This year’s annual Campus Computing Project survey was released last week at the Educause conference in Seattle. The survey polled officials at 555 colleges and universities on their technology use via an online questionnaire. The report provides some interesting information concerning security issues, the expansion of wireless access in the classroom, the adoption of open-source applications (apparently more attractive in theory than in practice), and the prevention of illegal file downloading.
The survey reveals, of course, that 2007 has been a milestone year for converged mobile devices. PDAs are becoming more popular, and the iPhone has colleges wondering how to handle the potential increase in Internet traffic caused by dozens of handheld WiFi devices surfing the Web
and downloading music during class. To date, campus IT officials have preferred not to deal with mobile phones and PDAs on campus networks. However, as Kenneth C. Green—the founding director of the Campus Computing Project— suggests: “That will have to change with the arrival of a new generation of network compatible phones and PDAs in the coming year.“
For more on the Campus Computing Project 2007 survey, check out the official summary or Inside Higher Ed’s full article.
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[…] iThinkEd placed an interesting blog post on Campus Computing Projectâ