Friday, November 14, 2014

More reasons not to buy a mac ... Yosemite makes the mac drop internet connectivity.

As if we needed more ...

In my broad attempt to help faculty and students with tech issues, I keep a mac mini around to test out programs and Learning Management Systems (LMSs) so I can be platform independent.  I made the beginner geek mistake of installing the new OS on my mac on the second day the update came out.  My mac would then keep cutting in and out with its internet connection.  So my mac mini became a nice big silver brick.  After a few weeks, it sort of started working again.  But today it failed again.  Apparently others have tried to post solutions.

Thursday, November 13, 2014

Why some websites don't work properly in your favorite browser!

Having trouble with your LMS, your email, your favorite web site?  Read below for the answers as I see them from around the web and some tips and links to help!

         (from the web @mtabini)...
A Fuzzy Standard
Web pages are programmed primarily using three different languages: HTML, used to define the structure of documents; CSS, which determines the way they look; and JavaScript, which is used to drive interactive features (like CLP (Collaborate)).
Of these, the first two are “managed” by a non-profit organization called the World Wide Web Consortium, or W3C, that is responsible for defining the standards that—in theory—browser manufacturers and developers must follow in order for their products to be compatible with each other.
In practice, however, Web standards tend to trail de facto innovations introduced by the individual browsers, usually in response to the business needs of their makers.

The Problem
Inevitably, however, small issues have a way of falling through the cracks here and there:
       Printing might work flawlessly in Chrome, but not in Safari, and maybe only on a specific version of OS X
       Some sites still insist on only working well with Internet Explorer, despite the popularity of devices—like the iPhone and the iPad—that only allow their users to browse the Web with WebKit-based browsers
                                                                What is one to do in these cases?

The Solution
                Use a different browser!             Always have a backup browser!
       While small cosmetic problems are fairly commonplace, websites that refuse to work at all with a modern browser like Safari or Chrome are relatively rare
       When you come across them, however, simply switching to Mozilla's Firefox browser as a backup can solve the problem
        See the bottom of this page for current links to browsers you need!

         (my two cents)...
The Teaching Solution
I have rarely had everything go perfectly right in my classrooms.  When I first started teaching, I didn't even have a classroom, I had a cart!  I learned early on to have a teaching backup, a “go to” activity (e.g., “Ok class, while I try to change the projector bulb, write down two things you learned this week in class and share with a partner.”)
Online you have more to go wrong, but more backup as well:
       Email
       Websites
       The Helpdesk is there to help!
       If worse comes to worst in a failed CLP (Collaborate) session, you can postpone the class or record a session later and share


Windows computers:
Mozilla Firefox
Internet Explorer (Windows’ operating system default)

Mac and Linux computers:
Safari (MAC operating system’s default)
Mozilla Firefox (Linux’s default web browser):
Google Chrome
Opera

2013 tech article resource is HERE  @mtabini