurring the boundaries between cloud computing and virtualisation, but the impacts are still valid.)
Would you like to comment?
Join Diigo for a free account, or sign in if you are already a member.