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NKU iPhone app brings hi tech to higher education
Monday, 08.03.2009, 12:58pm (GMT-4)
"The development of iNKU is a small but significant step in our plans
to make NKU a leader in the adoption of new technology," said Tim
Ferguson, CIO at NKU. "We think the impact of technology on the student
experience needs to be a focus in higher education and we hope to make
major strides in the coming months."
The first version of this
free mobile application is now available in iTunes (search "NKU"). The
application's many features include a glossary of terms used at NKU, a
trivia game, an NKU fight song player and a campus map that works with
the iPhone's GPS.
"iNKU has some fun built into it, but it also has some practical solutions such as the GPS navigation," said Chris Rider, senior technology architect for the Infrastructure Management Institute (IMI) in the NKU College of Informatics.
The
map feature will be especially useful to new students learning their
way around campus or visitors looking for a specific building. "If you
have an iPhone," said Rider, "it will show your current location on
campus and can be used to find the way to your next class, the Student
Union or campus event." The GPS capability has an accuracy of three to
four feet.
The iNKU application takes advantage of some cool
iPhone features, such as the accelerometer. "The glossary, which
contains facts about NKU, cycles through terms when the phone is
shaken," said Rider. The app's trivia feature will ask various
questions, with answers accessed by scrolling down. If a user shakes
the device, it plays random sounds and will change the trivia question.
"The app plays the NKU fight song as a basketball bounces in time to
the lyrics," Rider added.
iNKU is the launch pad to provide
mobile access to university resources for the NKU community. With the
development of iNKU, organizations in the community can see the type of
opportunities NKU provides to students and the work they are capable of
producing. "NKU is on the cutting edge of technology as one of the few
universities that currently have an iPhone application," Rider said.
"We
are excited about iNKU as it provides our prospective students
information about the university and students interested in technology
can see yet another reason to check out the College of Informatics,"
said Ferguson. NKU students helped develop iNKU, and the College of
Informatics plans to begin offering a course that will cover the iPhone
SDK (Software Development Kit) in the spring of 2010. Students in the
course will learn how to write their own iPhone applications.
Ferguson
said there will be updates coming with additional features designed for
NKU students, faculty and staff. "NKU is focused on providing the
necessary tools to allow our students that are accustomed to being
'connected to the net' all the time, to continue that feeling on
campus," he said.
nku.edu
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