Cameraphone Moments. People in the auditorium and in workshop sessions raised their phones above their heads to
snap images of interesting screens of information. I believe Daithi O'Murchu was snapped more than any other presenter, mainly because he appeared on two screens simultaneously. Online Meeting Rooms
depicted him in a head shot and he also appeared as a avatar in a
simulated world, in a full-screen projection. Outside of the
auditorium, I noticed several people snapping shots of key frames from
overhead presentations, getting screenshots from computer programs and
shooting themselves inside camera viewfinders. In the hands of several
educators, the cameraphone was working as a documentation device. I
wonder how we will see this process evolve in the next five years.
Virtual Identities.
As in most of the events I attend, I walked alongside a lot of people I
couldn't stop to meet in casual conversation. I know I walked behind
people whose work I read every week--but I didn't have time to chat.
I'm also sure I was in the same canteen as dozens of educators whose
faces I wish I'd recognised. I know all these people by their signature
elements, by their blog properties, by the slides they share or by the
reputations they've established. I wish I could capture all of their
faces (or their logos, or their nicknames or their URLs) on a big
screen that rotated the information in the meeting venue. Furthermore,
I wish I had a listing of all those who attended, with links to
information on websites like LinkedIn, Xing, Twitter, Flickr, Ning, Facebook
or any other website that offered thumbnail profiles or activity
streams of their virtual identities. In five year's time, I wonder if
we'll be able to run a large screen over the coffee break area with the
names and taglines of everyone who registered. I know I would seek out
people I had never met in person if I knew they were within my field of
vision at a crowded event.
The Free and Open Cloud.
Tipperary Institute's free and open wifi network served attendees well
on Saturday. More people were using laptops than smartphones (i.e., the
Nokia E90, the Apple iPhone or the RIM Blackberry). As talk during the
conference centred on the inevitability of scarce resources, I wondered
aloud about the impact of primary schools simply opening up their
broadband on campus with wireless routers offering a free connection to
anyone sitting around the school grounds. Just let the State-funded
bandwidth course through the hallways to be used by students who pledge
to adhere to standards of acceptable use. This kind of system works in
many locations, including the Gaelscoil of Newcastlewest.
Subscribing to a Group Calendar.
I want to see similar events like the Tipperary Institute Schools
Conference in the months before they're held. I'd like to subscribe to
calendars maintained by colleagues who are willing to share their
information with me. With the shared view of Google Calendar, I can
sync events onto a Blackberry or into Outlook. I really want to see
events shared between the Irish Learning Technology Association, the National Council for Technology in Education, the Symposium of Higher Education and the Computer Education Society of Ireland. At the very least, these shared views could ensure fewer event conflicts.
Pre-Event Workshops. We need more teacher-to-teacher practical sessions. These workshops should precede the main events and they may involve an attendance fee. All good workshops have long lunch sessions and programmed social evenings. I believe there are 20 additional teachers in Ireland who would attend the next running of the Tipperary Institute Schools Conference, just for the workshops.