Scoop has an Ethical Paywall
Work smarter with a Pro licence Learn More

Video | Agriculture | Confidence | Economy | Energy | Employment | Finance | Media | Property | RBNZ | Science | SOEs | Tax | Technology | Telecoms | Tourism | Transport | Search

 

How to easily and affordably improve school computers

Crucial NZ reveals how to easily and affordably improve school computers

Increase student and teacher performance with memory and SSDs


AUCKLAND, 27 February 2017 – Shrinking education budgets make it a challenge to deliver the computer speed and reliability that students and teachers need to succeed. With this in mind Crucial has revealed several easy ways to overcome these limitations with memory (RAM) and SSDs – an easy and affordable way to improve the performance of a school’s existing systems. Instead of spending money on expensive new computers, schools can instantly increase system speed, save money, and get more years out of current computers with new memory and SSDs.

Crucial SSD Sr. Product Line Manager Jonathan Weech explained “It used to be a unique thing for a classroom to have a computer – and it was rarely used. Those were the days of the hard drive. Today, computers are essential parts of education and students are not only expected to use them but to use them well. In the same way, SSDs are the next step in the evolution of classroom technology, sending hard drives the way of the typewriter. SSDs enable students to get more out of their computers and advance the learning process.”

Classrooms now rely on technology more than ever before, which is why it’s critical to ensure those systems run smoothly and securely. Waiting on slow computers wastes valuable class time and causes students to lose the focus that teachers work so hard to achieve. Here’s how more memory and SSDs improve student and teacher performance.

Advertisement - scroll to continue reading

Are you getting our free newsletter?

Subscribe to Scoop’s 'The Catch Up' our free weekly newsletter sent to your inbox every Monday with stories from across our network.

Weech added, “There may not be a more aggravating situation than working on a project, only to have your hard drive crash and lose all of your work before the assignment is due. While today’s version of “The dog ate my homework” is “My computer crashed,” no one wants to truthfully lose data because of technology that’s as outdated as that old excuse. SSDs are the new and more reliable alternative that access and store data digitally, which eliminates the small mechanical parts that were prone to failure in hard drives.”

According to Crucial there are six main ways schools benefit from more memory and SSDs.

Firstly more memory and SSD can maximise class time and keep students engaged as near-instant boot times, improved system responsiveness, and seamless multitasking maximise limited class time and help students use technology more efficiently, work six times faster, and maintain their attention.

Secondly you can boost online classes, virtual classes, and educational apps. In other words, the classroom is changing. As more schoolwork gets done online, computers and servers need more RAM and SSDs to power the digital classroom, not bog it down.

More memory and SSD better withstand the punishment of everyday classroom use as SSDs are inherently more durable than hard drives because they don’t use small mechanical moving parts to read data. You can also read this as computers that often get thrown around by students are less likely to fail.

Then there’s the fact that you can use more intensive apps or programs as many media and design apps that are now used in schools, such as Adobe® Photoshop® for graphic design and Adobe® Premiere® Pro for video editing, require large amounts of system resources. Using them in the classroom improves real-world application and better prepares students who are entering the workforce.

Better memory and SSD also improve student and teacher performance without draining the IT budget as installing more memory and SSDs instantly speeds up computers that are used for almost everything in modern education – and doubling a system’s memory from 4GB to 8GB and adding a 275GB SSD often costs 75% less than buying a new system.* Hardware is a long-term investment that you can likely also use in future systems.

Finally there’s the fact that you can avoid lengthy downtime upgrading your systems as memory and SSD installation is quick and easy, so your system upgrade won’t require significant downtime – plus, to maximise the learning value of an upgrade, you can teach students in computer science courses how to install memory and SSDs – a valuable skill.

Crucial DRAM Sr. Product Marketing Manager Jeremy Mortenson added, “More memory in school computers is an affordable way to instantly create more possibilities for what your students can do. Maxed-out memory allows them to open and surf between many Internet browser tabs with instant responsiveness as they’re doing research for school projects.”

The bottom line is that school computers don’t have to be slow and its now very easy to extend the life of a school’s systems and budget with better memory and SSDs.

Jeremy Mortenson concluded, “Education budgets are tight, making it difficult to find ways to improve your classrooms. A memory upgrade is a fast, affordable way to instantly boost the performance of aging computers without costing much money or time – two things that are extremely valuable in schools.”

For more information on how to overcome the top 5 server workload constraints go to: www.crucial.com

Picture credits:

Crucial “how to easily and affordably improve school computers” graphics

*According to IDC data, the most-shipped Acer®, Dell®, HP®, and Lenovo® laptops and desktops from 2013-2015 had a list price of $400-600 (in US dollars). Within this range, many systems shipped with 4GB of DDR3 memory, and as of 1 August 2016, doubling the amount of memory cost $37.99 USD on the Crucial manufacturer website (8GB kit of Crucial® DDR3 memory, part number CT2KIT51264BF160B) and a 275GB Crucial® MX300 SSD (part number CT275MX300SSD1) cost $69.99 USD. Together, these parts cost $107.98 USD (without taxes) and are more than four times less than $500, the mean of the IDC data range for most-shipped desktops and laptops of the aforementioned brands. All prices subject to change and based on current exchange rates. Claim is for illustrative purposes only.

Ends


About Crucial

Crucial is a global brand of Micron Technology, Inc. and Crucial’s Australian office is in North Sydney. Crucial products include award-winning solid state drives (SSDs) and DRAM for more than 50,000 desktops, laptops, servers, workstations, and other systems. Crucial products are available worldwide at leading retail and e-tail stores, commercial resellers, and system integrators. For more information or support, visit www.crucial.com
Follow us online!
Facebook: www.facebook.com/crucialmemory
Twitter: www.twitter.com/crucialmemory
YouTube™: www.youtube.com/crucialmemory

About Micron
Micron Technology, Inc. is one of the world's leading providers of advanced semiconductor solutions. Through its worldwide operations, Micron manufactures and markets a full range of DRAM, NAND and NOR flash memory, as well as other innovative memory technologies, packaging solutions and semiconductor systems for use in leading-edge computing, consumer, networking, embedded and mobile products. Micron's common stock is traded on the NASDAQ under the MU symbol. To learn more about Micron Technology, Inc., visit www.micron.com.


© Scoop Media

Advertisement - scroll to continue reading
 
 
 
Business Headlines | Sci-Tech Headlines

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Join Our Free Newsletter

Subscribe to Scoop’s 'The Catch Up' our free weekly newsletter sent to your inbox every Monday with stories from across our network.