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just a touch of class?!.....Apple losing ground in classrooms....
#1
....iPads and notebooks......to Windows and Google....


Apple Losing Out to Microsoft and Google in U.S. Classrooms

.....Use of iPads and MacBooks in U.S. schools hit a new low last year, with Apple struggling to make further inroads into the education sector, according to new figures (via The New York Times).

According to research company Futuresource Consulting, in 2016 the number of devices in American classrooms that run iOS and macOS fell to third place behind both Google-powered laptops and Windows devices.

Out of 12.6 million mobile devices shipped to primary and secondary schools in the U.S., Chromebooks accounted for 58 percent of the market, up from 50 percent in 2015. Meanwhile, school shipments of iPads and Mac laptops fell to 19 percent, from about 25 percent, over the same period, while Microsoft Windows laptops and tablets stayed relatively stable at about 22 percent.

At an operating system level, Chromebooks continue to gain market share, reaching 58% in 2016, up from 50% in 2015. The strong combination of affordable devices, productivity tools via G-Suite, easy integration with third party platforms/tools, task management/distribution via Google Classroom and easy device management remains extremely popular with US teachers and IT buyers alike. The rise of Chromebooks has also set new industry benchmarks with regards to average device pricing, with prices reaching as low as $120 on certain projects.

Apple attempted to outmaneuver its education rivals in 2016, announcing its Classroom app, Swift Playgrounds, and a number of other major education-focused feature updates in iOS 9.3, including the ability to share iPads. Microsoft also made significant developments in 2016, including the launch of Microsoft Classroom, 'School Data sSync', and several integrations with popular third party solutions.

This surge in competition has dented Apple's education revenue stream, according to research firm IDC. Of the $7.35 billion that schools, colleges and universities spent on mobile and desktop computers in 2016, sales of Apple devices fell to $2.8 billion, down from $3.2 billion in 2015.

Apple's iPad first lost its lead over Google's line of Chromebook laptops in 2014. Analysts at the time said the swing in fortunes for Google's Chromebooks could be attributed to their low cost, which starts at $199 for some models.

"At the end of the day, I can get three Chromebooks for each of the Mac devices I would have purchased," said Steve Splichal, the superintendent of Eudora Public Schools, speaking to The New York Times. He added that Eudora students continued to use MacBooks for certain creative courses and that first graders and younger students still used iPads.

Apple CEO Tim Cook has previously made light of Chromebooks' increased popularity in the classroom by calling them "test machines", referring to schools' need for cheap devices for mass computerized testing purposes.

However, Cupertino is not interested in advancing testing. Cook said in 2015 that Apple is interested in "helping students learn and teachers teach, but tests, no."



at its lowest numbers now....................?!
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I reject your reality and substitute my own!
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#2
Our local school district uses Chromebooks and Google Classroom. I think the Chromebooks are about $200-300 each and they last 2-3 years. I don't know how much they pay for Google classroom but I don't think it is expensive. Maybe it is even free, Google tries to hook you up to their eco-system. How can Apple compete with that? Besides Google drive and Google Docs probably work much better than iCloud.
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#3
Chromebooks are the right thing for schools. Period.

Next topic.
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#4
By the time one takes into account that each iPad needs a physical keyboard just to make its screen usable, a cover of some kind to minimally protect it, and some kind of storage/recharging, the cost per student gets ridiculous - and that's all before a school district starts paying for some kind of digital curriculum … and digital management … and IT infrastructure … "the internets" doesn't count as a curriculum. The iOS environment is also very unfriendly to individual client management of all those iPads and iOS apps - so get ready to pay up for some kind of specialized solution for that, too

But hey - they're iPads
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#5
Our district has ipads for each middle school and high school student. I hate them with a passion.

For the middle schools they make sense, but at the high school level (where I am), all but the math teachers have been asking for laptops or chromebooks for several years - that includes students. We are ignored because a single school boardmember is an obnoxious fanboy and won't listen to reason.

Each ipad air2 is in an otter defender case, so the cost is around $450 per student. Students can't reasonably use them for writing anything of consequence, we can't use them for testing, and they are so locked down that video is impossible.

An incredible waste of money
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#6
Apple has been losing classroom market share for YEARS now. That's no secret to anyone who works close to education.
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#7
bfd wrote:
By the time one takes into account that each iPad needs a physical keyboard just to make its screen usable, a cover of some kind to minimally protect it, and some kind of storage/recharging, the cost per student gets ridiculous - and that's all before a school district starts paying for some kind of digital curriculum … and digital management … and IT infrastructure … "the internets" doesn't count as a curriculum. The iOS environment is also very unfriendly to individual client management of all those iPads and iOS apps - so get ready to pay up for some kind of specialized solution for that, too

But hey - they're iPads

bfd probably followed the LAUSD "an iPad for every student" brouhaha from a few years back with some interest. What a fustercluck that was.
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#8
our school went with the Google environment lots of Chromebooks with some iPads. But every student got a chromebook this year.
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#9
N-OS X-tasy! wrote:
[quote=bfd]
By the time one takes into account that each iPad needs a physical keyboard just to make its screen usable, a cover of some kind to minimally protect it, and some kind of storage/recharging, the cost per student gets ridiculous - and that's all before a school district starts paying for some kind of digital curriculum … and digital management … and IT infrastructure … "the internets" doesn't count as a curriculum. The iOS environment is also very unfriendly to individual client management of all those iPads and iOS apps - so get ready to pay up for some kind of specialized solution for that, too

But hey - they're iPads

bfd probably followed the LAUSD "an iPad for every student" brouhaha from a few years back with some interest. What a fustercluck that was.
An absolute Charles Foxtrot, indeed. How much money went straight down the L.A. River on that one?
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#10
Apple simply can't stand a marketing plan that makes sense. They lose control then. Just like the computer updating thing . . . "we're working on it" has been their mantra for years, with nothing to show. Tim still doesn't get it.
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