SHARE
Follow this article on Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Bookmark and Share
Home >> IT Workplace >> IT Women

Many mice per PC makes for more hands

Many mice per PC makes for more hands

By:  John Ribeiro  On: 30 Nov 2005 For: IDG News Service (Bangalore Bureau) Creator

Microsoft Research Lab India Pvt. Ltd. is piloting a technology with schoolchildren in a suburb of Bangalore that lets several computer mice be used with a PC simultaneously to make up for a shortage of computers.

Microsoft Research Lab India Pvt. Ltd. is piloting a technology with schoolchildren in a suburb of Bangalore that lets several computer mice be used with a PC simultaneously to make up for a shortage of computers.

A key problem at rural schools in India is that the number of students far outnumber the PCs in the classroom, said Kentaro Toyama, assistant managing director of Microsoft Research India. As a result, several students often have to use the same PC, and one child often monopolizes the computer, he said.

The concept of having multiple mice and cursors on a single PC has been researched for some time, although most efforts have been for non-educational purposes, Toyama said.

Using technology developed at the University of Calgary in Alberta, Canada, under a project financed by Microsoft Corp., Microsoft Research India has developed a technology for such collaborative learning around a single PC, Toyama said.

The technology enables a number of mice to be connected to a PC's (universal serial bus) port. "Just for the cost of extra mice we can multiply the value of the PCs that are in the school," said Udai Singh Pawar, assistant researcher at Microsoft Research India. "The challenge is to design applications that get students to work together, and learning happens from that process," he said.

Microsoft's research group developed some sample instructional programs, including software that displays multiple cursors in different colors on the screen, Toyama said.

Other tools include a utility that keeps track of how each student does on an instructional program. The group also developed a voting mechanism that lets students switch to a different PC application only if the majority of them click their mice in favor, Pawar said.

Microsoft Research plans to release a software development kit on the Web to let developers create additional local content for schools. It is also talking to product groups at Microsoft that may be interested in incorporating the technology in their products, Toyama said.

Microsoft Research India, in Bangalore, is one of six research labs worldwide run by the Redmond, Washington-based software company.


Sign up for our Newsletters












Print |  Views: 535   |   Rating:offoffoffoffoff  (0 votes)
Rate this article on a scale of
1 to 5 stars,5 being the best.




John Ribeiro John Ribeiro is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

Related Content

Microsoft to test education PC in India
Microsoft to test education PC in IndiaMicrosoft to test education PC in India
Microsoft readies PC-sharing tool in India
Microsoft readies PC-sharing tool in IndiaMicrosoft Corp. plans to commercialize technology developed at its India lab that allows several computer mice to be used with a PC simultaneously. The technology, developed last year by Microsoft Research Lab India Pvt. Ltd. in Bangalore, enables several mice to be connected to a PC's USB (universal serial bus) port, helping to make up for the shortage of computers at schools in India and other emerging economies.
assistant managing director, Microsoft Research India.
assistant managing director, Microsoft Research India. Microsoft Research, the research and development arm of Microsoft Corp, is to collaborate on science and technology research projects with India's Ministry of Science and Technology and Ocean Development.
Microsoft Convergence Day 4
microsoft opened the door ever so slightly on its research. much of the technology such as speech recognition, image enhancement and visioning has been around. gis companies such as esri have been working on visual mapping for a long time. googleearth has a brought this to the consumer, however if you read between the lines the microsoft technology behind the demos goes beyond what we as consumer
Floored by a coffee table
having gone to roughly a million technology demonstrations in the last 10 years, i'm a skeptic. i'm rarely thrilled by a demo. especially one on a saturday when i have my nine-year-old's exquisite company. so i blew off an invite for a saturday show by microsoft without a second thought.as it happened, my daughter and i accidentally wandered into the microsoft

Comments (0)

No Comments!
Name: (required) eMail: (optional)

Your email address will not appear online and will be used only if the editor wishes to contact you personally for additional comments.