The next 10 days are the Edmonton International Fringe Festival. As part of this the Free WiFi Project (yes that’s the official name now) is attempting to cover part, if not all, of the Fringe grounds. Of course in order to broadcast wifi you need an Internet connection.
Not so simple.
The Fringe Festival is pretty tied up in sponsorship commitments and our group approached them relatively late in the game. So being officially supported isn’t in the cards. Don’t get me wrong, the powers that be are encouraging and wish they could help us out, but it’ll be next year if anything. Also, the businesses in the area either don’t have an Internet connection, or are too far away. Or, if you’re a business with many partners you can’t make a decision to share your Internet connection without talking to all 7 or them. I’ve found that the less understanding about the Internet and technology people have the more they have to validate a request with everyone they know. Not so surprising after all.
So what was our solution? Why WiMax of course
Having friends in the countryside I had used a Rogers Portable Internet solution before, with reasonable results. It’s not the fastest thing on the planet but with good reception you can comfortably browse the web and check your email. The problem was aquiring one of these devices.
Yesterday I went to THREE Digital Communications stores here in Edmonton. I’ll never go back. The first place I visited had the only person knowledgeable about the product out walking about the mall. Coming back later I find that their computer system is down and he can’t access the company intranet to actually sell me the device. Oh, and this manager tells me the device is a piece of crap to boot. Thanks but I’ve used it.
So I mosey on over to their head office where they should have some of these devices. “There’s NONE in Edmonton” were the first words out of the bosses mouth. Great. I make her check her computer anyway and low and behold there’s one in a kiosk in the same mall I was just at. Oh, and she also tells me it’s a piece of crap. Smrt.
Back at the mall I talk to this guy at the kiosk. Nice enough guy and he’s trying to sell it to us. Although he starts off by telling me it’s not very good and he doesn’t even try to sell it to anyone else because they all come back. That’s funny, if they all came back there wouldn’t be a shortage… Anyway I insist on buying the piece of crap and once again their system won’t sell it. This is four hours later, good job Rogers.
Fed up with Rogers (Digital Communications) I head to a Bell store the next morning. The guy sells me it without a hitch and I get two months free with 15 days to bring it back. Better deal than Rogers would have given me. Plus this guy was nice and didn’t downplay the product at all. Go Bell.
Other than activation, this thing is a no-brainer. I had to call in to activate and that took all of five minutes. After that you just plug in an ethernet cable and away you go. I slapped a switch into the box and a mesh router into that and boom, I now have wireless Internet wherever I’ve got a power cable. The modem has 5 lights on the top that indicate signal strength and it’s a matter of just turning it a little to get the best signal.
A nice business on the edge of the Fringe grounds, named Grateful Threads (go check them out, they deserve my plug) was gracious enough to let us put the setup in their window. In fact they were quite eager to help out from the very beginning. I slapped on a 7dBi omni-directional antenna that confero24.com sent me to test and away we went. Fairly decent range, all the way across the park, and the speed isn’t too shabby.
Back at homebase (my cafe) I prepped some more routers to be deployed as repeaters. Unfortunately we only got two out today, as Mack’s followers on Twitter pointed out. We’ll deploy some more tomorrow and hopefully get a bit more coverage.
All in all I’m fairly satisfied with the Bell hotspot. If it works out we’ll probably keep it around for various events around town. I’m stoked!
If you want to get involved or if you have a business in desperate need of some free community wifi give us a shout over at http://free-wifi.ca/contactus.php.
The University of Alberta is supposed to be a great school of business in Canada. However I’m slowly losing faith in it. This post is a continuation of my previous posts on my poorly run Management Information Systems class.
Since the last post we have had to create a continuation of our project websites as well as contribute to a group collaboration wiki. The website was easy enough to do, however we were still instructed to use FrontPage (discontinued in 2006). This time we needed to insert some Access databases into our websites and make them editable. To do this our instructors provided us with a nifty little template that does all the work for you, but you had to attend the labs to get it. I did not. So I did it the more realistic way, manually… and by manually I ran a database wizard in FrontPage, not terribly tricky.
A couple other stupid and unrealistic things we were required to do included adding a scrolling marquee and password protecting a page by making the password the name of the page. First of all a scrolling marquee is something no self-respecting web designer would ever implement and I seriously doubt any company would ask you do use it. Secondly, security through obscurity is probably the worst thing you could do. You might as well not bother to link the page.
For our wiki project the entire course of approximately 450 students needed to contribute significant work to a class wiki about MIS. There were 64 topics on various technology issues and about 15-20 students assigned to each topic.
Now, before I get started, this is an interesting idea but it was the worst executed project I’ve ever participated in. One of my profs, Ofer Arazi has spent a great deal of time researching and working with online social collaboration like wikis. He’s a great prof and he has done a good job teaching the class. Unfortunately this assignment was not properly thought through by the entire department, it was not any one persons fault.
I was assigned to edit Application Architecture, Peer-to-Peer Networking, and Software Application Generation Tools. Joy.
Our assignment was to contribute meaningful, useful entries that required “effort”. There was a short list describing what “effort” was and it includes everything from original content to reformatting for readability.
When I started my work the pages I was assigned to were pretty well fleshed out, albeit blatantly plagiarized. So I decided to contribute my “effort” through deleting irrelevant and useless content as well as reformatting the articles and properly referencing sources. The hitch with all the types of contributions is that if you’re moderately competent you can argue 100% at the end of the day if you’ve done even a little bit of work.
There were two major flaws with this project:
1. The wiki couldn’t handle everyone at once.
2. It’s peer marked, each student is responsible for grading two articles (40 different students).
1. Poorly designed wiki
The following bit of dialogue between myself and the course coordinator further reinforces my feelings of being robbed of precious tuition dollars. I posted this in our open discussion board accessible by students and faculty.
Me:
I’ve noticed the server hosting the wiki is excrutiationly slow. So slow that my session likes to time out when viewing pages.
Also, having to compete against 15 other students to edit one page is extremely unfair. I’ve found that by the time I’m done editing a section my lock has expired and someone else is editing it, now I basically have to sit here and hit edit and hope I get to it before the next person, AND then I have to try to incorporate the last student’s changes.
What are the odds of looking at the speed issue before this thing is due?
Response:
Eric,
It sounds to me like you left this assignment until the very last minute. This is fine, as it is your choice when you want to do it. However, thsi assignment has been available to work on for 3 months now. It is not our fault you left thje assignment to the last minute. the onus is on you to make sure you can get your contributions in on time. The entire purpose of giving you the assignment so early was to make sure everyone had a fair chance to get on and edit the page. Of course the server is going to be extremely slow and busy the night it is due. We gave all students every possible tool to complete this assignment.
N.J.
Course Manager
Me:
Actually I’d say the onus is on the department to properly design and execute relevant and working assignments. So far it’s failed pretty miserably. When I complete an assignment should not matter. Next year I suggest a warning be given to all students that the current server architecture in place can’t handle everyone at once. In fact it looks like it’s more of a software issue and not the server (poorly designed wiki) because ulearn was speedy.
By the way, you were not available during your office hours as we arranged to meet so I had to go talk to Ofer.
I look forward to the grading.
Thanks,
Eric
Response:
Eric,
AS you probably know, when many people try to work on something at the same time, the speed becomes very slow. We could take a lot of time and money top design a wiki that can handle mor epeople at the same time, but the problem will still remain. Only one person can ever edit a document or wiki page at any given time, no matter how fast the wiki is. Even if we had a state of the art, superfast wiki, it would still lock out everyone but one person for editing. So, very close to the due date, everyone will still have the same problem. This is why we gave everyone 3 months to work on this assignment, so that trying to find time to edit the wiki page woudl not be a problem. many students took advantage of this and began their work early. Unfortunately, those students who left it unitl the last minute will experience the issue of being locked out. I hope you understand the real reason as to why there were problems with the wiki. Hopefully this clearly explains all of the issues, and any amibiguities.
Cheers,
N.J.
Me:
N.J.,
MediaWiki (which powers Wikipedia) is both free and scalable. It also allows multiple users to edit and has built in edit conflict resolution management.
Here’s a few links to reference for next year:
http://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/MediaWiki
http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Help:Edit_conflict
Eric
After this he stopped responding completely. This was over a week ago and I’ll consider that conversation closed. I later had my professor tell me in class that I would make a very good consultant because I “always had suggestions for improving things”. Obviously he’d been reading.
I’ll admit I was a bit curt with our course manager but realistically someone needs to hold the school responsible for their ineptitude.
2. Peer marked assignment
Rumour has it that last year there were so many complaints about the peer marked wiki projects that the course managers had to give everyone 100% on the assignment. I could technically give everyone a 0 and they couldn’t do anything about it. My mark isn’t dependent of how I grade someone else. A few of us challenged our prof and verified that we could put in the bare minimum effort for this grading without penalties. For the record I did mine properly. I did give out a fair share of failing grades for blatant plagiarism without quotes or citations to back it up. Technically those students should fail the course… technically.
Yesterday I received a pleasant email from the course coordinator:
Hi Eric,
your URL’s to your webpages you submitted do not work. We have tried every one and even multiple alterations, and still did not get them to work. Did you check to make sure the URL’s you submitted work? It looks as though we can not access your webpages, and we need to in order to actually grade your assignment.
N.J.
Me:
Hi N.J.,
I just opened part 4B from my assignment page and clicked on every
single link and they all worked fine for me. I also went directly to
the site at http://students.bus.ualberta.ca/warnke/ from two different
computers and it worked fine, both in IE and Firefox.
I’m not sure what is wrong.
Eric
Response:
Hi eric,
Your link you gave me in this email works, but the uRL’s in your submission do not. We will grade you rassignment based on this working URL, but there will be a penal;ty for a submission that does not work.
N.J.
Me:
Hi N.J.,
This can’t be correct. My friend (who is also in this course) is
standing beside me right now as we download and click on each link and
they all work.
I would like to come to your office and go over the submission before
you deduct any marks.
Please let me know when is best to drop by.
Please attach the document you saved from uLearn so I may see for myself.
Regards,
Eric
Response:
Hi eric,
It turns out that there was another student whom had a very similar name, but did not put his full name, so we thought it was you. I have found your submitted file, and graded you thusly. You will receive no penalty for URL’s not working. Sorry for this confusion. I have attatched the excel file as you requested for you to look at.
Thank you,
N.J.
I don’t know what you’re thinking but it definitely felt like I was the first Eric to pop into his mind when something went wrong. The funny thing is each assignment also had a unique student ID attached to it, 3 times actually. Also, the only other Eric’s in the course had last names of Leong and Mah, nowhere near Warnke.
All in all I can’t say I’m terribly impressed with this course. I wrote on both my student evaluations that I felt this was a complete waste of time and that I intend to write a formal complaint to our assistant-dean.
By the way, any spelling or grammatical errors by N.J. are complete his, I didn’t edit any of his stuff except to change his full name to his initials for his peace of mind.
Any comments on what you’ve read would be appreciated. If I’m completely out to lunch or if you think I’m demanding way too much from my university I’d be glad to hear your thoughts.
I’m off to the Project Hope benefit dinner tonight, I hope it’s good 
I attend the University of Alberta. I’m 3/4 of my way through a business degree. One of my required courses is Management Information Systems (MIS) where we are taught about project management and database structure and information flow, etc. etc. For me it’s quite dull because I have a lot of experience with this stuff already. I am learning a thing or two though, so it’s not completely useless.
Our latest project requires us to develop a single web page using Microsoft FrontPage that includes an Access database we created last week. This is worth 10% of our course mark.
Microsoft discontinued FrontPage in 2006, two years ago.
I emailed our professors asking why we are being taught to use a non-standards compliant, outdated and discontinued pile of junk. The response I got back was that “the school of business has a contract for support with FrontPage until the end of this semester.” Apparently the university is using our tuition to strike deals that are in effect for years after they are useful. Smrt.
I’m meeting with one of the profs tomorrow morning to discuss it. I realize this isn’t entirely his fault so I hope he helps me fix the problem. I intend to make sure the school of business knows about this sort of crap. This would make a great article in the Gateway (our school paper), and it would be something for our Business Student’s Association (apologies for their website) to get their fingers into.
You wouldn’t pay $468.60 for a math course using slide rules, so why should we pay to use outdated software?
After applying for a business loan with my bank I drove like mad across the city to participate in a focus group for The Edmonton Council of Advanced Technology. Essentially this organization is attempting to act as a mentoring/incubator program for technology startups in Alberta, specifically Edmonton. One of my mentors, Jim over at Ambers Brewing sits on the board and invited myself and Timo to attend.
Some key points that I mentioned to the group as I walked in late were:
- An organization of this type must be Available to anyone who comes seeking help. Many organizations of this type are hard to get ahold of and when you do they bounce your calls around and make it difficult to learn.
- A mentorship program of sorts would be wonderful. I would love to pick up the phone and be able to quickly ask my mentor what I should be keeping in mind as I go negotiate a lease. Many places offer textbooks and stock guides but many don’t provide interesting mentors to grow under.
- The public image for the organization should be friendly. I was rather put off when I first read about ABCTech because it was wafting of snooty biotech and oilsand technology dreams. Had I never known Jim I would have dismissed ABCTech as out of my league.
There was a lot of important people there, and definitely a lot of money. I’m slowly realizing the importance of networking. However I still don’t believe in marketing yourself if you don’t actually have much to offer. These will be some great people to know for next year when I enter the Venture Prize business plan competition. I’d share my idea but that could lead to trouble
After the focus group and dinner we made our way back to headquarters and proceeded to polish off the pending update. We worked until around 1:30AM when the new site designs were finally put up.