Advanced News

Announcing three new limited-time SMART offers

As part of a mass media campaign targeted to K–12 education administrators, Advanced and SMART Technologies is pleased to announce the following promos:

Act now as these are limited offers!  These offers will be valid from January 21, 2008, until April 30, 2008, and are only available in the U.S. and Canada. This promotion is an affordable way for you to equip your classrooms with SMART products.

 For more information, contact us at 1-800-436-6239 or info@advanced-inc.com

Lifesize wins two industry awards

Lifesize, the high definition video conferencing solution, has been recognised for two prestigious industry awards within a matter of days.
Internet Telephony Award
Firstly, Lifesize Express was named as 2007 product of the year by Technology Marketing Corporation’s (TMC®) INTERNET TELEPHONY magazine. Craig Malloy, CEO and founder, commented:

We are honored that INTERNET TELEPHONY has chosen to recognize LifeSize Express with this award… Our customers tell us they love everything about LifeSize Express – the small form factor, the great value, the simple interface and the beautiful, crisp and fluid high definition video it delivers over their existing broadband connection. LifeSize Express makes telepresence accessible for everyone.

Launched on October 23, 2007, LifeSize Express delivers a high definition, point-to-point video communications experience at a significantly lower price than most standard definition systems.

Then, the manufacturer of Lifesize products, LifeSize Communications, was named “Videoconferencing Company of the Year” for 2007 by leading UK industry authority Videoconferencing Insight, calling the company’s technology “the most innovative and efficient in the industry” and calling the price/performance of LifeSize products “truly amazing.”

Richard Line, Editor of Videoconferencing Insight, said:

LifeSize was the first company to offer high definition systems and remains the leader in price/performance terms today. The company focused on creating HD VC systems from the outset almost five years ago and its technology is the most innovative and efficient in the industry.

Videoconferencing Insight predicted a rapid adoption of high definition, and observed that affordable LifeSize products are becoming the main force that drives that market transition.

Visit our products website for more information about Lifesize Videoconferencing Products.

New view to ‘conference call’

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Videoconferencing technology has been with us for years, but it never really took off mainly because of the poor image quality and the prohibitive per-minute cost of ISDN. Custom-installed ISDN lines, which had to be strung together in parallel to communicate the necessary data, were the only way to use the technology.

Now, videoconferencing vendors sell products designed to operate over standard broadband Internet connections. They also offer products with high-definition video, making images crisper and enabling a more intuitive conversation for both parties.

U.S.-based LifeSize Communications believes it has cracked the price problem with LifeSize Express, a relatively low-cost product with high-definition Inter-net-based video communications. With 30 frames per second (the same as standard video), at a resolution of 1280 x 720 pixels, it offers real-time video indications at Internet speeds as low as 128 kb per second. (To get the full video quality, however, you will need 1Mb per second.)

While still priced in the thousands, LifeSize Express is useful to companies with a need for regular long-distance communication between the same people. With gas prices escalating, and tighter security making it troublesome to take even short trips, companies that need something better than a PC-to-PC video link, with a product such as Skype, might opt for LifeSize Express.

LifeSize Express

For more information about LifeSize Express contact Advanced Presentation Products at 905-502-1110 or email sales@advanced-inc.com

 -as published in the Financial Post, Monday, December 10, 2007

AXIS GROUP NATIONAL ROADSHOW - Jan/Feb 2008

Axis Logo

A Canada wide event focusing on the latest advancements in audiovisual technology.

  • Unique products
  • Collaborative technology
  • Digital signage solutions
  • Staging Services

The Axis Group Roadshow, touching down in eight cities across Canada, is a Product Showcase and Seminar focusing on the latest in audiovisual technology.

Who should attend?

  • IT Managers,
  • Facility Managers,
  • Purchasing Managers,
  • Event Planners,
  • Architects and Designers
  • Educators

Why attend?

It’s an opportunity to experience the latest in audiovisual technology - to physically see product demonstrations in the product showcase area and attend a series of focused seminars related to trends in the industry.

Whether you are planning your next corporate event and looking for fresh ideas, designing or upgrading a new boardroom or classroom, or researching the impact of high definition video communications – you’ll find it at the Axis Roadshow. Come see the latest in A/V technology by well known manufacturers such as Audio Enhancements, Lifesize Communications, NEC Display Solutions, Polycom, and SMART Technologies.

Key Dates and Locations:

  1. Halifax – Tues Jan 29th – Pier 21
  2. Montreal – Friday Feb 1st – Centre des Sciences de Montreal 
  3. Toronto – Tues Feb 5th – Mississauga Convention Center
  4. Winnipeg – Thurs Feb 8th – Winnipeg Convention Centre
  5. Regina – Tues Feb 12th – Conexus Arts Centre
  6. Saskatoon – Thurs Feb 14th – Western Development Museum
  7. Calgary – Wed Feb 20th – Calgary Convention Center
  8. Vancouver – Tues March 11th- Renaissance Hotel 

For additional information, visit www.axisgroup.ca/roadshow

Event Sponsors
sponsors

Register now for a free webinar — The Top Six Reasons Faculty Choose to Teach Online

Wednesday, December 5, 2007

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11:00 am CST - 12:00 pm CST: Join York University’s Diane Zorn and Sonic Foundry’s Sean Brown as they explore how online, rich-media teaching can be easy and effective. The presentation aims to empower participants to create viable online learning environments that facilitate learning, community, and self-sufficiency for students and instructors with minimal time and energy and maximum results. This presentation concludes with a Q & A period.

Topics include:

  • The needs of today’s learners;
  • Key technology and distance education trends;
  • The top six reasons faculty are choosing to teach online; and
  • Pedagogical goals versus technology for its own sake.

Common excuses for not taking advantage of online, rich-media teaching are debunked, including:

  • Threats to standards, jobs and quality of faculty;
  • The notion that some skills can’t be taught online;
  • Overestimates of the time, support and training needed to make online teaching work.

Answers to the following questions will be provided:

  • why teach online?
  • why embrace rich media?
  • can students learn better online?
  • is rich media a tool that can drive students to higher-order skills learning?

LifeSize Announces Distribution Agreement with Tech Data U.S.

Leading IT distributor LifeSize Communications has announced that Tech Data Corporation (NASDAQ GS: TECD) will distribute LifeSize’s complete HD product portfolio consisting of the world’s most advanced and affordable high definition video communication systems to solution providers nationwide.

The agreement marks a significant milestone in LifeSize’s expanded distribution strategy. Tech Data reaches leading networking, telephony and communications solutions resellers, which support small-to-midsize businesses (SMBs) throughout the U.S. (more…)

SMART awards Advanced Dealer of Distinction status

North American dealers recognized as service and support leaders

CALGARY, Alberta — July 10, 2007 — SMART Technologies Inc. announces that 31 North American resellers have been named 2006 Dealers of Distinction, SMART’s top award for its North American dealers. Advanced is one of the only Canadian dealers that received this award. The award is based on sales volumes, dedication to customer service and support, and an overall commitment to excellence. SMART also recognized the manner in which the Dealers of Distinction have helped to transform the way customers work and learn with SMART products.

Advanced, as well as some other dealers, have been selling SMART products for more than a decade. Corporate, government and military facilities across the United States and Canada use SMART products to share multimedia information each day. Teachers and students in 500,000 classrooms across North America also use SMART Board™ interactive whiteboards to create engaging and interactive learning environments.  SMART has recognized its Dealers of Distinction with awards since 2000. 

“Dealers of Distinction represent SMART and our products and service to our customers, so we place immense value on this working relationship,” says Nancy Knowlton, SMART’s CEO. “These dealers have achieved significant success because they believe in building strong relationships with customers and are committed to providing the best solutions for them.”

This text has been adapted from SMART Technologies website (Press Release section).

 

SMART Technologies receive two Legacy Awards

SMART Technologies has announced that it has been awarded two Legacy Awards in the prestigious Technology & Learning Awards of Excellence program for SMART Board™ software 9.5 and SynchronEyes™ classroom management software 7.0. The category recognizes previous award-winning products that have stood the test of time and continually offer the highest quality experiences for educators and students.

The Technology & Learning Awards of Excellence program is now in its 25th year and is recognized as one of North America’s premier education technology judging programs. This year’s winners were chosen by more than 30 educator judges who test-drove over 120 entries. Ease of use, quality, effectiveness, creative use of technology and suitability for the school environment were some of the judging criteria.

“This year’s winning products reflect an impressive effort to respond to the real needs of schools,” says Susan McLester, editor in chief of Technology & Learning magazine. “The offerings being honored are practical, innovative and central to a variety of district and site operations.”

“SMART works directly with educators to develop products that meet their needs and make a difference in the classroom,” says Nancy Knowlton, SMART’s CEO. “The Legacy Awards recognize SMART’s long-standing commitment to education and reaffirms its position as a leader in quality technology products for educators and students.”

Toshiba Introduces New Super Narrow Bezel REGZA HDTVs

Toshiba’s Super Narrow Bazel line of REGZA LCD HDTVs has expanded by two, including a new 40” and 46” model. Both boast 1080p resolution, and a bezel that measures a mere 1” wide, allowing the TV to fit in smaller spaces.

“Our REGZA LCD line has already been a huge success by setting new standards in picture quality, and we will now set a new standard in design with the world’s thinnest LCD TV bezel,” explained Lindsay Takashima, Senior Director Marketing, Consumer Electronics Group at Toshiba. “These premium models are not only strikingly beautiful, but they also allow you to put a larger TV in a smaller space. In fact, our new 40” SNB model fits in the space of a standard Toshiba 37” LCD TV, which means that many consumers can now fit a 40” model into their existing home theatre furniture.” (Read More…)

Do clickers add anything to the classroom?

COLLIN McCONNELL / TORONTO STAR

Teacher Rod Zimmerman watches his Grade 6 students at Ellesmere-Statton Public School use remote control devices to answer questions.

 

Kids are so enthused they’ll even skip recess

Oct 22, 2007 04:30 AM


Education Reporter
They’re pumped up like it’s a game show; remote-control clickers clutched in their Grade 6 hands, racing to work out the answer and press the right button before time’s up. They’ve been known to skip recess for this. But are these clickers a hot new teaching tool, or just a tech toy paid for by taxpayers?

“We choose math for 40 points!” calls out Team 3, and teacher Rod Zimmerman brings up the question overhead.

After a huddle, teams point their remotes at an infrared receiver and punch in the answer, then wait to see who was right and how many – but not who – got it wrong.

“Woo hoo! We’re still in first place,” cheers Jonathan Fletcher, 10. “Clickers are really cool – they make education fun.”

Adds teammate Kinshasa Phillpotts: “You don’t even know you’re learning.”

But learning comes, under cover of fun, when Zimmerman flips to a blank screen using his hand-held wireless “chalk board” and reviews the mistake, something the class had covered days before.

Far beyond university lecture halls where they’re used to personalized classes for the masses, “clickers” have landed in Ontario schools as a new way to get children to take part, especially those who are shy, or unsure, or self-conscious about special needs.

The wireless hand-held remotes let students send answers to multiple-choice questions, with the click of a button. With a class set of 20 to 30 “clickers” a receiver, software, a computer, projector and screen, these Classroom Performance Systems are being used from grade school to grad school to get today’s tech-crazed students to plug into classroom discussion.

While teachers warn about using them too often – Zimmerman pulls them out only once a week, despite daily pleading from students, because he says it’s “only one tool a teacher should use” – they are drawing positive reviews.

“Tech for tech’s sake can be a complete waste of time and money,” says education professor Robin Kay of the University of Ontario Institute of Technology.

“We found teachers who use it for formal evaluations cause students far too much anxiety and stress,” says Kay, who is tracking clickers in 45 Waterloo classrooms from Grades 5 to 12. “But if you use clickers to provoke dialogue – like the Grade 5 teacher who used clickers to ask kids if they had been victims of bullying, and so many responded, they spent the whole class talking about the issue – then it’s an amazing tool to stimulate debate.”

Or to check your teaching smarts.

“When you ask, `Are there any questions?’ who’s going to raise their hand and draw attention to themselves?” says Kay.

“But put clickers in the students’ hands and ask them a question to see if they got it? I’ve found up to 60 per cent didn’t get the concept I was teaching – even when I thought I was being crystal clear!” he admits. “You have to go back and try something different.”

Clickers have been bought in bulk by at least a dozen Ontario school boards and are being tested by individual teachers in dozens more schools in the GTA – and that’s just the ones from eInstruction Canada, one of several firms that sell them.

The company’s infra-red models cost about $1,600 per class set of 32 eight-button clickers and are used more in grade schools. The more complex radio-frequency versions work better in large halls and have more options and a screen.

They cost about $2,600 per set and are more popular in high schools and post-secondary classrooms, says eInstruction’s John Paul Copeland.

“The biggest draw is the anonymity they provide students, who are more likely to participate when it’s a risk-free environment.”

Zimmerman, a teacher at Toronto’s Ellesmere-Statton Public School, agrees it pulls more kids into the lesson: “Look at this room; they’re all engaged – even the kids you never hear from all year.”

A growing body of research, much of it in Canada, shows the gadgets, if used properly – not for marks, never for tests – can engage more students and boost attendance.

Biologist Tom Haffie of the University of Western Ontario is tracking the use of clickers in two first-year biology classes with 600 to 800 students each.

He presented his findings this summer at an international conference in Edmonton.

“We had 85 per cent participating with clickers – and you never get 85 per cent of students to do anything, especially in a group of 800 people,” says Haffie, who uses clickers three to five times in a 50-minute lecture.

The software keeps a record of each student’s responses so teachers can see who is struggling and needs help. Haffie emailed each student their clicker record over several weeks, and 85 per cent said this prompted them to change their study habits, attend more often and 40 per cent sought extra help.

“Suddenly you’re not waiting six weeks until midterms to see how you’re doing,” says Haffie.

“Clickers have the potential to transform learning,” he said.

Kay agrees the enthusiasm clickers can spark is more than half the battle.

“It’s a promising tool for engaging students, especially the 40 per cent who never raise their hands. And if I’m engaged, the chances are a lot better that I might learn something.”

This article was extracted from TheStar.com. 

** For more information about Senteo, the clicker solution from SMART Technologies, contact Advanced Presentation Products at esales@advanced-inc.com .**

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