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Jeff Selingo makes that argument that control of the parchment (accreditation) and governmental funding of student aid as the only reasons our current Higher Education system is able to sustain it centuries old traditions of having:

professors at the front of a room or at a table with an average of 16 students in front of them.

Selengo points to several examples of disruption outside of academia StraighterLine, the Khan Academy, and Badges to certify skills as well examples inside academic like MITx and Udacity.

Is the perfect storm of change brewing for higher-ed? Time will tell but when you consider the following, something has to give: ubiquitous access to information through the internet, looming global financial crisis, evidence that the system isn’t producing the result we all expect, non-traditional organizations moving in rapidly and successfully at the bottom end of the market and perhaps most importantly a weakening in the reliance on and significance of the parchment.

Apple announced its FREE ebook publishing platform iBooks Author on January 19th and since the announcement there have been a flurry of posts in the blogoshere, on twitter and in all other forms of social media commenting on Apples move into ebook publishing. A few of the sites I follow include:

Engaget: Apple’s iBooks Author hands-on provide a general overview of the Author tool.

Macleans: 90,000 have downloaded iBooks Author since Thursday offers straight data on just how much interest there is in the authoring tool.

Chronicle of Higher Education: Apple’s New E-Textbook Platform Enters an Already Crowded Field is relatively negative perspective from the Technology writer Jeffery Young.

Mashable: This Is How Apple Changes Education, Forever provides a glowing review the authoring tool and the impact it will have on education.

Regardless of that the early reviews reveal, through this FREE platform, Apple gives us the ability to create interactive ebooks with rich media, 3D images and a wide range of interactive features. These books can be saved to PDF, epub or can be published to the iBook store so even if you don’t have an iPad or a Mac you can still share the books with just about anyone. There currently isn’t another FREE tool that offers all this. Yes the full features will only be available for viewing on the iPad but all this means is that the Android world will have another tool to copy–which is a good thing.

Over the years I have used Aldus Pagemaker, Macromedia Pagemaker and then Adobe Pagemaker, InDesign and many other programs looking for the ultimate tool to help me build a book and I have always ended up not only hundreds of dollars poorer but also countless hour poorer. Apples iBook Author is a wonderful first offering from Apple and I look forward to seeing that impact it will have on the book and textbook publishing industry.

Review the iBooks Author site…

I truly hope that this is not a surprise for anyone. I sold my Nikon F4S, F4 and other professional camera film bodies and switched to digital photography and video back in the late 90’s. The digitization of our society is moving very rapidly and this is only one more example of an established industry leader being displaced by a disruptive innovation.

Jason Hiner may be a bit premature in suggesting that the Android tablets have failed but he does point to some very relevant limitations of Android tablets when compared to the iPad. Based on the explosive growth of the Android phones in 2010 many tech commentators expected the Android tablet to at minimum match iPad sales in 2011 but this never happened. Hiner offers the following for reasons for Android tablet lack of success in 2011:

  1. The price
  2. The lack of tablet apps
  3. The enterprise doesn’t trust Android
  4. The 16×9 problem

 
While I agree these are significant limitations with the Android devices, I also think that you need to take into account the poor battery life, unreliability of the Android OS and apps as well as the fragmented user experience. In the past month two months that I have been using a Samsung Galaxy Tab I have been shocked at how easily I can repeatedly cause applications to crash or freeze, how poor the battery life is not and how long it takes to recharge the Galaxy Tab.

Perhaps the biggest indicator that I don’t trust Android and the Galaxy Tab surfaced on a recent ski trip that my family and I took over the Christmas break. I didn’t want to pack so much so I limited myself to only my laptop and one tablet. I chose my iPad because it was much more reliable and the battery life was so much better. When one is traveling you don’t want to spent time tinkering with a device, you just want it to work.

I won’t go so far as to agree with Hiner and suggest that the Android tablets are a failure I will agree with him that there is a long way to go before they reach the level of functionality and reliability. The sooner they get to this point the better it is for everyone–the more competition there is in the emerging tablet space the more we all win.

As part of their CNET 100 (10 lists of 10 products) CNET identifies the most important important tech products of the year in each major gadget category. It is interesting to note that of the top 10 tech products 8 contribute to the advance of mobile technology. It is also interesting to note that the iPhone 4S is the 1st product in the most important list and also the 10th item in the most disappointing list. Even though the iPhone 4S offers much more than the iPhone 4 for features, power and battery life people are expecting much more from Apple.

See top 10 tech products of 2011…

See the top 10 tech disappointments of 2011…

See the full CNET 100 list…