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Archive for the ‘Mac Users’ Category

Can’t connect through Bluetooth?

Posted October 15th, 2009 by melissa

If you are using the Mac version of Interact 1.3.1 or 1.3.2 and are having difficulties connecting through Bluetooth, you may need to revert to the prior version of Interact 1.2.  Apple recently released a Bluetooth update that is causing interference with the Bluetooth connection in the latest eBeam software.  Luidia is working on a fix that should be available next month.  In the meantime, you can connect via Bluetooth with an older version of the software or if you want to continue using the latest software (Interact 1.3.2), connect your eBeam directly to your computer with the USB cable.  First you must perform a clean uninstall of any eBeam software on your Mac.

1.) Remove all currently installed eBeam software including the eBeam Interact and eBeam Capture software.  Remove the icons from your dock as well.

2.) Delete any efi, ebeam, and luidia entries in the plist in your user account under the Library/Preferences folder.

3.) Logoff of your user account and logon in the main administrative account.  Under your hard drive, go to System/Library/Extensions folder and delete the USBeBeam.kext file.

4.) Delete all the eBeam Capture/ eBeam Interact/ Install eBeam Capture/ Install eBeam Interact entries found in the hard drive under the Library/Receipts folder.

5.) Empty the Trash folder after removing the files and reboot your Mac.

If you want to connect using Bluetooth, download the Interact 1.2 software  here.  This is an older release so it should detect the BT connection without any problems.

If you want to use the latest software and connect through USB, download the Interact 1.3.2 software here.

After installing the software, you will need to repair your eBeam with the Bluetooth.

Keynote Toolbar

Posted October 6th, 2009 by melissa

Along with the PowerPoint toolbar, the Interact 1.3.1 software for Mac has an integrated Keynote toolbar.  During a Keynote presentation, the eBeam toolbar (shaped as a wheel) allows you to annotate over your Keynote slides and save your annotations to Scrapbook.  Before opening a Keynote presentation with eBeam Interact, you must first set a few Keynote preferences.

From within Keynote, select Preferences from the Keynote menu.  From the General Preferences dialog box, select Slideshow.  Set the following two preferences:

  • If available, select Allow Exposé, Dashboard and others to use screen.
  • Select show pointer when the mouse moves.

You are now ready to begin using your Keynote Toolbar with eBeam!

Firmware Update

Posted September 22nd, 2009 by melissa

For all existing eBeam Edge users, you can now use the whiteboard feature as well as the projection feature.  To do so, you must first update your eBeam Edge receiver with the latest firmware version 6.00.5.  To update your firmware, click here.  The Edge receiver must be connected to your computer via USB cable to update the firmware.  The firmware must be updated before you can use your dry-erase marker sleeves with the Capture software.  All Edge units purchased after September 2009 will ship with the latest firmware.

Mac Software Update – Interact 1.2

Posted July 6th, 2009 by melissa

At the end of May, a software update for Mac was released for eBeam Projection users. The new Interact 1.2 for Mac OS X (10.3 or higher) has several features that Mac eBeam users have been asking for! Three of these new features include image based objects, an updated image gallery, and the PowerPoint/ Keynote Toolbar!

Every image that is imported into Scrapbook is now an image based object. Click once on your image with the pointer located on the Scrapbook Wheel and handles will appear allowing you to enlarge, minimize or rotate your image. When using the camera to capture an image or a selected area of an image from a website, the snapshot that is imported into Scrapbook is now able to be manipulated and positioned on the page as you desire.

Have you been utilizing your eBeam Image Gallery? In Scrapbook, click on the blue butterfly icon on the right hand side of the menu bar. The Image Gallery holds educational images to dress up your Scrapbook lessons. Download the latest release and you will notice your gallery has expanded! Some of these images include a Periodic Table, alphabet chart, U.S. currency and math tools.

The long-awaited PowerPoint Toolbar for Mac is here! Click on the PowerPoint icon located on the Desktop Toolbar, open an existing PowerPoint or Keynote presentation and begin annotating right on top of your presentation. Markings can be saved, emailed or shared. Tip: Make sure to choose “save as” when saving your annotated PowerPoint presentation so not as to erase your original. Interact 1.2 for Mac is integrated with Microsoft PowerPoint 2004 and 2008, as well as Keynote 2004 and 2008.

To download eBeam Interact 1.2 for Mac, go to Download Software

The End of the Overhead Projector

Posted January 7th, 2009 by melissa

Clean hands are not the only thing Jeff Caswell, a 7th grade math teacher at Arlington Middle School, has gained from using the eBeam.  Caswell’s class which began with a calculator, paper and pencil, has since evolved into an interactive teaching environment where he incorporates a MacBook, projector, the eBeam, videos and the internet into his daily regimen.  Caswell calls the eBeam “the end of the overhead projector.”  Caswell uses the eBeam stylus to create lessons in a Word document and then captures it into scrapbook with the camera.  Caswell loves using the different marker colors available on the scrabook wheel.  “I incorporate colors as much as possible as an extra advantage (to the students).”  He shows me a slide where the fractions are written in red, the decimals in green, and the percentages in orange.  Caswell remembers last year leaving school every day with a rainbow of colors on his hand from marking on the transparencies.

Caswell is enthusiastic to show me a lesson on the Mexican peso crisis.  He begins highlighting key information in the word problems using the eBeam. Caswell looks for real life examples to teach his seventh graders how to analyze data, understand a graph, and work with percents.  “The eBeam opens up so many opportunities,” replies Caswell.  At the end of each class, Caswell posts the notes on his school website. He likes to teach his students responsibility; if they miss a class there are no excuses.

Caswell said the biggest challenge he faces in the classroom is motivating the children. “If I lose the kids, I can get them back with the eBeam.”  Caswell recalls a recent lesson on where the eBeam’s spontaneity allowed him to bring in an image of a pizza from the internet and discuss pizza toppings as it relates to possible outcomes.   “I take a lesson and turn it into a show,” says Caswell.  Just last month, Caswell added the Wacom Graphire 6×8 Bluetooth Tablet to his instruction which lets him teach from anywhere in the classroom.

Caswell’s advice for the new eBeam user:”start simple with a warmup at the beginning of the class.” Warmups at the start of each day, also known as bell work and early birds, are a great way to introduce the eBeam technology into the classroom.

When I mention an update for the eBeam Interact software for Mac is coming soon, Caswell shakes his head as if he can’t believe more features are on the way.  Looks like it is just the beginning of many more interactive shows for Jeff Caswell’s classroom.