Author Topic: L.A. Unified's iPad  (Read 250 times)

Archer77

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L.A. Unified's iPad
« on: October 02, 2013, 09:02:03 AM »
They are giving out iPads to students.  What do the good people of getbig think about this?  Was the purchase of iPads a good use of funds? The program to provide iPads to 600,000 students to is going to cost around a billion dollars




http://www.latimes.com/local/la-me-1002-lausd-ipads-20131002,0,3394023,full.story
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Re: L.A. Unified's iPad
« Reply #1 on: October 02, 2013, 02:52:15 PM »
EPIC FAIL: Los Angeles high schools now confiscate all free iPads they gave students
Yahoo ^ 

Posted on Wednesday, October 02, 2013 4:39:32 PM by Sub-Driver

EPIC FAIL: Los Angeles high schools now confiscate all free iPads they gave students

The Daily Caller 3 hours ago

Hilariously, officials at high schools in the Los Angeles Unified School District are now taking back a couple thousand iPads a week or so after giving them to students as part of a 47-school pilot program.

The mass repossession is the latest in a series of responses by school officials to the fact that hundreds of students figured out almost immediately how to hack the security settings on their iPads. Another 71 kids ostensibly lost their iPads just as immediately. (RELATED: LA schools give every kid an iPad—what could go wrong?)

Each iPad cost the school district $700. School district officials have said that the eventual goal is to supply every kid with one of the devices as part of a technology plan that will cost $1 billion.

As of Friday, students at Westchester High School and Roosevelt High School are now bereft of their iPads, reports the Los Angeles Times. At least most of them are now bereft, anyway. A Roosevelt teacher told the Times that about one-third of the devices still remain unaccounted for.

“They carted them out of every classroom in sixth period,” Westchester senior Brian Young told The Times on Monday. “There has been no word of when they’ll be back.”

Other schools may soon follow suit and recall their students’ iPads as well.

The hacking was far from rocket science for the tech-savvy students. Bypassing the security settings imposed by school officials took no more than a few simple clicks.

Students had told the Times they were frustrated because they couldn’t surf the Internet freely or visit social media and music streaming websites.


(Excerpt) Read more at news.yahoo.com ...