We'll see how it goes....
Would you like to visit us?
http://groups.google.com/group/mathporting-summer
mathportingsummer.bmp
We went over the white board features, access to the room, acquiring the Marratech client... pretty much everything that you need to explain it to others...
( I will come back to edit this post and add an image, the image editor is acting up right now...)
Too bad the conference is in Washington DC....
You are invited to participate in the Marratech DEMO today at 3:30.
To enter the virtual room, please follow this link:
http://us.emeet
Your computer will need Java to open the Marratech client. If your computer does not have Java, you can download it from www.java.com.
Room will be open at 3:25, and you will be able to get in with the following username and password:
Username: Necklaces (case sensitive, so N, not n)
password: franklinrules
For further guidance going into the room, you can chat with me on Gmail:
See you at the demo!
Picture this: there is a chill factor of minus x out there and you know you need to warm up to the idea of math homework. That last quiz grade..., well...
But who is going to brave the T on a day like this, either coming back to BFIT in the afternoon, or, worse still, STAYING for evening tutoring and THEN walking the lonely South End streets to the Back Bay station, then transfer...
Forget it.
You are going home right now and not coming back into town, and if tutoring is needed those tutors can come chasing after. Well guess what: they can! and YOU CAN... cuddle up at home, pour yourself a cup or two of your favorite infusion, click on a few links, get the username and password of the day, and be present, virtually, in the same room as your tutor and fellow students.
Ah!, technology...
This is what Matt Toledo experienced today. And he was not being tutored on an easy topic either... try this one for size:
Calculate the area under f(x) = 3x - 4, by applying a limit of a summation as n (the number of rectangles) aproaches infinity in the interval [2,5].
Sounds like fun? Sure!.. it CAN be if you get tutored through Marratech: a virtual room environment where you have video, audio, chat and whiteboard.
To see screen captures of Matt's tutoring session and previous Marratech demos, please click into this Facebook album: marratech demos. (Let me know if Facebook gives you a privacy attitude when you try to view the album). Matt's scenes are the last three in the set.
For general information about Marratech, please check out their web site: www.marratech.com
Soooo... stay home and learn! The technology era has arrived, for your greater comfort.
And to expand gratification in a mathematical context, enhance your learning experience by a "factor of pi". No, not pi squared! More like round, as in ... APPLE PI e, ( :-)), right next to your whiteboard screen, perhaps with cream and a steaming hot cup of tea.
Chris Connors, an expert user, was my mentor. Chris took me quickly from the "What is Fab Lab?" stage to being able to design Mathport logos, name tags and badges, in only one session. Chris is the archetypal High School teacher, armed with patience and a measure of enthusiasm that does not overwhelm you.
The process is very simple: you design something using Open Office Draw (for all of you who have fallen inextricable prey to Microsoft, think "Paint"). Once your design is finished, you do prin ...sorry, make that "fabricate". A screen appears where you set the speed and power of the Laser beam that will trace your design. Remember that James Bond movie where the beam was advancing towards 007?... I even forget how he gets out of it. Well, in this case the material you place under the beam will not get out.
Your design will be etched on or cut out of the plank of wood or plastic that you place under the beam. Give the beam less power or greater speed and your design will be burnt in gently. Give it more power or less speed and the beam will cut your design right out of the board.
DO NOT forget to turn on the fan before you press run, and DO NOT leave the area marked off around the machine while the beam is operating. The guys at the Fab Lab are very nice, but they are also safety minded and after a couple of wrist slaps for forgetfulness you could get more serious sanctions including a Lab ban. I am telling you now.
Here is a (cell-phone, sorry...) picture of my creations:
Anybody wishing to get initiated in Fab Labbing only needs to come to the South End Technology Center on 359 Columbus Avenue (and Yarmouth, see map) on Thursdays from 5:30 to 8pm to get their initiation. I highly recommend it.
If you are more of a hands-off kind of person, here is a Globe story for you.
I am pondering various ideas around BFIT and what seems to be an extraordinary opportunity to develop creativity and industriousness. I will be happy to share them with any interested soul, perhaps at the Berkeley Perk?, over some coffee?... What would Benjamin do with this?...

These Got Mathport? signs posted around our building are a joint creative effort between the Math and Physics, Developmental and the Humanities departments. (Perhaps we should start an advertising agency???...)
Please feel free to comment on the variations of the copy as exhibited around campus.
The purpose of the campaign is to introduce some name recognition first, then develop content awareness in preparation for a program launch on January 28.
And YES, expect more signs next week...
This first post is written on the same DAY we are celebrating Benjamin Franklin's 306 birthday.
Students and Faculty at the Institute are dispersing after the function at the auditorium. Student Jimmy Torres spoke on behalf of the Student Body and President Michael Taylor highlighted the personality of our founding mentor.
This is 2008, and so this is the 100th year of our existence as an educational institution in the heart of Boston.
An auspicious day of a remarkable year. Dates have that energizing aura, don't they? I often find myself making resolutions and plans, reviewing past performances, or carrying out other such time-mark prone activities whenever a significant date comes around, and today, for sure, is a high-class date.
This afternoon, we are having a meeting to plan the introduction of Mathport at BFIT. I don't know if Mathport will be remembered 300 or even 100 years from now... probably not; but we certainly will not be able to blame its non- longevity on chosing an inauspicious day to launch it!
Happy Birthday, Ben.
Happy hundred, BFIT.
Hello Mathport.
