AV Technology - January 2009 - (Page 20) avantage education by Steve Cunningham TECHNOLOGICAL SELF-SUFFICIENCY Making the most of scarce resources. W ith the fall semester in the record books, it’s a good time to look forward at what we’d like to accomplish in 2009. In the interest of rigorous honesty, I should admit that one of the things I’d like to accomplish in 2009 is to do a better job of using the existing facilities at the university to their full advantage. I’d like to be able to tell you that I do this by default, but sadly this is not always the case. The fact that I consider myself a smart fellow who is technologically savvy makes these little failures — not to wring the most out of what resources I have — all the more galling. For example, I spent this past semester deal- To improve both my presentation and my ability to navigate windows, I instead put my laptop into “extend mode” so that the projected image becomes an extension of my laptop screen, albeit at a lower resolution. Every time I want to project a web page with this scheme, I must drag the browser window from my desktop to the right so it appears on the “extended” display of the projector. Furthermore, once the browser window appears on the projector, I have to twist my head around and view the projected image to click on buttons and links, rather than looking straight ahead at my laptop. Extend mode is just fine and wholly correct for PowerPoint or Keynote presentations THE FACT THAT I CONSIDER MYSELF A SMART FELLOW WHO IS TECHNOLOGICALLY SAVVY MAKES THESE LITTLE FAILURES — NOT TO WRING THE MOST OUT OF WHAT RESOURCES I HAVE — ALL THE MORE GALLING. ing with a projector in a large lecture hall. This particular hall features a lectern with an AMX touchscreen that controls power to three projectors in the room. When a projector is turned on, the AMX system simultaneously lowers the associated projection screen from the ceiling. A matrix of buttons on the touchscreen further allows one to select the source that will feed each projector independently of the others. LESS THAN MEETS THE EYE However, particular projector presents itself with a resolution of 800x600 pixels, which is considered SVGA resolution, and is by no means high enough to display an entire screen of a web browser. If I put my laptop in “mirror mode” so I can work entirely on my laptop’s screen and students see what I see, then my lovely 15-inch, 16x9 aspect ratio, 1,440x900-pixel laptop screen also assumes the SVGA resolution. Viewing web pages of any complexity requires scrolling in both directions to see it in its entirety. 20 | AVTECHNOLOGY | january 2009 center projector. Aiming it skyward, he clicked a couple of buttons and the projected image went blank, as did my laptop display. When the displays reappeared, my laptop screen looked the same, but the projected icons on my extended desktop were much smaller. I switched my laptop to mirror mode. My desktop darkened, then appeared with a somewhat larger, but still quite acceptable, set of icons on the desktop. “Why don’t I know about this?” I asked, feeling an odd combination of joy, embarrassment, and a bit of anger. “I dunno they’ve always been this way. I thought you guys knew that,” he replied as he turned his back and left. No, I didn’t know they were XGA projectors, and I’m not sure how I could have known. I wasn’t even aware that there was a remote for it in that drawer. ASSUMING THE RESPONSIBILITY Much as I might like to pin blame on the AV department, I cannot escape my portion of the responsibility for not using the equipment to its fullest. And I haven’t even mentioned the university wiki that I didn’t know existed when I established a wiki using a third-party company. The truth is that I bear most of the responsibility for knowing what facilities are available, and how to best take advantage of them. I’ll be doing an inventory of my own during the first week of classes, taking note of projector resolutions, network jack speeds and capabilities, audio facilities, and the like. If I cannot determine how many inputs are available to feed the projector, I resolve to ask until I get the answer. This is part of my job, and I expect no handholding. Instead, because I have that information, I will be a more valuable team member in 2009 than I was in 2008. In the current economic environment, that’s a very good thing indeed. Steve Cunningham is a senior lecturer in technology in the Thornton School, Music Industry Department at USC. He can be reached at voicetalent@mac.com. www.avtechnologyonline.com that benefit from dual screens, but it is less than optimum for projecting browser pages. Understand that there is no knob, button, or slider on the AMX touchscreen to adjust the projector’s resolution. Since we still have some native 800x600 projectors in various classrooms on campus, I grumbled about my predicament throughout the semester, but put up with it anyway. But, of course, immediately after the last lecture of the semester, the AV technician for the department wandered into the hall. He was taking an inventory of things that needed repair over the winter break, and I grumbled to him about the projector. “Why are you using this projector at 800x600?” he asked, and then added breezily, “Its XGA — its native resolution is 1024x768.” Before I could decide whether to thank him or berate him, he walked up to the lectern, pulled open a small drawer near the top, rummaged around in the back of the drawer, and produced a remote control for the http://www.avtechnologyonline.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of AV Technology - January 2009 AV Technology - January 2009 Contents Precedent Corporate: Hunkering Down Government: The Great Unifier Education: Technological Self-Sufficiency Integrating Communications into Your Business Process DVI/HDMI Signals over Twisted-Pair Cable AV Helps Explain the Unexplainable AV Enhancements at the Coliseum Product Forum Tech Horizons Product Spotlight New Products Ad Index AV MO AV Technology - January 2009 AV Technology - January 2009 - AV Technology - January 2009 (Page Cover1) AV Technology - January 2009 - AV Technology - January 2009 (Page Cover2) AV Technology - January 2009 - Contents (Page 3) AV Technology - January 2009 - Contents (Page 4) AV Technology - January 2009 - Contents (Page 5) AV Technology - January 2009 - Contents (Page 6) AV Technology - January 2009 - Contents (Page 7) AV Technology - January 2009 - Precedent (Page 8) AV Technology - January 2009 - Precedent (Page 9) AV Technology - January 2009 - Precedent (Page 10) AV Technology - January 2009 - Precedent (Page 11) AV Technology - January 2009 - Precedent (Page 12) AV Technology - January 2009 - Precedent (Page 13) AV Technology - January 2009 - Precedent (Page 14) AV Technology - January 2009 - Precedent (Page 15) AV Technology - January 2009 - Corporate: Hunkering Down (Page 16) AV Technology - January 2009 - Corporate: Hunkering Down (Page 17) AV Technology - January 2009 - Government: The Great Unifier (Page 18) AV Technology - January 2009 - Government: The Great Unifier (Page 19) AV Technology - January 2009 - Education: Technological Self-Sufficiency (Page 20) AV Technology - January 2009 - Education: Technological Self-Sufficiency (Page 21) AV Technology - January 2009 - Integrating Communications into Your Business Process (Page 22) AV Technology - January 2009 - Integrating Communications into Your Business Process (Page 23) AV Technology - January 2009 - Integrating Communications into Your Business Process (Page 24) AV Technology - January 2009 - Integrating Communications into Your Business Process (Page 25) AV Technology - January 2009 - DVI/HDMI Signals over Twisted-Pair Cable (Page 26) AV Technology - January 2009 - DVI/HDMI Signals over Twisted-Pair Cable (Page 27) AV Technology - January 2009 - DVI/HDMI Signals over Twisted-Pair Cable (Page 28) AV Technology - January 2009 - DVI/HDMI Signals over Twisted-Pair Cable (Page 29) AV Technology - January 2009 - DVI/HDMI Signals over Twisted-Pair Cable (Page 30) AV Technology - January 2009 - DVI/HDMI Signals over Twisted-Pair Cable (Page 31) AV Technology - January 2009 - DVI/HDMI Signals over Twisted-Pair Cable (Page 32) AV Technology - January 2009 - DVI/HDMI Signals over Twisted-Pair Cable (Page 33) AV Technology - January 2009 - DVI/HDMI Signals over Twisted-Pair Cable (Page 34) AV Technology - January 2009 - DVI/HDMI Signals over Twisted-Pair Cable (Page 35) AV Technology - January 2009 - AV Helps Explain the Unexplainable (Page 36) AV Technology - January 2009 - AV Helps Explain the Unexplainable (Page 37) AV Technology - January 2009 - AV Enhancements at the Coliseum (Page 38) AV Technology - January 2009 - AV Enhancements at the Coliseum (Page 39) AV Technology - January 2009 - Product Forum (Page 40) AV Technology - January 2009 - Tech Horizons (Page 41) AV Technology - January 2009 - Product Spotlight (Page 42) AV Technology - January 2009 - Product Spotlight (Page 43) AV Technology - January 2009 - New Products (Page 44) AV Technology - January 2009 - New Products (Page 45) AV Technology - January 2009 - New Products (Page 46) AV Technology - January 2009 - New Products (Page 47) AV Technology - January 2009 - New Products (Page 48) AV Technology - January 2009 - Ad Index (Page 49) AV Technology - January 2009 - AV MO (Page 50) AV Technology - January 2009 - AV MO (Page Cover3) AV Technology - January 2009 - AV MO (Page Cover4)
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