Interactive discussion on mobile technologies like the iPhone and iPad with the Charlotte Chapter of the International Association of Administrative Professionals (IAAP) on Monday, February 11, 2012.
3. Dancing with Mobile Technologies
pick up a few steps and learn to improvise
All ages, professions, and walks of life are picking up mobile devices and connecting to the Internet at all
hours of the night and day. Learning a few new mobile technology steps can make each of us more
comfortable as we move through home, work, and play. Mobile technology skills learned in one area of
life are instantly usable in other areas, so that we become more informed, more flexible, and more
effective in our personal and professional lives.
At the end of this session, participants will be able to:
• Understand the how development and adoption cycles affect the mobile devices we use
• Learn and practice mobile technology best practices and etiquette
• Learn and teach others about the best mobile technology applications and resources
4.
5.
6. • Check Out Dance Floor
• Know Who Is Dancing
• Chose a Style that Suits You and Learn It
• Decide on When and Where to Practice
• Engage All Your Senses
• Set Some Limits
• Never Stop Learning
Dancing with Mobile Technologies
pick up a few steps and learn to improvise
13. Set Your Own Parameters
• 24 hours a day?
• 7 days per week?
• 365 days per year?
• You are the boss, not
the device
14. Set Some Rules
• Society is evolving to
accommodate, keep current
with etiquette.
• Business and personal are
now integrated, determine
how you live with it.
• Share with others and learn
from others.
• You are the boss, not the
device.
15. Where Do I Learn the New Steps?
• Formal and Informal Peer Learning
• Websites
– http://www.lifehacker.org
– http://mashable.com/
– http://arstechnica.com/
– http://www.wired.com/
– http://www.apple.com/itunes/charts/free-apps/
– http://www.apple.com/itunes/charts/paid-apps/
16. 1. Find the embedded Help on your phone.
2. Get completely comfortable with your own email, calendar, contacts.
3. Use the phone to photograph your hotel room number, your rental car
license plate, your airport parking spot.
4. Sign onto FaceBook at post one picture update a month with a short
caption.
5. Sign onto Pandora and setup a few stations.
Beginner’s Steps
17. Intermediate Steps
1. Show someone else how to use the embedded Help on your phone.
2. Connect your device to a second email box and get comfortable switching
between the email, calendar, and contacts.
3. Use a notebook application like Evernote to tag your photos for later
reference.
4. Sign onto Twitter and use it to search for outages, like power outages,
internet outages, or Gmail outages.
5. Ask someone what their favorite free app is and try it.
18. 1. Convene or attend a informal peer learning group.
2. Ask a colleague who uses a different device to share what
they like, don’t like, or don’t understand about their device.
3. Learn about power management for your devices and make
adjustments that fit the way you use your mobile devices.
4. Learn how to backup and restore your mobile devices.
Advanced Steps