Skip to main content

Study: 60 percent of students won’t attend a college without Wi-Fi services

campus-wi-fi
Image used with permission by copyright holder

According to a recent study conducted by OnlineColleges.net, six out of ten students won’t consider a college unless the education institution provides access to “free” Wi-Fi services on campus. While any development and maintenance costs of a campus-wide Wi-Fi network is ultimately billed to the students through tuition costs, colleges that are behind the curve on providing Wi-Fi infrastructure may be negatively impacted by this trend. Seventy-five percent of students believe that Wi-Fi access on college campus helps them get better grades during the semester and 90 percent believe Wi-Fi is just as essential to an education as a computer or a classroom.  

Student-Laptop-campusWhen asked what was the one online resource or site that they could not live without, the most common answer was Google. Other responses included Wikipedia, Blackboard, Yahoo! and Facebook. When it came to social media, 86 percent of the respondents use a social networking site and 15 percent wished that their instructors used Facebook more often. In addition, 58 percent of students are very comfortable talking about class assignments over a social network. When asked if it was appropriate to befriend an instructor on a social network, nearly 40 percent thought that was an inappropriate action. 

When asked about the most important types of computer hardware, the most common answers included laptops, printers, desktop computers and USB drives. Other pieces of hardware that supported further education included smartphones, eReaders, tablets and MP3 players. The most popular forms of software vital to education include word processors, e-mail and presentation software like PowerPoint. In regards to college performance with technology, 43 percent believe that their college needs more technology and only 59 percent think that their college is putting good use to the available technology on hand. However, nearly a third of respondents stated that their instructor often needs help getting classroom technology to work correctly.

Mike Flacy
By day, I'm the content and social media manager for High-Def Digest, Steve's Digicams and The CheckOut on Ben's Bargains…
Meta has a bold new strategy for VR
A concept image of someone playing a game in virtual reality.

Talk of the metaverse has waned in recent months, but Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg shook things up with an Instagram post that could have a significant impact on the development of the best VR headsets and accelerate the pace of the metaverse.

The big news is that Meta will open-source the mixed-reality operating system it developed for the Quest 3 and earlier Quest VR headsets to expand the ecosystem to new partners.

Read more
How to choose an external hard drive
Samsung T5 SSD review

When it comes to learning how to choose an external hard drive, you need to consider what you want to do with the drive, how fast you need to be able to access the data on it, and how much you have to store on it. There are external hard drives with plenty of physical protection against the elements, external SSDs that give you super-fast data transfer, and huge external hard drives that are better for long-term backups. The best external drives often tick most of those boxes.

If it's not obvious what kind of external hard drive you need, or you need something that can do a little of everything, here are some more in-depth tips on how to choose an external drive.

Read more
How to change mouse DPI on Windows and Mac
An individual using a gaming mouse.

You can change your mouse DPI, or its sensitivity, pretty quickly in both Windows and macOS -- and many top gaming mice can do it with a simple press of a button. This can be a great way to boost accuracy in some games, to make you more productive at work, or just to give you greater control and accuracy of your mouse pointer.

Whatever your reason, though, here's how to change your mouse DPI.

Read more