Title of article :
Notebook versus desktop computers for cadets at West Point
Author/Authors :
Loy، نويسنده , , J.R.; Myers، نويسنده , , J.D.; Tappert، نويسنده , , C.C.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1996
Abstract :
me universities require or recommend that their West Point joined a national trend when it made the decision
students purchase personal computers, and the trend is toward
using the portable notebook variety. West Point cadets (students)
are currently issued late-model, IBM-compatible desktop PC’s
on matriculation, and this study investigated the feasibility and
desirability of issuing notebook computers to future incoming
classes. As a pilot comparison one classroom group of 18 students
taking introductory courses in computers and mathematics was
given notebook computers for one semester in place of their
desktops. An additional 12 notebooks were evaluated to assess
specialized technical features. The principal findings were that,
at a constant dollar cost, notebook and desktop computers differ
in computational power, durability, and ease of use. Due to
miniaturization costs a notebook is less powerful than a similarly
priced desktop or, for example, to replace a $1700 desktop with
a comparably powered notebook it would cost $2500. The most
negative feature of the notebooks was the lack of durability
indicated by a failure rate of 31% compared to a failure rate
of less than 5% for desktops. The portability of notebooks
was considered its most positive feature, and the Mathematics
Department felt the strongest about the potential positive
impact on their instructional pedagogy with other departments
expressing minimal impact. The capability of portable notebook
computers to serve in computer labs via docking stations for
network connections was also evaluated. We concluded that
we cannot move to notebook computers for incoming students
until notebook durability (maturity of technology) is reasonable
and until the disparity between the comphtational capability of
comparably priced notebooks and desktops reaches an acceptable
limit. We now see the technology maturing rapidly and are likely
to move to notebook computers within three years.
Journal title :
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON EDUCATION
Journal title :
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON EDUCATION