7 June 2013

iANU?

| johnboy
Join the conversation
4

CIO Australia has a moderately interesting story on ANU’s iPhone app intended to help dozy students find their lecture theatre.

In the first of a series of articles on new technology in tertiary education, CIO Australia spoke to Peter Nikoletatos, CIO at the ANU, about the mobile initiatives that are enhancing the services the university offers to staff and students.

The iANU iPhone app, which was released in February this year, allows students to navigate around the university campus, access online resources, lecture notes and recordings, and collaboration tools, It also lets them read the latest university news and find out about upcoming events.

But Nikoletatos wanted to add a simple navigation feature to the app that would help new students find their way to lectures on time.

“If you are on the campus, you can use the augmented reality function – you just point it around in 360 degree navigation, and using GPS technology, [you can] work out where buildings are in relation to you,” he said. “You can simply find a building as you rotate around and it will tell you exactly how far away it is from where you are currently standing.”

There I was thinking having the wit to find the building was part of the test.

Join the conversation

4
All Comments
  • All Comments
  • Website Comments
LatestOldest

They should ask him about his penchant for moving from uni to uni, signing contracts for Office 365, then leaving before successful deployment.

“… the university has a high percentage of iPhone users. However, an Android version of the app has been made available.”

I just installed it from Play Store.

Love to see that all these apps are only for iPhone, clearly android doesn’t exist, and there is no internet that can help us.

PS. Google maps and most GPS maps can find your way around ANU. everything has a road

Nice to see Nikoletatos marketing himself and padding his resume, because the feature itself doesn’t work at all. Tried it once and rotating around, it labelled the Federal Court as Melville Hall.

Daily Digest

Want the best Canberra news delivered daily? Every day we package the most popular Riotact stories and send them straight to your inbox. Sign-up now for trusted local news that will never be behind a paywall.

By submitting your email address you are agreeing to Region Group's terms and conditions and privacy policy.