Silicon_Knight
Member
Registered: Nov 1999
Location:
Posts: 40 |
I'm a college student, and the visor is great for storing TA contact information, professor's office hours, as well as notes, formulas and whatnots. I don't use it to "cheat", as college level classes most tests gives the equations or "a sheet of notes" anyway, but for homework it's invaluable. It has the potential for expansion, both hardware wise in the springboard modules, and software wise with open sourced development tools. At $250.00, it's a bit expensive if you compare it to a good graphing calculator, but not terribly so when you consider what it can do. To be perfectly honest with ya, I think a visor, a stow-away keyboard and a WinCE Z50 workpad (hacked to run Linux) can replace my laptop, and offer far more in flexability and portability.
Much has changed since my father's generation went to school. In my father's time, being an engineer was difficult; and I really have to admire and respect what he had to go through. Slide rules were the norm, and strapping a motor to an adding machine was considered an upgrade. But as technology matured, engineering and science students have more and more to learn (half the stuff that we learn in chemistry class wasn't invented 30 years ago!) and to offset that, they no longer have to learn to do the basic calculations the HARD way, since everyone now has a calculator. (Does anyone know how to take square roots by hand, w/o a calculator or a log table? My Dad does!) IMHO, that's the way things should be (focusing on the material, and not the basic techniques) and visors and other electronic gismos, if used correctly are GREAT learning tools.
-=- SiKnight
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