Welcome, Freshmen. Have an iPod.

By JONATHAN D. GLATER
August 21, 2008

Taking a step that professors may view as a bit counterproductive, 
some universities are doling out Apple iPhones and Internet-capable 
iPods to students.

The always-on Internet devices raise some novel possibilities, like 
tracking where students congregate. With far less controversy, 
colleges could send messages about canceled classes, delayed buses, 
campus crises or just the cafeteria menu.

While schools emphasize its usefulness - online research in class and 
instant polling of students, for example - a big part of the 
attraction is, undoubtedly, that the iPhone is cool and a hit with 
students. Basking in the aura of a cutting-edge product could just 
help a university foster a cutting-edge reputation.

Apple stands to win as well, hooking more young consumers with 
decades of technology purchases ahead of them. The lone losers, some 
fear, could be professors.

Students already have laptops and cellphones, of course, but the 
newest devices can take class distractions to a new level. They 
practically beg a user to ignore the long-suffering professor 
struggling to pass on accumulated wisdom from the front of the room - 
a prospect that teachers find galling and students view as, well, 
inevitable.

...

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/21/technology/21iphone.html?partner=rssuserland&emc=rss&pagewanted=all

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