EduTone World

This blog is dedicated to my daughter Olivia, born on May 19th, 2006. EduTone World is a new world in which Olivia will be experiencing a new set of learning tools and a completely new learning culture. Please join Olivia and millions of other EduTone Generation babies on their lifelong learning expedition.

Monday, July 28, 2008

Olivia is now 2-years old!


I know what you are all thinking! So where has Robert been for the last two years? Obviously busy raising a young child, Olivia, who is now 27-months old! Indeed time does fly by very fast. I intend to resume my blogging activities very shortly.

Here is one of the most recent pictures of Olivia ... demonstrating how to eat S'mores. She loves chocolate!


Meanwhile please refer to our new website at http://www.edutone.com/ to see the latest update on the EduTone Platform. We are now in pilot mode with various schools and school districts around the country and in strategic discussions with a few potential OEM distribution partners.


Stay tuned for more updates on EduTone on this blog.

Saturday, November 25, 2006

One-to-One Computing

So what is the big deal about 1-to-1 computing, One Laptop Per Child, Project Inkwell and all of those new initiatives?

Giving each child, starting at the age of 12, their own personal computing device, is like giving a hungry child a fishing rod. Imagine the possibilities!

Learning on-demand, communicating with others across the globe, creating content, organizing, trading, searching the web, collaborating with others on projects, learning new skills ... What an outcome! Imagine everyone getting a chance to do this from the young age of 12, not just in the US and other industrial nations but everywhere around the globe!

Well it sounds very revolutionary and ambitious. However it is possible. It is possible because technology is evolving very fast and devices are becoming smaller and cheaper. The various types of devices like mobile phones, PDA's, web browsers, digital audio players, digital cameras, video recorders, pagers, video games, and many other similar consumer-oriented devices are all converging into a new bread of "converged wireless devices".

The recent Nokia N9300 shown here is a great example of a converged wireless device. It is capable of doing everything from making phone calls to recording videos, but even more ... It is also capable of video conferencing! This means that we could have a teacher in one part of the world teaching as many kids with similar devices around the world in a synchronous video-based learning environment. This device is capable of using the standard mobile phone infrastructure, any where in the world, and is capable of browsing the web and many other things that we would expect from a typical laptop. Is it a perfect substitute of a personal computer? Probably not! However we are getting very close.

Last week I attended a meeting for the members of Project Inkwell (www.projectinkwell.com) which is an initiative of Strategic News Services (SNS) that is run by Mark Anderson, a very well-connected, and well-respected, technology and telecommunication industry visionary. I quote: "Inkwell intends to be the standards body for computing platforms for pre-K through 12 education. " They are creating a set of proprietary specifications that would perfect the design of such a device to meet the needs of pK-12 students. The meeting was attended by representatives of various organizations including hardware manufacturers, software companies, content publishers, network service providers, school districts, system integrators, education marketing companies and many others! I am quite confident that Project Inkwell will produce a very impressive set of specifications, and is going to lead the industry down the right track.

As we discussed in the project Inkwell meeting, the new model of 1-to-1 computing is going to require a new infrastructure, new software tools, new business models and a new perspective! We can't just give the kids fishing rods without teaching them how to swim, how to fish, how to access the bait, what to do with the fish they catch, and so on. Similarly we need to prepare ourselves for this new culture and paradigm shift.

For example: is it reasonable to expect that these new devices will be made available freely to children by their schools in lieu of, or in addition to, text books?

The answer is clearly YES. I know of many such experiments that are going on today in various parts of the US. Most of them are very successful and a few are not. Many of the IT directors that are involved in these experiments will tell you that they were not quite ready for such big leap. There were too many missing components in the support infrastructure. They all hoped for more centrally managed and securely administered software solutions to offer these end-users. Most of them agreed that a Single Sign-On Portal, that could automate the provisioning and administration of software, is needed to support such a project.

So how about making these devices available for free by the schools? Well the cost to schools is not just the cost of the devices, but also the cost of other components involved in the support and operation of these devices: network infrastructure, software licenses, support services, help desks, security, system administration, training, and many other components that need to be included within the Total Cost of Ownership (TCO). Enterprise-centric deployments are not trivial and require well-planned and adequately resourced projects.

So how about the consumer-centric funding model? This is actually very possible given today's utility infrastructure supported and marketed by network carriers like phone companies (both traditional landline and wireless services), cable operators and satellite services. These companies have their own network infrastructure in addition to various resources like service centers that are able to market, sell and support the access devices. They are willing to subsidize the initial up front cost of these devices in return for selling their access services. They may even partner with the schools to market to the students a new bread of devices that are supported jointly by the school and the mobile network carrier.

I am now convinced that AT&T could be the next global virtual school of the future! Wow, and I always thought it was going to be Disney!!

Saturday, September 02, 2006

EduTone Learning Community

Last week we formed a new non-profit (501c3) organization called "EduTone Learning Community", or ELC for short. We will soon have a new website for this "global" community: www.edutone.org.

The goal of ELC is to foster collaboration amongst educational organizations across the world!

As I said in my last week's blog: ecosystems and communities grow together and serve each other. As we grow the ecosystem with more applications, content and services, we are actually creating a catalyst to grow the community surrounding this ecosystem. Every new service component will attract new members in the community, and every new member in the community will eventually add new services to the ecosystem. So in essence, all we need is just a couple of services along with a few end-user members of these services to 'seed' the ecosystem along with its initial community! Wow ... that is easy! NOT!!

In reality, ecosystems require an infrastructure that sustains them. They need energy to fuel them. They wait for catalysts to initiate their growth. They are organized, yet they are random. They are not predictive. They are alive ... and always evolving!

The EduTone Learning Community will have an ecosystem of services, known as the EduTone Ecosystem, supported and integrated via the EduTone Xchange. In other words, the EduTone Xchange serves as the infrastructure for the EduTone Ecosystem.

So what's in the EduTone Ecosystem? Well ... that is a great question! We integrated a few community-centric and learning-oriented services to get it started - however this is not an extensive list ... so keep your eyes on this space as the EduTone Ecosystem evolves:

Sakai: A Collaboraive Learning Envoironment (CLE) (www.sakai.org);

Fedora: A Flexible and Extensible Digital Object Repository Architecture (www.fedora.info);

School MATRIX: A web-based fully-integrated school management system that inludes SIS, Assessment, Curriculum & Instructional management, Special Education, Professional Development, and many other applications (www.schoolmatrix.com);

Content Channels: Lots of Free and For-Fee K-12 content channels from both non-profit and commercial organizations;

CEEDS Channels: The Consortium of Educational Enterprise Data System (CEEDS) is soliciting vendors to offer their web-based applications to serve the Californian K-12 school market, there are many vendors who are currently lined-up to join the CEEDS Ecosystem (www.ceeds.org);

Many of these services in today's blog will be launched soon ... in case some of the above mentioned URL's are still not LIVE yet.

The community will be sharing a very large respository of assets: They will share content, software, ideas, best practices, requirements, people, resources, and many other by-products and derived services.

I am excited about the future! Many of these technologies are either free or very affordable. Many of them will be deployed quickly without too many barriers. People will help each other. The community will grow quickly. Private-Public partnerships will increase in volume and will be more influential in technology adoption and selection decisions. The K-12 educational organizations will not be as fragmented as they are today.

The EduTone Learning Community will evolve quickly and will be energized by its members' need for effective and affordable solutions.

Wednesday, August 23, 2006

EduTone Ecosystems

"We plan to deliver hundreds of thousands of software applications in our ecosystem", said KB Chandrasekhar, Founder & CEO of JamCracker, (www.jamcracker.com) a leading provider of On-Demand Software as a Service (SaaS) Delivery Infrastructure, as we were having lunch together today. Chandra's ecosystem is a new world of connected services, whereby telecommunication companies and service providers are able to package a subset of this ecosystem and offer it as an on-demand service to their customers - both enterprises and consumers.

By searching the word "ecosystem" on Google, you will encounter 104,000,000 results! A bit over-used you may say. However, I was specially entrigued by one search result at the bottom of the sponsored links sections: Learn All About Ecosystem Teach Yourself Biology in 24 Hours.Rapid eLearning w/Visual Tutorials www.Biology24.com/Ecosystem, which had a very interesting article on Community Ecology and Ecosystem. The article links ecosystems with communities. I found this very entriguing. Whenever we create an ecosystem, we are actually catalyzing the formation of a community that strives and survives within this ecosystem.

Chandra's dream of an ecosystem of hundreds of thousand of on-demand software application services would eventually create a very large community of online subscribers who would aggregate, support, market, integrate, consume, and evolve these services. This community should include consumers (individuals) and various size businesses (subscribers and providers).

The EduTone World is an ecosystem of services that would serve both individual learners and teaching organizations. The EduTone ecosystem will eventually catalyze the creation of a global community of learners and teaching organizations. This ecosystem includes content providers, software as a service providers, sales/marketing resources and professional service companies.

The EduTone world connects these web services tightly together and enables delivering this as a single solution to each of the stakeholders in any education enterprise.

Sunday, August 13, 2006

Olivia's EduTone World


After setting up the EduTone World blog yesterday, I decided to dedicate it to my new born daughter Olivia who is 12-weeks old today.

As I think of Olivia's own journey in life, and her learning expedition, that started from the first minute she was born, I can't help but wonder about her own perceptions of the things she sees around her. She will grow up in a world that is completely different than the one I grew up in, or even the world that my son Johnny, who is 19-years old, grew up in. She will probably have her own blog at the age of 4, as soon as she learns how to type. Amazing! Her own blog!! I just started my first blog yesterday, at the age of 44!

So what does that mean? Well, I hate to admit it, but Olivia will be a much better Blogger than her own Dad. To her, blogging will be as natural as writing a letter is to me, and so will be the use of the various devices that we can't survive without today like mobile phones, PDA's, i-Pods, , DVD players, etc... She will also find it very strange to use the traditional phone to make a call, or a desktop PC to access the Web, when she could use her wireless all-in-one micro gadgets that are built-in her jewelry, accessories and clothes, including her latest Bebe Sport top.

Olivia will have 24X7 access to all kinds of services that are at her finger tips. Soon we will all be using our own biometrics, including finger prints, to securely access services and uniquely identify ourselves, instead of using passwords. So by touching a device, we make it our own! When we identify ourselves, we are giving permission to a service provider to serve us through that specific device. Olivia will really enjoy this new world she is born in, where she can be served instantaneously with the touch of her finger tips! I wish I were Olivia! I wish I was starting all over again today in this new world of services.

How about learning? Will learning also be delivered as a service?

Who will be the learning service providers? schools? teachers? publishers? Disney?

How will Olivia track her own learning outcomes? Will she still need diplomas, certificates, degrees, and the like? Will she need a "proof" of her learning experience?

When will she start her "official" learning? pre-K? Kindergarten? already started?

I find all of these questions overwhelming and, of course, very difficult to predict.

However I do know one thing ... and that is Olivia will be able to subscribe to various learning services offered by various types of service providers. She will grow-up in a service-oriented world accessing a service-oriented Web. She will have a unique learning path, that differs from everyone else's. She will have her own Webtop, that delivers to her these customized set of services. Olivia's unique identity will allow her to access, order, manage, track, sustain and consume all of the services that she will encounter in her lifelong learning journey.

These learning services will enable her to learn interactively, collaboratively, and experientially. She will not be limited to the classroom experience. She will move at her own pace, fast or slow, in any subject matter at any age.

I wish I had been born in the EduTone World like Olivia!

Saturday, August 12, 2006

EduTone ... connecting all the dots!

Welcome to my new Blog!

As the CEO of an education technology company, I intend to share with you my journey that will take us together to a new frontier in technology, and possibly in education as we know it today!

The title: EduTone ... connecting all the dots, summarizes the destination of our journey!

So first what is EduTone? Edu: short for Education, and Tone: short for web-tone, similar to dial-tone in the telephony network, the indicator of availability of the web services network infrastructure utility, that should always be on!

So ... EduTone is the utility computing infrastructure for the Education vertical market.

Connecting all the dots is a slogan that I had originally picked for VIP Tone, which I founded in April 2000 (http://www.viptone.com), and it means exactly what it says! We need to connect all of the dot com's of the education world, i.e. the web services, into a single web-based delivery infrastructure.

I like to use the Cable Companies as a metaphor for EduTone ... the cable company delivers to us a single service delivery infrastructure, that consists of the set-top box that is connected to our TV's through a fiber network, which aggregates (or syndicates) 100's of content channels (like HBO, MTV, Comedy Channel, etc...) from various content sources. The cable company provides one service delivery infrastructure for all of these channels, a unified billing system, and a single customer call-center and a customer service infrastructure. Could you imagine a similar model for aggregating (and integrating) web services for our schools? well ... that is EduTone.

Welcome to an EduTone World! I look forward to our journey together.

To get started, please take a tour of the new EduTone Xchange website: http://www.viptone.com/prod_edu.html As we continue our journey together, I will update my Blog with any new developments in our EduTone World. I hope to hear back your feedback, thoughts and comments.

Thanks for joining me!