Students get discounts on Exchange-compatible Office for Mac
College isn’t cheap these days, even if you’re attending public university. In that case, pretty much any discount offered to students is welcome. Microsoft’s Mac Business Unit has just announced that it’s offering a special discount on the full Office 2008 Business Edition for US college students, offering them a 70 percent discount off the usual retail price. Even if you’re not a college student, though, the Mac BU is offering a range of “holiday” discounts on Office as well.
Office 2008 for Mac comes in two different editions. The Home & Student Edition includes Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Entourage, and usually sells for $149.95. The Business Edition, includes Entourage Web Services Edition, which is compatible with Exchange, as well as Document Connection for Mac, Automator actions, templates, clip art, and more; it normally sells for $399.95.
Students get discounts on Exchange-compatible Office for Mac
College isn’t cheap these days, even if you’re attending public university. In that case, pretty much any discount offered to students is welcome. Microsoft’s Mac Business Unit has just announced that it’s offering a special discount on the full Office 2008 Business Edition for US college students, offering them a 70 percent discount off the usual retail price. Even if you’re not a college student, though, the Mac BU is offering a range of “holiday” discounts on Office as well.
Office 2008 for Mac comes in two different editions. The Home & Student Edition includes Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Entourage, and usually sells for $149.95. The Business Edition, includes Entourage Web Services Edition, which is compatible with Exchange, as well as Document Connection for Mac, Automator actions, templates, clip art, and more; it normally sells for $399.95.
Japanese university tracking students via free iPhones
Filed under: Analysis / Opinion, Hardware, Odds and ends, Developer, iPhone
If you happen to be enrolling in Aoyama Gakuin University’s School of Social Informatics in Tokyo this year, make sure to stop by the admissions office to pick up your free iPhone — the school made a deal with Softbank Corporation, the iPhone’s vendor in Japan, to give the phones to 550 students for school usage. But oh, there is one catch: they’re also going to use the phones’ GPS to track students, and make sure they’re attending class on time.
It looks like skipping class is an issue — the students at the school, despite having to answer an attendance check and/or hand in an attendance card, are still skipping out on class and having their classmates cover them. But apparently university officials think the iPhone plan will work better, because students will be less inclined, they believe, to pass off their iPhone to a buddy.
Need to keep track of truant students? There is, apparently, an app for that.
[via Ars]
TUAWJapanese university tracking students via free iPhones originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Mon, 01 Jun 2009 09:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Apple opens registration for 2008 Insomnia Film Festival
If you are a high school or college student, then you can now register a team for Apple’s 2008 Insomnia Film Festival. The idea behind the festival is simple. Apple will post a list of elements you can use in your film, you pick three of them, and then take 24 hours to make a 3 minute movie.
If you are the lucky grand prize winner, your team will receive: 5 MacBook Pro notebook computers, 5 Final Cut Studio 2 box sets, 5 copies of Shake, 5 Logic Studio box sets, and 5 One to One personal training cards. That sure is a nice set up!
If you want to get in on the action, check out Apple’s Insomnia Film Festival website, and register your team today! All the fun will start on November 15th at 9:00 a.m. EST. And if you like the Insomnia logo, Apple has posted wallpaper for both Mac and iPhone/iPod touch on the site.
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Apple Stores welcome kids via Field Trip
Filed under: Retail, Education
Letting a bunch of kids loose in a candy store might be a sticky mess, but letting them loose in an Apple Store should be a delightful, brushed metal and glass wonderland of fun. Right? That’s the idea behind Apple’s new Field Trip program for elementary, middle and high school students and their teachers.
Apple is inviting groups of up to 25 students for the hour-long programs, which can feature a big-screen presentation of work that the students have already done in class (Keynote/PowerPoint, movies & more) or hands-on creation sessions that allow the kids to make new projects in the store. Parents and friends are welcome to come watch the fun.
Session reservations are available through November 21; the ’school champion’ organizing the event gets email templates to send to attendees, the option of printed invitations, and a complimentary subscription to One-to-One training for a year. Not too shabby.
[via Apple Hot News]
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Back to School: Papers updated for the new term
Filed under: Software
TUAW’s going Back to School! We’ll be bringing you tips and reviews for students, parents and teachers right up until the bell rings in September. Read on for a timely app update useful for students.
PDF management app Papers has been bumped to version 1.8.5, bringing what the developers claim are 100 improvements. Top on the list is a new sharing feature called Papers Archives, which lets you share a PDF file and its associated metadata with a colleague.
Papers isn’t for everyone. Instead, it’s specifically designed for students and academics, particularly those who deal with a lot of scientific periodicals in the course of their research. It lets you search them, sort them (manually or using Smart Folders), find them on any one of 14 different online repositories, rate them, browse your library in tabs, and much more.
Papers costs $42 for a single-user license, but students qualify for a 40 per cent discount.
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Back to School: Papers updated for the new term
Filed under: Software
TUAW’s going Back to School! We’ll be bringing you tips and reviews for students, parents and teachers right up until the bell rings in September. Read on for a timely app update useful for students.
PDF management app Papers has been bumped to version 1.8.5, bringing what the developers claim are 100 improvements. Top on the list is a new sharing feature called Papers Archives, which lets you share a PDF file and its associated metadata with a colleague.
Papers isn’t for everyone. Instead, it’s specifically designed for students and academics, particularly those who deal with a lot of scientific periodicals in the course of their research. It lets you search them, sort them (manually or using Smart Folders), find them on any one of 14 different online repositories, rate them, browse your library in tabs, and much more.
Papers costs $42 for a single-user license, but students qualify for a 40 per cent discount.
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