Crime and Punishment lesson for Adults

Adult ESL teaching: Crime and Punishment.

One of my adult classes was studying a chapter about Fyodor Dostoyevsky. Seeing as I’ve purchased Crime and Punishment with every intention of eventually finishing it despite repeated attempts, I decided to bring it along as a prop. I also cooked up another interesting activity that I called “Crime and Punishiment” in honor of the book.

It works like this. On a paper introduce that you have been given the power to make new laws about anything you want. All you have to do is state the crime, the law, and the punishment below and anything you want can be made into a law. Try to have the students think up things that aren’t already illegal, but are more annoyances, and try to have the punishments fit the crimes.

Read more

Hot SATA drive

Seagate Baracoda 200 GB SATA vs Western Digital 200 GB IDE Drive

The seagate drive has good reviews for performance. But the review often note it runs hot.
No problem I thought. I got two !
Big mistake I think.

I recently lent the drive to a friend. it was hanging out of the side of the computer in the open air and it’s temperature was 40 degrees !
The Western Digital was mounted in the drive bay of the computer, and it was only 29 degrees.
That is over a 10 degree difference. When you think that the OS and the swap file is on the western digital it is even worse. It is working much harder in a hotter enviroment and it is not just a little cooler, but over 25% less.

MP3 Players in language learning

You might have heard that Duke university last year gave out iPod MP3 players to all new students one of the uses of this is

iPods Assist with Spanish Accents
This article is taken directly from Duke Universities site:

Duke University junior Keith Rand says he has always struggled learning languages. This semester, he is confronting that challenge by taking an introductory Spanish course that packs two semesters of Spanish into one. It is also a class that is pioneering the use of iPod digital-audio players for education.

“I was kind of skeptical about [the iPods] at first to tell you the truth,” Rand says. “You know: ‘They’re giving out these free iPods as a marketing scheme for Apple.’ But it’s actually been really useful.”

Rand’s progress in his first-ever Spanish class is documented in recordings he makes each week with his iPod for homework and tests. During his first week of class, Rand recorded a conversation with a classmate that is limited to the most basic Spanish phrases (listen to Rand’s Spanish after one week). After just two weeks of class, a recording of his first oral exams shows that his vocabulary is expanding

Students in a Duke University Spanish class use iPods to complete oral comprehension exercises at their own pace. Students use iPods to record their speech.

Visiting assistant professor Lisa Merschel is the course?¢‚Ǩ‚Ñ¢s instructor. She says, when she first found out iPods would be available for her class, she was limited in her imagination about the pedagogical uses of the devices.

?¢‚Ǩ?ìIn the first two days, I was thinking, ?¢‚ǨÀúWell I would play some songs for them,?¢‚Ǩ‚Ñ¢?¢‚Ǩ¬ù she says. ?¢‚Ǩ?ìAnd then after that I became much more imaginative in my use of the iPod and have expanded quite a bit and am surprised about how many ways I can use it to students’ benefit.?¢‚Ǩ¬ù

So far, Merschel has had the students use the iPods to: hear dramatic recordings of the novellas they read ; record responses during oral quizzes; play back her verbal comments on quizzes and homework; review the pronunciation of each week?¢‚Ǩ‚Ñ¢s vocabulary words, a use suggested by a student (listen to an example); and listen to audio exercises inside and outside of class. She also assigns weekly ?¢‚Ǩ?ìaudio diary entries,?¢‚Ǩ¬ù for which students record themselves speaking on a topic. And yes, she provides a handful of Spanish songs, like Gloria Estefan?¢‚Ǩ‚Ñ¢s ?¢‚Ǩ?ìAyer.?¢‚Ǩ¬ù

Rand says the iPods are most helpful when he does oral comprehension exercises in class, for which he listens to short segments on the iPod and then fills in blanks on a worksheet.

?¢‚Ǩ?ìWe?¢‚Ǩ‚Ñ¢re able to keep up [at] our own pace,?¢‚Ǩ¬ù he says. Each student can focus on the sections most difficult to him by reviewing them on his iPod, Rand notes, without the entire class having to repeat those segments.

He also finds useful the recordings of vocabulary words — ?¢‚Ǩ?ìaudio flash cards?¢‚Ǩ¬ù — that Merschel records each week.

?¢‚Ǩ?ìI?¢‚Ǩ‚Ñ¢ll come out of class and listen to vocabulary for a little bit,?¢‚Ǩ¬ù he says.

This list of Spanish vocabulary words was recorded by Professor Lisa Merschel to make “audio flash cards” that students can listen to on their iPods to review pronounciation.

Another student, Lissa Smith, who works full time on campus and audits the course, says she appreciates the convenience of being able to review pronunciation walking to school or driving.

?¢‚Ǩ?ìIt?¢‚Ǩ‚Ñ¢s especially nice for me because I often work and travel for my work,?¢‚Ǩ¬ù she says, ?¢‚Ǩ?ìand when there are places I can?¢‚Ǩ‚Ñ¢t access a computer this is really great for me.?¢‚Ǩ¬ù

Lauren Berkowitz, commutes to the class from UNC, where she is sophomore. She likes how the iPods increase the number of ways she applies her burgeoning Spanish skills. Her only regret: as a UNC student, she?¢‚Ǩ‚Ñ¢ll have to turn in her iPod at the end of the semester.

Wireless Network Cards

On April 1st I purchased an ASUS WL-167G USB wirless network card for 60,000 won. In Australia it costs from $55 to 77 dollars!

Usually Korean prices are a little more expensive then Australia and much more expensive then Americia.

The product specifications mention USB 2, but I got it working on my USB 1.1 Windows XP laptop at work with no major problems.

Driver & Utilities Download Page

The ASUS WL-167g WLAN USB2.0 adapter Card utility release note and utility progrm in English, version 2.2.8.0.

The ASUS WL-167g WLAN USB2.0 adapter Card utility release note and utility progrm in Korean, version 2.2.8.0.

The ASUS WL-167g WLAN USB2.0 adapter Card driver for Win98SE/WinME/Win2K/WinXP

OS X Driver 2004/10/07 Version 1.0.5.0

Got this working on my iBook G3 900 Combo. I disabled the built in Airport Card and installed the driver. I then had to reboot.
When OS X loaded it ran an ugly utility called RaConfig2500 which detected the ASUS card and my local wireless network … but it did not work !

Went to System Preferences and the Network icon. It detected a new port – Ethernet Adaptor (en2) I enabled the port and BINGO, it worked!
As a test I set my Linksys Router to G Mode only and I got

475 KB/s incoming to windows,
467.5 KB/s upload from OS X

Now, that is not very impressive, but using Airport Express (B mode only) I got

624.9 KB/s incoming to windows,
623.1 KB/s upload from OS X

hmm … not good ! The G mode is actually slower! More work needs to be done to find out why.
But if you are looking for a wireless adapter for the Mac, particullary, any old Mac’s which can’t accept the new Airport cards, then this is a good deal.The price is cheap and it works!

I will test the card with Apples Airport Express later.

Haidong Gumdo Grading

Good news 🙂

I passed my Haidong Gumdo grading. My new formula for success ?

The Six P’s

Prior Preparation Prevents Piss Poor Performance

After the class one of the Kwang-Jang-nims showed me how to improve the form.
Overall, a good day.

I’ve got it

I got my iPod Mini last night after work. The colour is Silver. I was tempted by Pink, but I would have to wait for that , so I went with boring silver and I like it 🙂
I am very happy with it. The students like it very much. They were impressed with the scroll wheel that the iPod has. It is an excellent system. It only took me seconds to figure it out. I did miss some of the features you get by pressing the centre button. But I think I have discovered them all now.
Just in case I will read the manual to see if I have missed anything.

I am now working on creating audiobooks for the iPod. Basically you convert MP3 to AAC, then change the extension and you have an audio file which will remember where it was when you were last playing.
Very useful! So if you are sick of listening to your audio book, stop, play some music, then come back to the audio book and it will continue from where you last were.
I believe you can also see bookmarks in the audiobook as well, but I haven’t tried out that feature yet.

When opening the box for the iPod the installation CD said to Install software before installing iPod

Well being the consumate computer professional I am, I off course ignored the warning.
I plugged in the iPod, it appeared as a removable USB harddrive. Excellent!
boy, am I smart
So I install the software and reboot
and …. #$%WSAF it freezes during boot
oh … hmm … to cut a long story short, I booted into safe mode, uninstalled the iPod software, unplugged the iPod, rebooted, installed the iPod software, plugged in the iPod, formated the iPod as a windows iPod (FAT32 I assume) and now everything works wonderfully.

Korean iPod Market Share and xenophobia

The Korean Herald has said that

Apple Computer Inc. is strengthening its presence in the local digital music player market, a segment dominated mostly by Korean companies, thanks to the company’s low-cost approach on its best-selling products.

According to a survey by online electronics retailer Danawa Corp., Apple Computer’s iPod music players accounted for 7 percent of the local market by revenue as of the first two-weeks of March.

Danawa estimates iPods market share by units to be well over 10 percent, considering that Apple’s products are sold in far-less fewer stores compared to those of their Korean counterparts including ReignCom Ltd (Iriver). and Samsung Electronics Co.

According to U.S. market researcher iSuppli Corp., global MP3 player shipments will reach at around 57.7 million units this year from 36.8 million units in 2004. Apple Computer is believed to have controlled about 50 percent of the global MP3 player market last year.

According to industry figures, products by Korean MP3 manufacturers accounted for about 20 percent of the global market last year, dropping from 33 percent in 2003 and 41 percent in 2002, with the rise of hard-disk products made by U.S. companies such as Apple Computer and Creative Technology Ltd.

The Chosun Ilbo mentioned Apple as well

Reigncom is the world?¢‚Ǩ‚Ñ¢s number one in MP3 players with flash memory sticks, while Apple leads the world with the hard drive disk (HDD) players. But recently both transgressed on each other?¢‚Ǩ‚Ñ¢s patch, with Reigncom releasing an HDD player and Apple a flash memory machine.

Late last year, Reigncom put out the iRiver H10, a five-gigabyte HDD model, after 10 months of research and development, to challenge Apple?¢‚Ǩ‚Ñ¢s iPod mini. Weighing 100 grams and about the size of a business card case, the iRiver H10 can store up to 1,200 songs, 200 more than the iPod mini. It is equipped with a 1.5-inch color liquid crystal display (LCD) screen, so that users can look at digital pictures or read e-books while listening to music. At the 2005 International Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas, Microsoft CEO Bill Gates named the iRiver MP3 player as an outstanding product. Reigncom says its primary goal is to break Apple?¢‚Ǩ‚Ñ¢s dominance in the MP3 player market.

But Apple is not just sitting back, putting the iPod shuffle, a flash memory MP3 player, on sale in Korea last Thursday. The version with 512 megabytes of memory is priced at W125,400, and the one-gigabyte model is W189,500. This consolidates a shift in Apple?¢‚Ǩ‚Ñ¢s marketing strategy away from the classy, high-priced brand image of the past. The iPod shuffle abandons LCD screens, and music is played with just one button. It can also serve as a USB flash memory stick. The biggest advantage is that it is simple to handle, allowing older, less tech-savvy people to use it. Unsurprisingly, it targets the same customers as the iRiver N10.

IGM says

In South Korea, the 1GB Shuffle will cost only 60% of the equivalent ReignCom model, even after the price cuts. In fact, the 1GB Shuffle costs considerably less than the Korean company’s 512MB model.

However, the Shuffle is not expected to be a huge seller in South Korea, where features are all-important. The Shuffle lacks a display and a radio tuner, for example.

As a Foreigner in a strange land (Korea) I have been somewhat taken with Korean products and Culture. A lot of good stuff is made in this country.

But the culture can be a little xenophobic when threatened. The company that makes Iriver MP3 players (of which I am a happy owner of one) published an interesting add on Sam Il Jul (Independence Movement Day) Sam il Jul is sort of like Australia Day or the USA’s 4th of July.
Iriver racist add
A translation of the add is

Does shouting “mansei” buck-naked make Korea independent? US firms are sweeping up most of the world?¢‚Ǩ‚Ñ¢s HDD-type MP3 player market… As a sovereign MP3 state, we could not simply sit back and watch … After spending countless nights in the research room, we?¢‚Ǩ‚Ñ¢ve finally produced a precious son for the world market… There will be many difficulties, but we are not afraid … We are the descendents of martyrs who braved bullets and swords to bring about independence to the cry of “mansei.”

What the F_ _ _ is a sovereign MP3 state?
“Countless nights in the research room”, luckily for them the martyrs were doing something else at night before shouting “mansei” and dying for indepence, otherwise there would be no descendents to spend countless nights. 🙂 Get a life!

Off course every country has this sort of advertising now and then, but usually in a more upbeat tone. In Australia we have Dick Smith selling Aussie Made grocery products. But he does this in a more postive way.

For a much more serious issue see the dispute between Japan and Korea over the Doko islands (I support the Korean side). One man set himself on fire! And in the Korean Japan Friendship year there was a lovely picture in the newspapers of flag waving Koreans walking on Japanese flags! .. nothing like showing respect to the other side in an argument.
The funny thing is the Koreans are the ones in posession of the islands. Image what would have if the Japanese had them!
Someones needs to drink a little less soju I think 🙂

References:
http://english.chosun.com/cgi-bin/printNews?id=200501240017
http://www.insanely-great.com/news.php?id=4557
http://www.insanely-great.com/news.php?id=4318