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6/9/2008
Ed tech developer Elluminate Monday announced new collaborative learning bundles--the Elluminate Learning Suite and the Elluminate Next bundle--and launched a new tool for planning online learning sessions called Elluminate Plan! The company also told us it's revamping its education licensing structure, moving away from a concurrent user model to a structure based on the full-time enrollment of educational institutions.
Elluminate Next
The Elluminate Next bundle incorporates Elluminate Publish! and the all-new Elluminate Plan!, a tool designed to help instructors and instructional designers organize and package content for online sessions prior to the session being conducted live.
Gary Dietz, product marketing manager for Elluminate, provided us with a preview of Plan! last week. He explained that the software allows users to plan a template, structure, and framework in a non-real-time environment. It allows the structure used for interaction to be, essentially, packaged in advanced. "You can take the actions and content from a rich environment and provide this plan, which is a single file [and] runs on any system," he said. (It will be compatible with Elluminate Live! version 8.5, which is slated to be released at the end of June.) "It's like moving back to old planning book."
Although planning and packaging happens in advance in Plan!, Dietz said that deviation from the planned material is fully supported.
One beta user, Val Brooks, deputy director of Stockton City Learning Centre in the UK, shared some experiences with us via e-mail: "Plan! is just what I have needed--to be able to organise my activities in a way that will make them easy for me to handle within an Elluminate session. I had always found it cumbersome to have a series of actions that I had to remember to load at the appropriate times. Multi-tasking is not easy at any time, so Plan! will 'free' me to make the overall learning experience smoother and even more valuable."
Publish!, which is also part of the Elluminate Next bundle, is still fairly new. It's used to create "portable, reusable learning content from Elluminate Live! session recordings." It provides support for playing back audio from sessions on MP3 players. It also supports offline viewing in the Elluminate Unplugged! multimedia presentation environment.
Tufts University has optioned rights to a technology that can recharge the batteries of any hybrid electric and electric-powered vehicle while it is driven. The Tufts-developed technology could increase by 20 percent to 70 percent the miles per gallon or total driving range performance of vehicles like the Honda Civic, Ford Escape, and Toyota Prius hybrids and the Tesla Motors and Phoenix Motorcars electric vehicles.
The University of Florida has entered into a research agreement with life sciences company Cyntellect. The university's Interdisciplinary Center for Biotechnology Research will work with the company to focus on a variety of research areas including the purification and analysis of cancer stem cells (CSCs), rare cells believed to be directly involved in propagating cancers.
George Mason University (GMU) in Fairfax, VA has been awarded a grant from Intergraph to enable students enrolled in GMU's Geospatial Intelligence Graduate Certificate program to use the company's geospatial production and exploitation software as part of their core curriculum.
George Mason University (GMU) in Fairfax, VA has been awarded a grant from Intergraph to enable students enrolled in GMU's Geospatial Intelligence Graduate Certificate program to use the company's geospatial production and exploitation software as part of their core curriculum.
The University of Texas at San Antonio (UTSA) Institute for Cyber Security (ICS) has launched a new Internet security incubator. The incubator was developed to commercialize promising technologies that address major cyber security and privacy issues. The first companies to enter the incubator are Denim Labs and SafeMashups.
ISO/IEC has published the Office Open XML (OOXML) file format standard, formally known as ISO/IEC 29500:2008. It describes file formats originally designed by Microsoft for its Office 2007 productivity suite, which are used in presentation, spreadsheet and word processing applications.