Archive

Archive for 2011

LRC Outlook/Exchange 2010 Resource Calendaring: How students can view resource "Calendars from the Internet" in web browser and OWA

2011/09/20 5 comments
  1. Want a shorter version?
  2. Students, unless specifically TBA:invited, will encounter a permission problem when trying to view calendars like staff.
  3. Instead, students can use the scheduling assistant to view a basic version of the resource’s calendar. This works “out of the box”.
  4. Students can also view an advanced version of the resource’s calendars (one-time, or bookmark this link in your web browser – hope you know how to synch your bookmarks between all the devices you use…). This requires little work: click on the “view” link  in the “student calendar” column of our  list of LRC resources that you can book or check out, to see the current calendar in your web browser: student-internet-calendar-in-browser
  5. For students  who check the calendar of a resource regularly (e.g. to see when the LRC main classroom is available for your self-access/the tutor in your language, for help), it is better to “bookmark” the resources’ calendars in NINERMAIL. Here is how:
    1. Copy the URL for the calendar you just opened, from the web browser address bar: student-internet-calendar-in-browser-uri-marked
    2. Go to NINERMAIL,  click on the lower left “Calendar-icon” calendar-icon_thumbto unfold the “My Calendars” list my-calendar-icon_thumb in the left pane, then right-click on “My Calendars”, choose “Add Calendarowa-mycalendars-add1_thumb1 .
    3. In the “Calendar URL” field, paste URL of the calendar you just opened, but replace “html” at the  end with “ics”: student-internet-calendar-in-owa2-marked, click “OK”.
    4. For on-premise users in OWA (seems OWA stirs on-premise users to the superior intranet calendars, which would be good. But what if the intranet calendar has not been shared with this user, but internet sharing is intended?), This may not work as advertised (neither with protocol http and webcal) OR just need a lot of time (~12hours?) to synchronize,student-internet-calendar-in-owa-errorwhile it works (both with protocol http and webcal) when subscribing from Windows Live? student-internet-calendar-in-windows-live-works. Most importantly for us (as we have now tested), it works for students with accounts in the cloud from NINERMAI.
    5. OWA remembers your internet calendar subscriptions, and you can easily display or hide them, using the checkboxes it provides. To keep an overview over your calendars added from the internet, you need to rename them, by right-clicking on them, like so: student-calendar-adding-renaming

How to use the LRC Lists

2011/09/20 2 comments
  1. The LRC lists are built with MS-Excel Web app, one of the new features which came with NINERMAIL (live@edu, try logging into http://skydrive.com .
  2. Important benefits of MS-Excel Web app include
    1. sorting: click on column header / down arrow, and choose menu item: “Sort Ascending/Descending”
    2. filtering: click on column header / down arrow, and choose menu item:
      1. either “filter”, excel-web-app-filter1, to choose from a condensed overview of all unique items that occur in the column, and e.g. filter out “Blanks” by removing the checkmark in front of it: excel-web-app-filter2
      2. or the advanced “number filter” (in columns with numbers) or “textfilter”,excel-web-app-filter3 , to do more advanced searches, like for all items that contain “camera”: excel-web-app-filter4 
      3. sharing beyond viewing: Authorized users can click on an “edit link” below the list display to update the information from their web browser.

LRC Facilities: Coed037 (Film studies lab)

  1. The classroom
    1. old layout (wall-facing, 1 row along wall):
    2. new layout Fall 2011 (front-facing, 2 columns along both side walls): coed037-CIMG0003
  2. The teacher computer (an upgrade is in the works):
    1. coed037-teacher-IMAG0025 Stitch
    2. coed037-teacher-IMAG0028 Stitch
    3. coed037-teacher-IMAG0034 Stitch
Categories: COED037, documentation

American National Corpus English Word Frequency Lists

The American National Corpus list is long (~300k) and  lemmatized: http://americannationalcorpus.org/SecondRelease/data/ANC-all-count.txt.

Our Office 2010 natural language features upgrade: A running log

2011/09/15 1 comment
  1. Just logging some notes, observations, issues, step-by-step instructions… – other than non-natural-language, most collaboration features, which are being logged here.
  2. Office 2010 proofing tools (proofing-tools2010-install.wmv),:
    1. again, we select custom install, “run all from Computers”
    2. install is extensive, but uneventful
  3. Office 2010 proofing tools (proofing-tools2010-first-run-German-set-language.wmv), first run:
    1. German is not autodetected. You have to set the language of the selected text manually, and first find the button on the ribbon:reviewing
    2. While choosing the language, you can see from the checkmark which languages now have proofing tools installed
  4. Foreign Language Support
    1. One of the strongest benefits of upgrading to MS-Office 2010 in the language center is the improved foreign language support licensing for so called “Language Packs”, and that we have a complete set of licenses to the MS-Proofing Tools.
    2. In addition MS-Office supports free download of so called “Language interface packs” which seem essentially downscaled language packs for LCTL (usually come only with (see feature list) a spell checker and help in the language). Compare: “If a language is available in a language pack or as a fully localized version, it is not available as a language interface pack”.
    3. Unfortunately multi-user (= learner of different language) support is not the primary usage scenario of these tools. It is, however, possible, to set the language to a default (e.g. Spanish, Arabic or Chinese, depending on your environment). Switching to another language is relatively easy for a user
      1. changing the screen-tip language: http://skydrive.live.com/embedicon.aspx/screencasts/office-2010-switch-screentip-language.wmv?cid=4fa3329905d7e1ce&sc=photos
  5.  

The Language Resource Center within the Department of Languages and Cultural Studies in the College of Education building

CIMG0002 Stitch

Time-zone issues when creating meeting requests

2011/09/14 4 comments

Do the clouds change with the time zones you are in, or can the cloud also change your time zone? Smile We are seeing strange inconsistencies of time zones in meeting requests with on-premise resource mailboxes from hosted student accounts…

When students say they see the “correct” time in *their* calendar, they should verify their time zone settings. In OWA/NINERMAIL, upper right corner: Options / See All Options / left menu: Settings / top menu: Calendar / you can check your time zone. In OWA / upper right corner: Options / See All Options / left menu: Settings / top menu: Regional / bottom drop-down:, you can change your time zone, like in the last dropdown here:

owa-options-all-options-settings-calendar-time-zone-change

From setting up calendaring infrastructure for a university using Windows Live Accounts only, I remember that users, when they manually created their accounts, failed to look at the time zone dropdown. So instead of at Greenwich time, they ended up at Pacific time which seems the default for MS products.

That’s one of the reasons why I am glad not having to use Windows Live Accounts for the enterprise anymore.  Now how can time zones be not set up properly for student accounts in a hosted environment? And this time we see not only the Pacific, but also Monrovia… time-zone-issue-in-appointment

The answer seems to be: Even though large institutions may be creating 25000 accounts when they start using live@edu, there seems to be no way to set a default time zone in live@edu to where the client predominantly does business. It seems still the server time that sets the default offered to the new user on login. I could tell you a story or two why that needs fixing…

How do I make a video out of my PowerPoint Presentation?

  1. Many streets may lead to Rome, but here is the "One Microsoft way”, built into PowerPoint 2010: http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/powerpoint-help/turn-your-presentation-into-a-video-HA010336763.aspx: You can essentially “save as”  video, including recorded narrations. You have to have your media inserted in 2010 format. Here is a walk-through:
  2. under “file”, “save&send”, use “create video”powerpoint-save&send-create-video
  3. if you get a compatibility error like so: powerpoint-save&send-create-video-error-media
  4. follow the instructions given; powerpoint-save&send-create-video-error-media-convert
  5. watch the progress bar: powerpoint-save&send-create-progress
  6. Takes over 60 minutes with on average over 50% CPU of an Intel i5 with 8 GB Ram, to produce a 75MB file of 920*760 and less than 18 minutes in length. But this video streams from MS-SkyDrive.