Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byAriel Franklin Modified over 8 years ago
1
Fluency with Information Technology Katherine Deibel INFO100 and CSE100 Katherine Deibel 2012-03-28Katherine Deibel, Fluency in Information Technology1
2
If you do the work, you can expect the following grades (from winter 2012) Average: 3.44 Median:3.60 St. Dev.:0.62 2012-03-28Katherine Deibel, Fluency in Information Technology2
3
Computers are provided but feel free to bring your own laptop Most of the software used in this course is free and available for PCs and Macs 2012-03-28Katherine Deibel, Fluency in Information Technology3
4
Introduction to several computing services available here at UW Setting up your account for this class 2012-03-28Katherine Deibel, Fluency in Information Technology4
5
Lab 1 is due on Monday by 10pm Turn in is the submission of the WebQ quiz In general Labs assigned on Monday/Tuesday are due by 10pm on Thursday Labs assigned on Wednesday/Thursday are due by 10pm on Monday 2012-03-28Katherine Deibel, Fluency in Information Technology5
6
You can turn in most work up to two days late 20% penalty for being 1-day late 50% penalty for being 2-days late Applies to projects and labs Does not apply to GoPosts and other assignments unless otherwise stated 2012-03-28Katherine Deibel, Fluency in Information Technology6
7
2012-03-28Katherine Deibel, Fluency in Information Technology7
8
When you activate your web storage, you might not see the disk usage listed right away Why? 2012-03-28Katherine Deibel, Fluency in Information Technology8
9
Consider a wastebasket We hire a person to check on it and empty it when it is full How often do we have that person check its status? 2012-03-28Katherine Deibel, Fluency in Information Technology9
10
Option 1: The employee stands by the basket constantly watching it Option 2: The employee periodically checks the basket 2012-03-28Katherine Deibel, Fluency in Information Technology10 How often should they check? When should they check?
11
How many wastebaskets are there? 2012-03-28Katherine Deibel, Fluency in Information Technology11
12
UW hosts 1000s of web accounts Each account’s usage changes infrequently Monitoring the usage constantly would be a waste of resources 2012-03-28Katherine Deibel, Fluency in Information Technology12 This is an example of what it means to be operationally attuned.
13
Think about how devices operate Observe what they tell us—feedback Progress bars, spinning cursors, etc. So, if you think you’re waiting for the computer but there is no feedback, it’s waiting for you One of the most effective habits new users can adopt is to be operationally attuned. 2012-03-28Katherine Deibel, Fluency in Information Technology13
14
Icons tell us a lot about software functionality What do you think click on these icons would do? 2012-03-28Katherine Deibel, Fluency in Information Technology14
15
Things can go wrong You may need to seek out help To do so requires knowing the right terminology 2012-03-28Katherine Deibel, Fluency in Information Technology15
16
Learning le mot juste, the right word for something, aids us in two ways: Helps learning... our brains anchor concepts to words & phrases Helps us get help... asking “tech support” for help requires us to describe the problem precisely mot juste /MO zoost/ (Fr.) most appropriate word, expression 2012-03-28Katherine Deibel, Fluency in Information Technology16
17
I’ve had a few CRT monitors go bad One started only showing red One started only showing yellow What do you think happened? Turn to your neighbors and hypothesize some explanations? 2012-03-28Katherine Deibel, Fluency in Information Technology17
18
I’ve had a few CRT monitors go bad One started only showing red One started only showing yellow What happened: The green/blue components died The blue component died 2012-03-28Katherine Deibel, Fluency in Information Technology18
19
We learned this as kids Primary colors: Red Yellow Blue Secondary colors: Orange Purple Green That’s for mixing pigments, not light Primary colors: Red Green Blue Secondary colors: Cyan Magenta Yellow 2012-03-28Katherine Deibel, Fluency in Information Technology19
20
2012-03-28Katherine Deibel, Fluency in Information Technology20
21
Sound familiar? Think printing. Color printers are CMYK printers They use four types of ink Cyan Magenta Yellow blacK (actually Key) 2012-03-28Katherine Deibel, Fluency in Information Technology21
22
Technically, CMYK printing is mixing pigments, not light Cyan + Magenta = Blue Magenta + Yellow = Red Cyan + Yellow = Green C + M + Y = Black(ish) 2012-03-28Katherine Deibel, Fluency in Information Technology22
23
Where can you find IT definitions? Glossary in the back of the book Google query: define Online flash cards Wikipedia 2012-03-28Katherine Deibel, Fluency in Information Technology23
24
Hardware refers to physical devices Software refers to programs The main difference is: Hardware cannot be changed Software can be modified The same hardware (computer) runs different software (applications) 2012-03-28Katherine Deibel, Fluency in Information Technology24
25
Separating the two is tricky A mouse is actually both Hardware: the mouse itself Software: the mouse drivers 2012-03-28Katherine Deibel, Fluency in Information Technology25
26
Hardware & software make up a computer How the computer performs also needs to be described Memory Speed Storage space And you need to compare different performance levels! 2012-03-28Katherine Deibel, Fluency in Information Technology26
27
How fast to run a mile? First four minute mile was in 1954: Roger Bannister (3:59.40) Current record was set in 1999: Hakim El Guerrouj (3:43.13) Their speeds: Bannister’s rate = 15.04 mph El Guerrouj’s rate = 16.27 mph 45 years to get 7% faster! Still holds the record today! 2012-03-28Katherine Deibel, Fluency in Information Technology27
28
How fast can you run a mile? Healthy people in their twenties run a mile in 7:30 (≈8 mph) El Guerrouj is twice as fast as us He is about a factor-of-2 faster than normal people A factor-of-2 is a good rule for human strength 2012-03-28Katherine Deibel, Fluency in Information Technology28
29
How fast do computers run? Univac I ran 100,000 adds/sec in 1954 ASCI Red ran 2.1×10 11 adds in 1999 ▪ A factor-of-21 Million improvement ▪ This was a teraflop machine. We have since built petaflop machines (1000x faster) Can we comprehend such speeds or factors of improvement? 2012-03-28Katherine Deibel, Fluency in Information Technology29
30
A factor of improvement is different than a percent improvement … factor = new_rate/old_rate percent = 100 x (new_rate-old_rate)/old_rate Expressing an improvement by its factor is easier, especially for large changes El Guerrouj’s 7% improvement over Bannister is a 1.07 factor of improvement Indy 500:1911 Harroun74.59 mph 2002 Castroneves166.5 mph 2012-03-28Katherine Deibel, Fluency in Information Technology30
31
One reason to notice the factors of improvement is to recognize scale The time for the mile run has improved Maximum adds per second has improved But the difference in scale is dramatic A factor-of-1.07 for the mile run A factor-of-21,000,000 for additions Getting information is easy with IT, but we need analysis to understand its significance. 2012-03-28Katherine Deibel, Fluency in Information Technology31
32
Fluency involves Knowing the correct vocabulary and concepts Paying attention to what the computer does Being able to make comparisons 2012-03-28Katherine Deibel, Fluency in Information Technology32
33
The GoPost board is now up Let’s visit it: https://catalyst.uw.edu/gopost/area/deibel/27196 2012-03-28Katherine Deibel, Fluency in Information Technology33
34
Ten weekly discussions Goal is to engage in conversations about IT and fluency Bring in our "barnyard" of diverse viewpoints and backgrounds Talk in greater detail about what we might not have time for in lecture/labs 2012-03-28Katherine Deibel, Fluency in Information Technology34
35
Topics of discussions can include anything we have been studying Asking questions about the material Interesting applications Your own thoughts I will add additional topics in each week Example: Digital natives and immigrants You are invited to suggest/post other topics 2012-03-28Katherine Deibel, Fluency in Information Technology35
36
Your contributions to the weekly discussion is graded on a 0-12 scale 0 pts: No posts 1 pts:Minimal contributions (+1, this, I agree, etc.) Up to 6pts: Contributes a decent post but mostly repeats previous posters and does not add to the conversation 2012-03-28Katherine Deibel, Fluency in Information Technology36
37
Your contributions to the weekly discussion is graded on a 0-12 scale 7 pts: Post contributes to discussion: says something somewhat novel or replies to previous comments 8 pts: Post contributes a link or question but does not provide context 10 pts:Significant contributions: asking questions with stated reason; posting links and discussing them; etc. 2012-03-28Katherine Deibel, Fluency in Information Technology37
38
Your contributions to the weekly discussion is graded on a 0-12 scale 12 pts: Student makes exceptionally strong contributions to the conversation(s) Note that serious grammatical errors posting incorrect information, or unclear writing will lose points 2012-03-28Katherine Deibel, Fluency in Information Technology38
39
10 weekly discussions worth up to 12 points each Total possible points is 120 Your score will be out of 100 points Ergo, you may earn up to 20 points of extra credit 2012-03-28Katherine Deibel, Fluency in Information Technology39
40
Late postings not accepted You can post multiple times and is probably a good idea if you want to have a conversation Summarizing topics is an easy 6 pts, but it is only 6 pts I will be contributing as well 2012-03-28Katherine Deibel, Fluency in Information Technology40
41
Post Your Biography Activity Instructions linked on the Calendar page Due Friday by 10pm 2012-03-28Katherine Deibel, Fluency in Information Technology41
42
Read Chapter 2 for Friday Lab 1 is due on Monday by 10pm Submit your GoPost biography by 10pm on Friday Bring clickers on Friday… we will do a test run and discuss their HCI aspects 2012-03-28Katherine Deibel, Fluency in Information Technology42
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.