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Blackboard and WebCT merge

Acidangl writes "Blackboard and WebCT, leading providers of enterprise software and services to the education industry have announced plans to merge." From the article: "Under terms of the agreement, Blackboard will acquire WebCT in a cash transaction for $180 million, which values the offer at approximately $154 million, net of WebCT's August 31, 2005 cash balance of $26 million. The ultimate value of the offer will vary depending on WebCT's cash balance at closing."

277 comments

  1. Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    No, wait, the other thing - tedious.

  2. Wow by zegebbers · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Given how many institutions use one of these or both, this will have a big impact on choice. Some of the horror stories that I've heard about webct admin aren't good. On the other hand, there was the Georgia Tech student who found the vulnerability in Blackboard.

    Hopefully someone can provide some sort of competition to this company.

    1. Re:Wow by rovingeyes · · Score: 4, Informative

      Yup I'm privy to some of those horror stories, even though I'm just a backup sysadmin for Blackboard. No wonder universities got together for an alternate. It's not ready for primetime but if Bb doesn't get its act together I wouldn't be surprised to see Sakai gain momentum.

    2. Re:Wow by b17bmbr · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I used WebCT last year for an online class. I really didn't like it. Perhaps it is because I have been doing web development for years, I found the whole interface and page creation process totally distracting and useless. I also didn't like its test and quiz creation features. My district was part of a statewide testing program and we have settled on WebCT but I'd rather give teachers a choice or some more freedom. WebCT forced things to be a certain way far too much for my tastes. I imagine for someone with no experience designing web pages, then maybe it'll be helpful. But, it's just too confusing to create links, topics, etc. Overall I'd give it a C-. But then again, I was a little jaded. Also, the kids didn't like it too much either. They had trouble with some of the features and it was confusig for them.

      --
      My problem? I was perfectly gruntled, until some numbnuts came by and dissed me.
    3. Re:Wow by LoadStar · · Score: 4, Informative

      To clarify: the vulnerability that the Georgia Tech student found was in the Blackboard Commerce Suite, not the Academic Suite.

      The Commerce Suite was a product line purchased from AT&T several years ago, and is mostly seperate from the Academic Suite. This merger mostly affects the Academic Suite.

    4. Re:Wow by mkiwi · · Score: 1

      My university uses WebCT extensively, especially for its physics 221 and 222 classes. Most of my instructors use it as a place to post grades and notes rather than using it as a teaching tool, though. I'm not surprised there is consolidation in this area, I do not know about BB, but WebCT is NOT a very good teaching tool. For online Math classes, my school uses yet another system called MapleTA.

    5. Re:Wow by malcomvetter · · Score: 1


      I'd like to see Snap Grades develop the other side of their educational information system experience. They've got the grades portion down in a web interface that is very google/gmail-esque. Now, if they can just create the classroom portion fully integrated ...

    6. Re:Wow by kat11v · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Horror stories happen everywhere and having known someone who worked at WebCT tech support, I can tell you that a significant portion of them start with the sys admin working for the university. No, this is not meant to be a troll on sys admins, there are some very smart and competent people out there. But you can't help but giggle when you hear of one guy who hot-swapped the network cards and then was puzzled as to why the server went down, oracle crashed and students couldn't connect. I suspect what happens is that some of the smaller universities don't have the budget to hire people with a lot of experience and so you end up having someone on the job that doesn't always know what they're doing but trying to learn it as they go along.

      My personal experience with the product interface is mixed. Older versions were not too bad, then newer ones got worse and the very latest one (Vista) is supposed to be much better. So it totally depends on which university you go to and which version they happen to be using at the time.

      Incidentally, while Blackboard is a publicly traded company, WebCT is not so concerning the stock options owned by employees and owners, rumours have it that there will be a cash out rather than a stock swap. Will be interesting to see how it goes.

    7. Re:Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unfortunately, the two suites are not as separate as the public has been led to believe, particularly with the increasing integration of credentials accross them. Virgil's exposure of Blackboards physical access faults has profound implications to the security of the two suites combined. It's old, clunky, and suffering from initial architecture design choices and heavy hardware integration.

      WebCT is also no better, but at least it is all software so some things could be fixed given decent amounts of time and money. But with them merging, it would give even less incentive to fix hardware related issues to keep merger costs down.

    8. Re:Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Have you ever noticed that on multiple choice questions with checkboxes for multiple answers on WebCT, you can mark all the answers and get the question 100% correct. If it says pick 2 and you're debating about 3 of them, mark all 3 and you'll get it right

    9. Re:Wow by psm321 · · Score: 1

      What Sakai needs is a UI expert or even just a user as a UI advisor. That project has the absolute worst interface ever. They switched to a version of it at U of Michigan from an in-house product that had a MUCH better interface, and everybody hates it. I even suggested some UI changes at a meeting of theirs (U of M is big in the development of it so they were having a meeting there) and the response I got was essentially "yeah a lot of people have complained about that but that's the way we think it should be so we're not going to change it"

    10. Re:Wow by Goalie_Ca · · Score: 1, Insightful

      No, webct blows donkeys for bus fare. I've used it for my classes @ SFU. I really really hate it. Such a pain in the ass to navigate not to mention the shitty implementation.

      --

      ----
      Go canucks, habs, and sens!
    11. Re:Wow by lahvak · · Score: 1

      I used both WebCT and Blackboard quite extensively, and I absolutely hated CebCT's user interface. Blackboard is slightly better. The only thing I prefer about WebCT is that you can work around it by creating content (including quiz questions and quizzes) offline and upload them to the system. I haven't figure out how to do that with Blackboard yet.

      --
      AccountKiller
    12. Re:Wow by Seumas · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Seems like a waste of money to me. What's wrong with a teacher just using a blackboard and chalk or a whiteboard and pens? They work when the power is out. They don't require a staff to maintain and upgrade. They just work. I guess I don't get it. Why fix something that isn't broke (or dependant on so many things that can break)?

    13. Re:Wow by noda132 · · Score: 1

      Hopefully someone can provide some sort of competition to this company.

      Yes, somebody please do! It'd take about 2 hours for a PHP newbie to create a better system than WebCT.

    14. Re:Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Moodle (http://www.moodle.org/) is a great alternative to Blackboard and has almost all of the same features with new functionality being added daily. We are currently migrating all our Blackboard courses to Moodle since we have found Blackboard 6 to be buggy and unstable. We have 10 machines dedicated to providing Blackboard to our students and it can barely handle 500 concurrent connections without some part of it crashing. Moodle easily handles 50 or more on 1/10 of what we throw at blackboard.

      A.

    15. Re:Wow by jtwJGuevara · · Score: 1

      It's somewhat difficult to use a blackboard/whiteboard with writing utensils when your students are 30+ years old, living hundreds of miles away, and have full time jobs. Part of the attractiveness of an online learning management system is the asynchronous instruction it can enable to students enrolled in distance education.

    16. Re:Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's like saying "Why use e-mail I can just call them or send them a letter." These systems have their purpose.

    17. Re:Wow by Seumas · · Score: 1

      I might be confused then. Are we talking about "whiteboard" systems similar to WebEX? Or are we talking about "whiteboard systems" such as the actual physical whiteboards that a lot of schools have in the classroom where the whiteboard is illuminated and accepts input both from a stylus-like tool and a computer?

      Since we were mentioning educational institutions (real ones, not those crappy "Pheonix Online" things), I presumed we were talking about actually attending classes. Or does MIT and Brown University offer study-from-home masters degrees now?

    18. Re:Wow by jtwJGuevara · · Score: 1
      In the context of this conversation, whiteboard was meant to be a physical whiteboard with a dry erase marker mounted at the front of a class.

      I don't know if Ivy League schools or top class technical schools are offering work-from-home degrees, but I know alot of state supported public institutions are. For example, see the UNC systems listing of all remote learning and fully online programs: http://www.northcarolina.edu/content.php/aa/distan ce/index.htm

  3. Blackboard... by Frank+Battaglia · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    ...is lame

  4. Possible rising costs by ZerocarboN · · Score: 3, Interesting

    IS this the big break for Moodle?

    1. Re:Possible rising costs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I love moodle, I really do... I use it to run a small, private, online school and it runs very nicely. The BIG break for moodle however, will be when they clean up the code so that it runs faster and uses less cpu.

              Right now, one user simply clicking onto the main page, with no other connections to apache, is pushing an httpd process out to 21 meg of ram, and 19% of cpu. When someone actually does something, or when a whole class is connected, things go downhill a bit. No one's getting connection time outs that I know of, but I do worry about it.

          I'm using the best hardware I can afford to run it but I still have to put the database server on another machine or it just gets too laggy to be useful. I can't afford to just throw more hardware at it, so my little school remains private with very limited enrollment.

              I'm grateful that moodle is free and I love the software, but I'd love it even more if I could open my little school to the public and let anyone who wants to enroll, enroll.(grins)

      P.S. - My school is free, no teachers are paid and no students are charged, so extra hardware really is _not_ an option... I just have to hope they'll optimize it a bit :)

    2. Re:Possible rising costs by xMjollnir · · Score: 1

      There has been a lot of performance work done in moodle since about 1.4.5 plus. You should search a bit on the moodle.org forums for hints about server optimisation.

    3. Re:Possible rising costs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Install TurckMMCache, if you haven't already. It makes a world of difference when running a large PHP application like Moodle.

    4. Re:Possible rising costs by iamlucky13 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Always hard to say. My school just went through a really long discussion and evaluation period on the three (Blackboard, WebCT, and Moodle) and determined that a TCO analysis slightly favored Moodle (open source), but the ultimate decision was to go with Blackboard based on the fact half the faculty who wanted course management software were already familiar with it due to their trial licenses. If things stagnate while they figure out how best to accomplish their merger and promote their products, then things look good for Moodle. From the discussion we had, I think had Blackboard been in a position of change like this, we very well may have gone with Moodle. It honestly came down to, "Well, Blackboard costs a little bit more, but the nursing faculty already know how to use it." Institutions in a similar position could now might say, "Our experience with Blackboard has been good, but who knows what their next move will be."

    5. Re:Possible rising costs by timmyd · · Score: 1

      I'm writing a paper for a technical writing class at ga tech where I want to evaluate those three solutions (and some other ones). Do you perhaps have a link or some more info about how your school evaluated blackboard, webct, and moodle?

    6. Re:Possible rising costs by blackburnrovers · · Score: 1

      ...and don't forget that Moodle is free. When giving costs to administrators, you must include the competitors. So yes, Moodle will require some upgraded hardware. WebCT/Blackboard will require licensing/maintenance and hardware. With Moodle, get the hardware and pay the maintenance to someone who can make it fly and who can customize it for you. Will still be considerably less than the other two.

      I can assure you that WebCT and Blackboard will crawl on your old hardware as well. Invest in Moodle and you will see improved results. Crawling courseware is a sure way to get cranky users.

    7. Re:Possible rising costs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Moooooooooooooodle! Mooooooooodle!

    8. Re:Possible rising costs by xMjollnir · · Score: 1

      The NZVLE (New Zealand Virtual Learning Environment) project (http://eduforge.org/projects/nzvle) has some good documentation about foss learning management systems here: http://eduforge.org/docman/?group_id=7. Includes a technical evaluation of three FOSS Learning Management Systems (Moodle was eventually selected), Moodle at enterprise level presentation slides, migrating from proprietry to Moodle, etc.

    9. Re:Possible rising costs by iamlucky13 · · Score: 1

      Last time we discussed it (I was a student representative on the committee until I graduated), I was told the details of the decision was privileged, but the general form of the evaluation was as follows. It was a weighted analysis with different importance assigned to each consideration. The criteria I remember were features, cost of ownership (including license, hardware, and administration personel), familiarity, expandability, and compatibility with our overall strategic plan. There were several other options evaluated, but those three were the only ones I remember and only one of the forgotten ones scored comparably (actually beating webct, if I remember correctly). Obviously, Moodle earns high marks for expandability and cost, although the latter was affected significantly by the expectation that it would require more administration/development labor.

    10. Re:Possible rising costs by PsiPsiStar · · Score: 1

      Are you running Moodle on a Windows or Linux server?

      --

      ___
      It's the end of my comment as I know it and I feel fine.
    11. Re:Possible rising costs by nietsch · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Your comments about unclean code ring so true with me. I tried once to extend a module of it. What should have been one day worth of coding turned into several week cutting and cleaning up a gigantic php file of >3000 lines, just to get an understanding what was really happening. When I finally submitted my code, the maintainer just threw away my code because because he favoured a slightly different approach of cutting it up. If I wanted my extension included i was welcome to do it all again. When an upgrade to the next stable version broke all my quizzes i gave up.

      I think the problem with moodle/php is that is is rather easy for a non-programmer to change some functionality. But none of these enthousiasts are experienced programmers, and I get the impression that most of the people working at Martin Dougiamas' (the original author) company all have a pedagogy/education background. The end result is that the code will never be clean.
      That will probably not make it any worse than BB or WebCT, a proprietary licence is by no means a guarantee for clean code, esp if you cannot see the code yourself.

      PS: if you want visitors form /. , why don't you make an account here and put the url in your .sig?

      --
      This space is intentionally staring blankly at you
    12. Re:Possible rising costs by CyricZ · · Score: 1

      That's more a problem with PHP in general. PHP is, like it or not, lousy. Many apps developed with it are by far the shittiest pieces of software I've ever seen. Very little of PHP encourages good programming practices, and as such many inexperienced users are able to create monstrosities with it.

      Considering its recent security problems, I'd be very weary to use PHP, or any software written in PHP, for any serious task.

      --
      Cyric Zndovzny at your service.
    13. Re:Possible rising costs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm actually using Moodle 1.5.2. I agree that there have been many enhancements, and I enjoy and appreciate all of them. I've done what optimiziations I've been able to, which brings me to the current situation I described originally.

    14. Re:Possible rising costs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sorry, but did you actually read my comment?

      I own the 'school'. There are no administrators to give costs to. It comes out of my own purse.

      I also nowhere suggested that I would be switching to any other system. My comment was that the "Big Break" for Moodle will not be in the consolidation of it's competition but in becoming a cleaner and more efficient codebase. I still believe this. It's good software, but is far too bulky and slow. Using that much ram and cpu to let a user (not even logged in) see the welcome screen, is simply not good design.

      There is no option for "Investing in Moodle", because there is no money. The teachers aren't paid. The students aren't charged. Donations aren't accepted. The hardware is at the limit of what I can afford to put into it.

      Will I keep using Moodle? Yes. Will I continue to recommend it to others? Yes. Does that change any of my points here or in my original comment? No.

      Before assuring people of anything, perhaps you should actually read their comments? I can assure you, that's the only way your responses will be relevant.

    15. Re:Possible rising costs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      FreeBSD, actually. The database server is located on a Fedora Core 4 machine, though.

    16. Re:Possible rising costs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I do want to re-emphasize that I quite like Moodle. I just think they need to take one whole release cycle to do nothing but clean, re-organize, and optimize their code base. The reason I'm using it instead of writing my own, is because I like it.

      PS: I don't want visitors from slashdot to my school. My school is private, with a limited enrollment and, as I've mentioned, the problems with resource usage and lagging are bad enough now. People not involved with the school getting onto the website and just poking around would make it all the worse and offer no benefit to the school while making things harder on both the students and the teachers.

    17. Re:Possible rising costs by MichaelPenne · · Score: 1
      Odd, when we were demoing Moodle we ran it on a G3 450 with 100 or so students, and it ran fine. That was 1.1-1.2, it's gotten much faster since then.

      Something may be problematic with your setup, though you probably couldn't even install WebCT or Blackboard on your system if it has trouble running Moodle:-).

      Have you tried asking for help on the Moodle forums (such as 'servers and performance')? There are some folks running a few hundred students on $300 eMachines plugged into their office ethernet port, they can probably help you get your server running better.

  5. Schooooooools....out.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ....due to patent violations.

    Ahh, the wonders of the software industry!

  6. I look forward to.. by SillySnake · · Score: 5, Insightful
    the merging of two terrible web based systems for an even worse web based one.

    Seriously, it's often so hard to find where a professor has put the file you're tyring to find. With so many different places to put things, it just gets students confused. Not to mention all the trouble one has to go to in order to find a specific post, send an e-mail, etc..

    I don't mean to troll, but both systems could stand to see quite a bit of tweaking.

    1. Re:I look forward to.. by Therlin · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That's not a problem with the tool, but with poor instructional design. Just because a person knows how to teach face to face, it does not mean that they can create a good online course.

    2. Re:I look forward to.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The reason that all the chuckle heads on this board hate webct and blackboard is because we the readers of Slashdot generally know how to make web pages. Profs on the other hand are total technotards. Some get it yeah but man most of them they are just fumbling in the dark. These systems allows very smart people (University Professors) who have alot to say err , who's kidding they really don't have all that much to say. The reason that they suck is that professors suck. That's it. Nothing else really to it.

    3. Re:I look forward to.. by timbo234 · · Score: 1

      When I was a student at UTS in Sydney they used blackboard for discussion boards for some subjects. Just getting to the discussion boards was a nightmare - the interface was so complicated and badly laid out it would give you a headache just trying to work out where anything was. It looked like a classic example of building one big monolithic super-application that tries to tie together functions better done by several seperate apps running off the same database.

      A year or 2 a ago I heard that WebCT had caused a major disaster at the Uni of Wollongong. The UOW was/is completely reliant on that system - all lecture notes, assignments, grades etc. are recorded and made available using webct. One of my friends who goes there told me that their whole WebCT system had crashed and that no-one could access anything. Apparently in the end some people had to be given estimated marks on some subjects/assessments because they couldn't get the data back. I also heard that the 'database' that WebCT ran off at the time was a multi-gigabyte CSV file!! Not sure how true that is.

      --
      Pre-canned Evolution Links for all those Slashdot holy wars.
    4. Re:I look forward to.. by MacGod · · Score: 1

      My undergrad used WebCT and I actually liked it. I wish all my profs had used it. I know it's far from perfect, and the interface is a little plain, but for a basic course website, it was great. Lecture notes, old exams, whatever, were generally easy to find. Some classes had message boards, others had online quizzes.

      It was much more easily discoverable than the alternative, which was every professor having their own site, often stored in different locations on different web servers, with different layouts. Having everything look similar, in one location, was by far the better choice.

      --
      "Reality is merely an illusion, albeit a very persistent one " -Albert Einstein
    5. Re:I look forward to.. by SillySnake · · Score: 1

      I should have clarified some I suppose.. Certainly it was better than each professor with his/her own website, and much better than nothing online at all.. Was just saying that the layout could use some modification in the area of simplicity :)

  7. Classroom software is CRUCIAL these days by Work+Account · · Score: 3, Informative

    Having web sites for each class using Blackboard(tm) or WebCT(tm) which are now one and the same thanks to this merger means that students are always able to check out their course website multiple times a day while they're procrasting by browsing websites such as this one (Slashdot) or Fark.

    I have used this software for 5 courses online and it was great for getting the most recent problem sets and scanned in PDFs etc.

    It's just so much easier to have professors use a simple web form to post things rather than worry about building an entirely different course web page for each class they teach.

    Also, it's hush-hush in academia, but professors just aren't good with computers aside from those with MS.

    --

    If you "get" pointers add me as a friend (116)!
    1. Re:Classroom software is CRUCIAL these days by B3ryllium · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Multiple Sclerosis is a serious disease, why do you feel a need to single out the rare and emotionally strong teachers who try to work through the disease? ;-)

    2. Re:Classroom software is CRUCIAL these days by kebes · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I agree that having this kind of software is a must for any modern university. It's easier for the students, and in many cases easier for administrators. I've used WebCT from the teacher end, and it is certainly a savings in time and money to be able to post material online, which students can print (or not) depending on what suits them. The savings in paper are significant, and most importantly we can implement fixes to lab manuals (for instance) immediately, instead of students using a lab manual that was printed in the summer and whose errors cannot be fixed until next semester.

      Overall these kinds of software help alot. That having been said, WebCT is not a very well designed piece of software, and frankly it is frustrating to use at times (for students and teachers alike). I certainly hope this merger means that they will develop a new piece of software, that pulls together the best parts of both packages. As is, WebCT is useable, but it has to become much much better if universities are going to modernize their teaching.

      I'm definately interested in learning more about Moodle (which other posters have mentioned), since it's possible it may evolve to fill the needs of institutes faster than commercial offerings.

    3. Re:Classroom software is CRUCIAL these days by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As someone who has used Blackboard both as a student and as a teaching assistant, I absolutely hate it. The interface is horrible --- if I click on an annoucement about a new homework assignment, for example, I have to go back to the main page, then select the course, and then click on "Assignments" to actually see the assignment that was announced --- you cannot go directly. Viewing grades, accessing discussion boards, and other such tasks are similarly inconvenient, not to mention that there are all kinds of links to useless features all over the place.

      From the teaching perspective, it took me a long time to figure out how to actually enter grades in Blackboard; further, when entering grades, it doesn't seem that there is any way to sort by student ID. No, it's not a big issue, but it is an annoyance.

      These are just a few of the many things that annoy me about Blackboard. It's a good idea in theory, but the people who wrote it really need to learn how to make useable websites. Most course websites I've seen that have not used Blackboard have had all of their information layed out in a clean, convenient way.

    4. Re:Classroom software is CRUCIAL these days by khromatikos · · Score: 0

      All my computer science professors seem to manage with computers just fine.

    5. Re:Classroom software is CRUCIAL these days by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While these systems are great for communicating assignment specs and providing forums, they aggravate the issue of copyright assignment for content a professor creates. With some of the professors, there is a fear that, someday, universities will require posting of course material to the content management systems. Currently, in some universities (such as the one these professors I spoke to), any material posted becomes property of the university. For professors that wish to publish textbooks, or change universities, it is often best limit use of management systems such as Blackboard to announcements, assignment specs, and class forums. Posting course material isn't a completely postive action for everyone (esp. when the uni gains rights of material on its servers). Hopefully, though, most schools will be different from the one university I recently attended so posting courseware remains a positive action for all sides.

    6. Re:Classroom software is CRUCIAL these days by phlako66 · · Score: 2, Informative

      actually http://moodle.org/ is the place to go if you want more info on Moodle. Moodle is a phenomenal Open Source casestudy. It has grown logarithmically over the past couple of years to accomodate almost every feature available from the proprietary offerings and more. The user/developer community of Moodle is one of the strongest of any open source project I have ever seen. Moodle is also designed from a particular pedagogical standpoint, which is I think one of it's strenghts and is incredibly simple for users (particularly teachers) to understand and use. brent. ---- eXe: http://exelearning.org/ ----

    7. Re:Classroom software is CRUCIAL these days by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Woot. Given both of their track records ill be able to check out my classmates coursework too!

      lol.

      fuckblackboard.com is now owned by Blackboard itself.

    8. Re:Classroom software is CRUCIAL these days by kurtmckee · · Score: 1

      While there is utility in having a system that integrates all classes into a single interface, these are poorly designed products. It's the same problem that plagues the medical software industry: there's no real innovation in the product, and poor developer competence. (I work at my school's health service, in addition to being a student).

      Several professors refuse to use Blackboard because the information that they'd like to have in the open is bottled up in a proprietary, locked-down system. They'd like to have the PDFs and code/slide downloads available for the world, but they can't using Blackboard.

      Further, Blackboard doesn't support feeds, my prefered method to get to all of the information I regularly check. If you ignore the terrible technology, though, it's got an awful interface. I wish they would hire some monkeys to do a redesign - the monkeys could probably whip together something more friendly than their developers have.

    9. Re:Classroom software is CRUCIAL these days by rob_squared · · Score: 1

      Blackboard is painful for teachers, it must be, because nobody but the engineering and CS professors would use it. I mean, I hope they make it usable for non-tech people like english teachers. I know my life would have been easier if I could go there to get resources. And please, choose one method for delivering documents to the professor, and stick with it.

      --
      I don't get it.
    10. Re:Classroom software is CRUCIAL these days by kurtmckee · · Score: 2, Insightful

      professors just aren't good with computers

      No kidding. I once had a professor come into class on the first day (he's about 60 years old) with a PDF he had generated on a Unix box. He used SSH to copy the file to the Windows desktop, double-clicked on it, and then stood there for a while. Eventually he left the room, returning with another professor.

      This second professor used the mouse to show the first how to use the arrow buttons above and below the scrollbar. "I just usually click on these arrows to show more of the file."

    11. Re:Classroom software is CRUCIAL these days by erlenic · · Score: 1

      I have yet to see a professor CREATE their own material. They all use Powerpoint slides and assignments straight out of the book.

    12. Re:Classroom software is CRUCIAL these days by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Umm... who do you think writes those books?

      Hint: look at the "about the author" section.

      Just because your professors don't write, doesn't mean that none of them do.

  8. Being that its Slashdot and all... by Deslok · · Score: 5, Informative
    Why pay for their service when you can go open source for free?

    Moodle

    The school I'm at made the shift and hasn't looked back(well, aside from the technophobe teachers who grumble about learning something new a few years after they started to grasp the old system).

    1. Re:Being that its Slashdot and all... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget about MS Class Server! ;-)

      http://www.microsoft.com/Education/ClassServer.msp x

    2. Re:Being that its Slashdot and all... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      Teachers don't care if it is free.

      AFAIK WebCT and Blackboard made inroads with the text book publishers. The publishers provide WebCT and Blackboard course materials with the teacher's edition. I do know that A LOT of faculty are not very technical and love to have someone else do the work for them.

      The publishers provide the books, test banks, and the online course materials. It makes you wonder why we need teachers sometimes.

      In all seriousness: you can tell which teachers are worth their salt and which ones are just enjoying tenure(sp?). The good ones use all of the stuff provided as enhancements to already great classes. The others are just lazy asses.

    3. Re:Being that its Slashdot and all... by Xugumad · · Score: 1

      Another one:

      http://sourceforge.net/projects/mms-mle/

      Although in it's current state, MMS is a little too tied into the University of St. Andrews' systems and methods. Does make good example code though, and we'd love to hear from anyone interested in working to adapt it for use in their university. Key features:

      Ties directly into central data storage, to make importing students and assigning them to the correct modules essentially a single click operation.
      Provides coursework upload, grading, per student file space, enrollment, tutorial and lecture attendance monitoring.
      Works well with both MySQL and Oracle.

    4. Re:Being that its Slashdot and all... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Teachers don't care if it is free.


      Actually, you're wrong on 2 counts. One, I'm a teacher and I care if our CMS is free. Two, I KNOW at least one set of school administrators and school board members care if the CMS is free (my school's).
    5. Re:Being that its Slashdot and all... by prismbreak · · Score: 1
      There are many other options indeed... unfortunately open source doesn't work for everyone. Setting up Moodle with e-commerce is next to impossible.

      My software company Savvica provides a compelling alternative. For individual users, check out Nuvvo. E-commerce is very gracefully integrated in both.

      I'd love to hear what everyone thinks of our solutions, if you have a moment.

  9. Blast from the past ... by TapestryDude · · Score: 3, Informative
    This is interesting to me, because I worked at WebCT before I left to become an independent consultant.

    What's more interesting is that WebCT's Vista was out pacing Blackboard's product in terms of features (at least when I left in October 2003). Blackboard was, I believe, an ASP.NET product, WebCT's Vista is J2EE (and written in Struts and JSP, not Tapestry, alas).

    My guess is that one of the two product lines will be phased out. This could become an interesting competative case for .Net and J2EE.

    Sorry, JEE. Cause Sun can't stand to stick with just one name for anything.

    --
    Howard M. Lewis Ship -- Independent J2EE / Open-Source Java Consultant -- Creator, Apache Tapestry and HiveMind
    1. Re:Blast from the past ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Wrong - Blackboard uses Apache/Tomcat/ModPerl on either Windows,Linux or Solaris. They did apparently make a full port to .NET as MS have a shareholding but it's never been released...

    2. Re:Blast from the past ... by FiSHNuTZ · · Score: 1

      Hey Howard! ;)

      -Jason
      WebCT QA

    3. Re:Blast from the past ... by schapman · · Score: 1

      Hey fishboy... *stab to the grill*

      --
      Wouldnt you like to be a pepper too?
    4. Re:Blast from the past ... by jsupersample · · Score: 0

      Blackboard is JSP all the way. It was originally written entirely in perl and there is still quite a bit of that code left as well. No asp.net here.

      I really have to give kudos to BB for their wide range of platform support. Both versions of their system (Basic Learning Edition and the Community Portal System) can be run on Solaris, Linux, or Windows. Blackboard is not perfect, but WebCT can only benefit from merging with a product that is both easier to administer and easier for most professors to use. All this and a plethora of open source plugins available via Blackboard Building Blocks.

    5. Re:Blast from the past ... by musakko · · Score: 1
      > Blackboard was, I believe, an ASP.NET product, WebCT's Vista is J2EE (and written in Struts and JSP, not Tapestry, alas).

      No, Blackboard is J2EE as well.

    6. Re:Blast from the past ... by stuntpope · · Score: 1

      Blackboard was, I believe, an ASP.NET product

      Blackboard started out in Perl and moved to Java. I interviewed with them back in the Perl days.

  10. It all makes sense by hansreiser · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Given how few schools are privately owned, I can see why consolidation might be necessary in the "enterprise software for the education industry" market.

    Or did I miss something?

    1. Re:It all makes sense by R.Mo_Robert · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Maybe my area isn't the norm, but we have a lot more private colleges here (midwest, specifically Iowa) than public ones (or were you thinking only of high schools--do some of them really use these systems?). My school made the switch to Moodle this year after years of using Blackboard--although they *did* come up with their own name for it because they probably couldn't keep a straight face telling their students to go to Moodle (their name is Kaite, spelled with various degrees of capitalization and periods or with a lack thereof, for "Knowledge and Technology in Education" and a play on the fact that this is Luther College and Luther's wife was named Katie).

      Granted, I was never here when they used Blackboard, but I don't think I've heard many complaints about Moodle.

      --
      R.Mo
  11. Yes, but by complexmath · · Score: 0

    WebCT is worse. At the very least, I hope this merger will eliminate WebCT from the field.

    1. Re:Yes, but by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed. WebCT is 10x worse.

    2. Re:Yes, but by dgatwood · · Score: 4, Interesting
      My initial thought was "Wow, so two of the worst pieces of software I've ever had the misfortune of dealing with will now be under one roof. Maybe this will spark some competition that's actually worth using."

      Then I realized that if software this bad is the state of the art in the field, it probably means that there's no real money to be made in the field, so no one will bother. *sigh*

      Open Source Opportunity, I suppose.

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    3. Re:Yes, but by Mystic+Pixel · · Score: 1

      WebCT is an interface abomination. Yet, as I type this, I have it bookmarked next to Blackboard in my browser toolbar, as my engineering classes all use blackboard and the humanities classes use WebCT for some godforsaken reason. Probably because they're humanities classes -- at least the engineers have the good sense to use blackboard. So yeah, here's to hoping this wipes WebCT off the map.

    4. Re:Yes, but by phlako66 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I'd say that this merger is directly in response to an LMS market that is increasingly becoming dominated by excellent Open Source offerings, ie. Moodle and Sakai. There's becoming fewer and fewer reasons to pay the high prices for licensing either of these products, especially as the Open Source ones are so good and getting better and better. The developers community for Moodle for example is phenomenal.

    5. Re:Yes, but by yurnotsoeviltwin · · Score: 1

      My engineering class uses WebCT, unfortunately. It's bad. Really bad. Slow, ugly, and not nearly as easy to use as it should be. Then again, it's better than just sticking with paper, like all my other classes do.

    6. Re:Yes, but by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then I realized that if software this bad is the state of the art in the field, it probably means that there's no real money to be made in the field, so no one will bother

      My university (University of Missouri-Columbia) pays $5,000 for EACH class that uses BB. This university has quite an extensive selection of online and distance ed classes that use this software. The list grows every semester at this and other schools. I'd say there's some money to be made.

    7. Re:Yes, but by AP23 · · Score: 1

      There are several open source efforts with different degrees of maturity.
      I have been looking into Claroline http://www.claroline.net/ and it seems to be fairly good for my requirements.

    8. Re:Yes, but by Alex+Zepeda · · Score: 2

      You think Blackboard is bad? Yikes.

      Blackboard, for all intents and purposes, gets the job done for the teachers that use it. Yoou should see some of the alternatives.

      One teacher (Ms. Cheung, a PhD candiate at Cal), has created a Yahoo! *e-mail* account for the purpose of sending files to it. She then gave every student in the class the login and password, so we can retreive files from it.

      Another teacher (Human Sexualities prof., Sociology department) required that students buy a $16 remote (requiring a $12.50/semester subscription) to track our comings and goings, take our asinine multiple choice tests on, etc. Said remote works with einstruction.com to allow us to check our grade and such. It's got perhaps the most craptastic interface I've ever seen. It fucking WISHES it was as good as WebCT or Blackboard (and yes, I've used both).

      Now, said teacher (*cough*Carrington*cough*) could have used Blackboard to distribute course materials, like most of the other Uni professors I have do. He could use the craptastic eInstruction interface. No, he wants to be different. He sends out e-mails to the 450+ students in the class. ::bangs head on desk::

      That wouldn't be so evil (nah.. it would.. who fucking uses e-mail to distribute files to a large audience!?), if it worked reliably. Instead he wasted a good 5 minutes of each class for the first month of instruction dealing with administrivia. He sunk so far as to announce that GMail was blackholing his e-mail. His solution? Encourage students to pay for a Hotmail or Yahoo! account. Hell, even the school's e-mail server is flagging his messages as "possibly spam". ...

      Blackboard, I can live with that.

      --
      alex

      --
      The revolution will be mocked
    9. Re:Yes, but by cgicw · · Score: 1

      No, it's directly in response to Microsoft wanting to name their new OS Vista. Microsoft's been in alliance with Blackboard since 2001 *hint hint*. The OS alternatives have nothing to do with this because they don't even compare at this point in time. Moodle's developer community may be "phenomenal" but developers are not support and developers are not QA. The last thing on a University's mind should be jumping on board an OS alternative that has no support past what their adminstrators can google.

  12. Less innovation. by davecrusoe · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What this will ensure is less innovation in the online schooling front; competition generally drives innovation. Unfortunately, these two packages are so very cumbersome that innovation is unlikely; the pedagogical framework that once strengthened the software(s) is kaput.

    It will be a challenge, but Moodle stands a great chance to out-think the combined WebCT/Blackboard group. What they MUST do effectively is reach out to districts - THIS is where the combined merger will find its force, in its broad reach.
    ~d

    1. Re:Less innovation. by anaradad · · Score: 1

      Actually, Desire2Learn is really pushing both Blackboard and WebCT, and competition from D2L might have pushed them to merge. I'm at the University of Iowa, which recently adopted D2L (calling it ICON - Iowa Courses Online - http://icon.uiowa.edu/ ) and is dropping both WebCT and Blackboard. Desire2Learn, WebCT and Blackboard were all finalists, and it was pretty clear from the comparison documents published by UI that D2L won primarily because of usability issues.

    2. Re:Less innovation. by kurtmckee · · Score: 1

      competition generally drives innovation

      Educational software such as Blackboard is too specialized to have much competition in the first place. It's because of this specialization that they can get away with terrible technology and interfaces. It solves a problem that a small population faces, and even though the solution is ugly and painful, institutions snap it up, desperate for anything.

      Here's to Moodle taking all of Blackboard's marketshare.

  13. Great... by sH4RD · · Score: 5, Interesting

    So when does either company provide technology which can actually scale to user load, is actually powered by modern technology, and generally isn't a Piece of Shit (tm)?

    I've used my fair share of Blackboard, and I've had some great experiences:
    1) The ability to embed Flash and JavaScript into free response questions. 2) The time Blackboard's database started crashing, which caused it to take at least 5 tries to login. 3) And better yet, the 1 in 2 odds that when you finally logged it, it would be as someone else as the database switched your tokens. 4) Best of all, the 1 in 20 odds that person would be a teacher or professor.

    And I've heard WebCT isn't much better...

    --
    WASTE - The Secure P2P
    1. Re:Great... by Stalin · · Score: 1

      It isn't. WebCT is steaming pile of dog shit.

    2. Re:Great... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are too kind.

    3. Re:Great... by sazim · · Score: 1

      And if not tweaked and fiddled, the page response times are dismal: between 5 seconds and 12 seconds PER click. That is really, really frustrating if you are trying to set up a course using it. Bb is such a monolith. So I wrote my own system from scratch, which does only one thing (quizzes) and it does it well. As a lecturer, I gave up on Bb after wrestling with it for a week.

      --
      "Those who don't believe in magic will never find it." - Roald Dahl
    4. Re:Great... by jsupersample · · Score: 0

      It sounds like your institution is running on underpowered hardware. We have a beautiful Sun Cluster which just this semester went to 4 nodes. Even the first week of a semester with record enrollment there was barely a blink. With fail over, users don't even know when an entire node goes down. Like any heavily loaded system it is about a redundancy.

    5. Re:Great... by sH4RD · · Score: 1

      We're using Blackboard's officially provided hardware. We rent it. One would hope it's not underpowered.

      --
      WASTE - The Secure P2P
    6. Re:Great... by bgibby9 · · Score: 1

      I've only worked with WebCT as a developer so from my perspective WebCT is crap! I ended up writing a smaller version of it just because I hated it so much!

      --
      http://www.gibby.net.au
    7. Re:Great... by Soul-Burn666 · · Score: 1

      WebCT is horrible.
      Where I study (the Technion), we used to use a system called Webcourse which was developed by a student in the CS faculty and was free to use for the institute (the institute gets it for free other than tiny prices for mentainance and the student uses it as a testbed).
      It's an excellent system, very simple interfaces for both the user and the TAs/Professors (my brother is a TA and can attest to that).
      After some power games (the Technion didn't want to pay the humble mentainance fee etc etc), they decided to throw the system away and install WebCT (which cost a hell lot more).
      That didn't work well. The CS students made an uproar in the end, Webcourse was used only for CS courses and WebCT was used for the rest.
      Now it seems like they finally realized what a piece of crap WebCT is, for both the students and the TAs/Professors. My brother TRIED to use to it to set up a page, but it was way too complex so he decided to make a page of his own, with nice CSS and HTML compliance.

      Apparantly, they have now moved to a different system, but I have already finished my degree.

      So it seems the students' uproar was heard. Everyone here, other than the administration agreed that WebCT sucks.

      --
      ^_^
    8. Re:Great... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Re the problem of logging in as someone else: supposedly that was fixed with the newest version.

      We have the newest version and still experience it, but we are on a load-balanced configuration. So my question is are you on an older version or load-balanced or did they never really fix it? Thanks.

  14. Re:Don't read this post if you're under 18 by kerplunk1984 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    thats some fucked up shit right here dude.

  15. Blackboard doesn't know web standards by sockonafish · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Until just a few months ago when an upgrade was rolled out at my university, the only web browsers officially supported on OS X were Internet Explorer and Netscape Navigator. Tiger, which had been out for a few months at the time, was not officially supported.

    Blackboard is also a fan of frames, ugliness, and odd behaviors. It's impossible to enroll a system administrator in a course, no matter what. They can only self-enroll.

    1. Re:Blackboard doesn't know web standards by suwain_2 · · Score: 2, Informative

      the only web browsers officially supported on OS X were Internet Explorer and Netscape Navigator

      It's lame to not support Safari (or Tiger at all), but I think the key word is official. I use Blackboard from Opera. I used to use it through Firefox. It works just as well in them as it does in IE.

      Blackboard is also a fan of frames, ugliness, and odd behaviors.

      Agreed. It's ugly.

      It's impossible to enroll a system administrator in a course, no matter what. They can only self-enroll.
      While this is probably a bug, how often does this actually cause problems? Here, at least, administrators are administrators, not students. You say that they can only self-enroll, so they can enroll. Maybe it'd be nice if they could be enrolled, but I'm not seeing how this is a big issue. (I could easily be missing something, though.)

      --
      ________________________________________________
      suwain_2 :: quality slashdot p
    2. Re:Blackboard doesn't know web standards by LnxAddct · · Score: 1

      Then WebCT will fit right in with Blackboard because it is a piece of shit as well. WebCT actually went above and beyond its own horrible self a few months ago releasing WebCT Vista and my University upgraded (no relation to Windows Vista).
      Regards,
      Steve

    3. Re:Blackboard doesn't know web standards by Quattro+Vezina · · Score: 1

      Blackboard is also a fan of frames, ugliness, and odd behaviors.

      Sounds like WebCT. WebCT features abuse of both frames and JavaScript. Especially JavaScript. Every single link on WebCT puts its destination in JS onClick events instead of putting the destination in href="" where it belongs. Therefore, it's impossible to, say, copy and paste a link into a different tab, or anything else.

      It also tends to randomly break Firefox. As in completely randomly. Sometimes it works, sometimes not.

      --
      I support the Center for Consumer Freedom
    4. Re:Blackboard doesn't know web standards by Grfxho · · Score: 1

      Blackboard uses the same java link trick. The whole system has been nothing but a nightmare for us. We're the medical school for a multi-campus state university. The main campus uses WebCT and there's been quite an inter-school war about which is better. Now they'll be able to share the same craptastic product.

      --
      Greatness. It comes in many forms, sometimes it comes in the form of sacrifice - that's the loneliest form.
    5. Re:Blackboard doesn't know web standards by Jakeypants · · Score: 1

      It doesn't work in Opera either.

    6. Re:Blackboard doesn't know web standards by itazurakko · · Score: 1

      Chicago, by any chance?

      I'm from Urbana, we spent something like a year having a "bake off" to decide which of these products to use (we'd been using the non-enterprise versions of BOTH products, plus a homegrown thing). Verdict? They both suck (albeit in slightly different ways), but we gotta pick one. So we did.

      Now when there are issues, we get complaints from the users, hey, why did you buy this if it has such problems? Well, we put out an RFP, with a requirement that the system run in Unix, and we got two replies, so there ya have it. So much for "the market will provide the perfect thing."

      Personally I wish Illinois had more of a DIY philosophy like in the old days, but they've changed - it's about buying commercial stuff now. Still, the old quiz program I worked on had so much more in the way of quizzing (questions having students filling in Karnaugh maps and timing diagrams in engineering, for instance) than any of the commercial tools have, and so it's frustrating. Maybe we can work it as a plug in at some point.

      Although, I hear the library school is doing some things with Sakai that sound interesting.

      Anyway I'm one of the people that writes "glue" marrying this thing to all the various campus information, login, rosters, etc, and let's just say the back end has issues as well...

    7. Re:Blackboard doesn't know web standards by DoktorMel · · Score: 1

      Blackboard has supported Safari for well over 2 years. It's entirely possible that your institution was following a less than active upgrade path.

      --
      -- The Sage does nothing, and nothing is left undone. --Lao Tzu
    8. Re:Blackboard doesn't know web standards by Grfxho · · Score: 1

      In New England, actually. There's certainly some panic here about the merger as we currently have -several- open issues/tickets with Blackboard. The general fear is that the resolution of any of them will be delayed because they'll be too focused on the merger and subsequent re-org.

      --
      Greatness. It comes in many forms, sometimes it comes in the form of sacrifice - that's the loneliest form.
  16. oh great by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    instead of two systems that suck, well have one system that sucks twice as much.

  17. "Holes" can happen anywhere, even on an OS by Work+Account · · Score: 1, Troll

    By "OS" I mean simply file/directory permissions.

    In college I was looking through shared files/directories of a computer science professor because he had code snippets from lab and problem sets etc. shared for us to access.

    Unfortunately I was able to get into a directory that students should not have and suddenly I saw files that looked like solutions to the current programming project.

    I didn't look but I think 80% of other students would have.

    I phoned him immediately at his home number, and he was annoyed at the dinnertime call and I think wondering how/why I found it, but was glad in the end because he could appropriately "chmod 600" the directory instead of "666" or "777" like it was set.

    My whole point is that security holes and such can often just be human error and not the actual software.

    This nothing new; don't take it out on Blackboard.

    --

    If you "get" pointers add me as a friend (116)!
  18. On Blackboard by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Aftering being pretty much forced to use Blackboard for a year, it is possibly the most vile and wretched thing I have EVER had to use --would be nice if it worked properly too.

  19. Something Better? by ThinkComp · · Score: 1

    I've been thinking of getting into this market, given that everyone seems to hate all of the incumbents. I created a portal system for use at Harvard, but the administatraion there did all they could to shut it down, even though students seemed to like it.

    If anyone has any ideas for how I can convert these 10,000 lines of code into something that a school might actually want to buy, let me know! I have not been able to figure it out so far, though given the competition, you'd think it wouldn't be that hard...

    1. Re:Something Better? by Monoman · · Score: 1

      If anyone has any ideas for how I can convert these 10,000 lines of code into something that a school might actually want to buy, let me know! I have not been able to figure it out so far, though given the competition, you'd think it wouldn't be that hard...

      You have been to /. before, right?

      1. Give away the product
      2. Open the source
      3. Sell support and services

      which brings us to the obligatory
      4. ???
      5. Profit!

      --
      Keep the Classic Slashdot.
    2. Re:Something Better? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've had the exact same problem. I created a working, efficient, system that professors, lab managers, and safety managers loved. A year ago, after already buying it and using it successfully for a year, the administration dictated that they need to buy some half-million dollar software that had been trialed several places unsuccessfully and has an interface that is universally hated. All this was done for politics and probably money (but I can't prove it). To this day, my software is still being used while they attempt to get the new system working. The few departments they have working hasn't updated their database in forever and is considered to be completely invalid. Who do I need to bribe to get my product adopted?
      Unfortuately, I will have to post this anonymously. So that some stupid company doesn't come after me. Like BlackBoard did to that Georgia Tech student.

  20. In other words by pHatidic · · Score: 1

    Moodle, far better than either of the above, is still free. As someone whose university uses Blackboard, I can honestly say it is the worst piece of commercial software I have ever used. Worse than Windows XP. Worse than windows ME. Worse than realplayer. Worse than CometCursor.

    1. Re:In other words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One problem with moodle, it doesn't scale ... MySQL crashes and burns under a reasonable load when complex queries are the order of the day, if they're possible at all.

    2. Re:In other words by wk633 · · Score: 1

      People have gotten older versions (1.4) to work with MS SQL. Someone is working on Oracle, and a couple of us are/were working on getting moodle 1.5 to work with MS SQL.

      I don't know if the scale problem is the DB, or the moodle code- but you're not tied to MySQL.

    3. Re:In other words by xMjollnir · · Score: 1

      Moodle scales extremely well in newer versions, we're running it very happily on postgres with upwards of 40,000 users. It comes out of the box with postgres support as well, no port needed.

    4. Re:In other words by chrislunter · · Score: 0

      Worse than CometCursor? What could be worse than CometCursor? Well, I suppose that Celine Dion might be worse than CometCursor...

    5. Re:In other words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Moodle is NOT FREE! the total cost of ownership when you look into it is alot greater! think about all the training. Cost of servers...backup....staffing...expertise to keep the bloody thing running! your talking ALOT!

      A hosted managed solution is the way forward!

  21. It wasn't security issues by complexmath · · Score: 1

    that inspired my comment. The usability of both of these products is quite poor. It just happens that I find Blackboard slightly less annoying to use than WebCT.

    1. Re:It wasn't security issues by erlenic · · Score: 1

      I can't imagine Blackboard being slightly less annoying that ANYTHING! I'd rather go through constant paper-cuts under my tongue.

    2. Re:It wasn't security issues by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amen, brother. I'm a BlackBoard administrator. We host our own server. It's a fucking nightmare.

  22. Easy... by complexmath · · Score: 1

    Charge 10 times more for it than it's worth and force them to buy a new copy once a year ;-)

    1. Re:Easy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As much as that might sound funny it's true. Your even better off giving grants out. Charge 10x what you want to and then give grants so it's only 3x as expensive.

  23. Students are doomed..... by OneByteOff · · Score: 1

    With the importance of education that is relevant to the real world I wish there was software which would integrate outside resources (google, wikipedia, etc.) and provide students with easily accessible information via a search engine as well as relevant to the classroom. I can't remember how many times in my CS classes the professor would post an assignment up with little or no instruction "Create a database program in C that stores and retrieves values with a non-graphical user interface", would have been awesome to have access to some helpfull functions, code snippets etc. Perhaps with this merger they can toss more resources towards R&D and focus on what students need and not just create a way for college prof's to be lazy....

    1. Re:Students are doomed..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Use your initiative. Or failing that, try Google.

      And remind me never to employ you.

    2. Re:Students are doomed..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are supposed to be paying attention in Class. Or are you one of those students that never shows up except to hand in assignments or write exams?

    3. Re:Students are doomed..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It would appear that you are an M$ student...

      gg: in konqueror let's you search for anything :-)

      wp: in konqueror let's you search for anything :-)

      You really do need to investigate alternatives to M$ junk like Internet Explorer...

  24. From a UI Standpoint by mplex · · Score: 2, Insightful


    Usability on the products are horrible. We use WebCT where I work and we can't even get the professors to use it for the most basic tasks. The UI is horrible, and even after teachers are trained and start using it, they end up going back to a simple web page. We can't even get 15% of classes to use the system. I know CS professors who hate it and personally I do too. It is good for giving quizzes and posting things on the calendar, but beyond that NO ONE USES IT. I agree that the concept could be extremely powerful, but the implementation is just bad. And please don't tell me how professors are just too lazy to learn the system, they just don't have the time to waste troubleshooting a confusing system. In the end, it's usually easier to break out frontpage and post assignments and test dates on a simple website. IMHO, these products have a long ways to go before the time they are supposed to save is realized.

    1. Re:From a UI Standpoint by Manchot · · Score: 1

      Yeah, we use WebCT, too, and it's terrible. The most annoying things are that (a) they want you to not block pop-ups and (b) it opens up a Java Virtual Machine, though there is no good reason for them to do so. A site that should take a few seconds to visit ends up taking a full minute.

    2. Re:From a UI Standpoint by spydink · · Score: 1

      The most widely implemented version of WebCT (4.x) is pretty bad. The latest version (6.x) is much better. We're currently implementing it where I am.

      --
      Always be sincere, whether you mean it or not.
    3. Re:From a UI Standpoint by the+idoru · · Score: 1

      Amen. My university uses Blackboard, and often after posting a file to the class's Blackboard site, I have to tell the students, "Go to your Blackboard site, click this link on the left, then that link down at the bottom, now this link, and the file's here." Announcements that you post are not ordered in any meaningful way, menu categories are vague if not confusing. Menus can be customised, but that means the teacher has to put in lots of effort to tweak the page, and that there is no consistency between pages for students in multiple classes. Blackboard gets the job done, but the usability is crap and you're constantly fighting it to make it as non-confusing as possible.

    4. Re:From a UI Standpoint by pfaffman · · Score: 1

      Moodle's UI is much cleaner and intuitive. I give my students (future K-12 teachers) less than 30 minutes of training and they're able to make it go. The fact that it's OSS means that, unlike Blackboard or WebCT, they'll be able to use it when they get to whereve they're working.

      Just to make sure, I got the University to host Moodles for anyone in the state.

  25. HAHA by tardigrades · · Score: 0

    How funny. I just got done with a test on blackboard... like two minutes ago. Stupid thing quit out on me on question 14 of 50. 28% sucks pretty hard.

    --
    really bored? My blog
  26. Too many mergers. Where's the control? by syousef · · Score: 0, Troll

    This is getting ridiculous. I used both Blackboard and WebCT as an Astronomy Masters student a couple of years ago. Both were awful and I never did understand why anyone paid money for these solutions when this is one area where open source can easily provide the basic functionality, but...

    What's with all the mergers lately? In 3D graphics, Autodesk aquired Discreet (3ds Max, GMax) a while back, and then Alias (Maya) days ago. They then promptly killed the free GMax product which a lot of game developers (both paid and hobby) use. There are also now very few competing products in the 3D market to compete. (Killing GMax is actually quite big news but I haven't been able to get an article on this accepted on /. - These days if it doesn't contain the company names Google or Apple, good luck...)

    I thought there was suppose to be some kind of government control to prevent monopolies from springing up. I guess they're too busy with the "war on terrorism" and prosecuting music/movie/software "pirates" to actually police these laws...and there's no money in it!

    --
    These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
  27. two bad choices by commodoresloat · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I have some insight on this topic as a university professor. I've used both systems, and I was on the Academic Technology Committee when it was advising the CTO and CIO on purchasing decisions for such systems. We wound up paying for both. As you say, they both suck, and I'm sure whatever unholy combination is produced will suck even worse. At the time - 1999 or 2000 I believe - "open source" was something my colleagues on the committee had heard of but didn't know anything about, and the CTO and CIO were computer-savvy but looked on open source with disdain (this made sense as they were constantly wined and dined by folks who represent closed source companies looking for big deals). I was teaching summers at UCLA at the time and had the opportunity to use ClassWeb, an open source alternative to such tools. My experience with the tool was exemplary; I thought it was easy to use, it fulfilled the necessary functions and was not needlessly confusing for students. It was also free. Best of all, the developer worked at UCLA so when there were features I wanted I was able to ask him for them and they were available in days. It was truly a classic case of the superiority of the open source model working well. For much less the price we paid for Blackboard and CT, which all the students complain about, we could have hired programmers to handle coding issues on classweb and had an open source solution that we could fine tune at will. But when I made the suggestion, the feeling around the table (particularly from the CTO and CIO) was, shut up hippie.... Today I don't use any such tools -- I still code my course web pages by hand using html and have some very primitive open source discussion board technology for discussions. I think it's necessary to have courses online these days for various reasons, but the tools offered by these companies are needlessly ornate and confusing. The open source model makes sense in general but especially in public university settings where costs are a relevant factor and where the freedom to tinker with code brings with it additional educational benefits.

    1. Re:two bad choices by haggisman · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Having endured 3 major releases of Campus Edition of WebCT, this poor sysadmin just about barfed when I saw this news today. Just when were migrating from CE 4 to CE 6, THIS happens.

      The old WebCT was cobbled together at UBC on some rainy FRiday afternoons. Their old architecture doesnt scale anymore, an indexed flat-file system causes all kinds of performance problems, backup and restore problems, and more often than not leaves you running out of inodes on your file systems. Campus Edition 6 was rewritten from the ground up as a J2EE application using an Oracle backend. Now we have a 505Mb download instead of 90Mb.

      I sure hope whatever happens to BB/WebCT results in a slimmer easier to administer product. Good luck to them both.

    2. Re:two bad choices by i.r.id10t · · Score: 1

      Heh. I suffered thru the implementation of the *beta* WebCT 1.x for NT, had 12 classes up and running in a few weeks. Went up to 2.x on NT/2k, then 3.x with Linux, still on 4.1 CE. We were planning on going to CE 6 next fall, but now.... who knows?

      --
      Don't blame me, I voted for Kodos
    3. Re:two bad choices by eTherapist4Faculty · · Score: 1


      Does it feel more like a "merger"
      or an "erasure" of WebCT into Blackboard?

      Something like this perhaps:

      www.ByeWebCT.com


      I'm guessing WebCT's lasting mark will soon mostly be chalk dust left behind on the blackboard ... briefly ... until that too is erased. And sooner than that, many of those who have been using WebCT will shop for and find a new eToolBox that hasn't yet been bought by Blackboard.

      tom

  28. I hope this gets rid of WebCT by Quattro+Vezina · · Score: 2, Informative

    WebCT is an utterly horrible piece of crap.

    My school uses WebCT for all classes, so I have to deal with it daily (coincidentally, I'm posting this while sitting in one of my more WebCT-intensive classes). WebCT has the single worst interface of anything I have ever used in my life.

    I really, really hope that this results in WebCT getting replaced globally.

    --
    I support the Center for Consumer Freedom
    1. Re:I hope this gets rid of WebCT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      WebCT is meant to be used as a tool. If your prof doesnt utilize appropriately, he or she is crap, not the software.

    2. Re:I hope this gets rid of WebCT by DeXtroMe · · Score: 1

      Thank you, kind sir for not using 'ironically' in place of 'coincidentally'. Pedantic slashdot nazis around the world salute you.

  29. It isn't the softwrae that bugs me by ageoffri · · Score: 2, Informative
    My school uses WebCT and it is ok. The real problem is the number of teachers I've had who have no clue how to use it. I'm taking an online Geography class this semester and the teacher hadn't cleared out posts from last a year ago! This confused some of the other students who missed the 2004 on the post dates. Another problem is my current teacher couldn't figure out how to remove a link in one of her assignments, so we had a good link to a html document and a bad link to a word doc.

    I've never had a problem with WebCT crashing and the one time I accidently closed my browser during a test, I logged back in and continued the test.

    --
    -- Slashdot, making the Left look conservative since 1997.
    1. Re:It isn't the softwrae that bugs me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I train faculty to use WebCT and believe me - they have no idea how to use the software. If the faculty member is saavy enough to learn the software (e.g. they have to know how to do basic web functions like upload and manage files etc.) then they can make superb online courses. The main problem I see is that professor X gets called up to teach a course online two weeks before classes start and they've never taught online before. One can't simply take their on-campus course format and port it over to WebCT/Blackboard/Whatever. New pedagogical rules have to be applied in order for online courses to be effective and interesting.

  30. in other news, by moosesocks · · Score: 5, Funny

    In related news, shares of WebCT were down $5 after news of the merger, although this is expected to rise by 20% at the end of the semester after the curve is applied.

    --
    -- If you try to fail and succeed, which have you done? - Uli's moose
  31. message board by tehwebguy · · Score: 1

    maybe they will merge with phpbb too.. the message board function on webct (at least the version my school, UCF, uses) is worthless and unintuative.

    most of the features on webct are excellent.

    --
    -- lol pwned
  32. Sakai by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Forget Moodle, the up-and-coming piece of course management software is Sakai. Open source. Developed by universities for universities. "The Sakai Project follows what is called the community source model, which is an extension to the already successful, economically feasible, open source movement forged by projects such as Apache, Linux, and Mozilla. Based on the goal of addressing the common and unique needs of multiple institutions. community source relies more on defined roles, responsibilities, and funded commitments by community members, than some open source development models." (More)

    1. Re:Sakai by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Too bad it doesn't, you know, actually work yet.

      Moodle works now. And well.

    2. Re:Sakai by b0fh · · Score: 1

      It works great!

      It's already in 2.0 release, and in our university it's used by all our students (9000+)
      DAILY!

      --
      -b0fh of apostols.org-
  33. Don't forget Sakai! by EvilMagnus · · Score: 2, Informative

    Moodle is only one of many!

    I am required to pimp the Sakai project, an open source collaboration between a bunch of schools, including UMich, Indiana, MIT, Stanford and Berkeley. The biggest production install is UMich, with around 100,000 students using it.

    --
    -EvilMagnus
  34. in house? by quest(answer)ion · · Score: 1

    i spent a semester at the university of auckland in new zealand, and their in house IT services included a web-based classroom management system called Cecil in the exact niche filled by Blackboard and webCT commercially here in the states. it was enormously popular at the UofA, and it seems to have been developed, managed, and serviced almost entirely in-house by the University. i used it myself for classes that semester, and have used Blackboard at my home university, and i thought Cecil was remarkably reliable in comparison, if a tad less intuitive.

    point is, while most schools are not likely to have the resources to do something like this so completely in house, many do have at least some in-house IT staff who would be able to administer a project like this. not only is in-house development a good alternative for schools that have the means, but it also might be a way for entrepeneurs (like the parent) to approach universities with their own systems. a system developed partially in-house is by default custom-built, and probably most useful and intuitive for users in that environment.

    business as usual on /.--open-source or proprietary non-commercial development looks like the way to go.

    --
    /. is what happens when geeks talk. get used to it.
  35. My problem with Backboard by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    My principle problem with blackboard isn't usability or UI issues (I agree it stinks but I can tolerate lousy UI). What grinds my gears is that Blackboard is used to EXCLUDE students from online course content! Maybe I'm old fashioned but I thought that the purpose of schools were to educate fools like me. Unless I'm registered for a class, I can't take a look at handouts or problem sets! How are we supposed to "try out" classes at the beginning of the quarter/semester/term? Not all of us can afford to register for 10-15 classes at the beginning of the term.

    As a result, some of us have resorted to posting course materials on "p2p" networks and we are aware that members of the administration are actively looking for us (with the goal of expelling/arresting the perpetrators). Ironic that we have to do this stuff to try to learn.

    1. Re:My problem with Backboard by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      What is this "try-out" of which you speak? You sign up for classes, you take them. Are you advocating some kind of "it's ok to eat the grapes 'cause i'm buying melons" philosophy?

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    2. Re:My problem with Backboard by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you advocating some kind of "it's ok to eat the grapes 'cause i'm buying melons" philosophy?

      That argument works for tangible goods, but a class lecture is intangible, like software. After the first copy is made, subsequent copies have no cost. If a class has been registered by the maximum number of people that can be safely seated in the lecture hall, what harm is it for a few more people to check out the problem sets? Worst case scenario, a few extra people learn something.

      Disturbing that RIAA and MPAA-like forces are now restricting the distribution of educational content.

    3. Re:My problem with Backboard by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um, that's not a problem with Blackboard. That's a "problem" with:

      a. Your institution, because it doesn't allow you to self-enrol in classes (yes, it can be done using BB) that you haven't PAID FOR;
      b. The professor involved, because they don't allow guest access (yes, it can be turned on! either for the whole course, or selected sections of it) for course materials you haven't PAID FOR;
      c. You, because you want to access course materials you haven't PAID FOR,
      d. All of the above.

      You get class handouts using p2p software? Why don't you make an appointment with the professor and actually talk to him/her about their class? Course Management Systems are not designed to be the dial-up-pizza equivalent of education.

    4. Re:My problem with Backboard by myc · · Score: 1

      Mod parent way up. As a newly minter asst. prof., my biggest gripe with Blackboard is the same as the parent post. I don't necessarily mind the lousy UI, it looks ugly but it gets the job done. From an instructor's point of view, it provides a reasonably simple interface to upload course documents and annoucements to students (very useful if you have a large class). But I could care less if students not registered in my course want to download course material (heck, I could care less about (and even encourage) students who want to audit my course). If I had the time, html skills, and funds for a separate server for my course materials, I'd do it in a heartbeat, but alas I lack all three.

      I wonder, if my willingness for non-enrolled students to freely obtain course material/audit is a function of being science (biology) faculty? do faculty in arts and letters/humanities have a bigger issue with this?

      --
      NO CARRIER
    5. Re:My problem with Backboard by canozmen · · Score: 1

      Exactly. When I have to decide which university to go to, which classes to take, etc.; I like browsing the offered courses to see a detailed sylabbus, past assigments, projects, etc.

  36. Other open source options by edremy · · Score: 1
    I set up Dokeos where I work. (Randolph-Macon Woman's College) We've been running it for three years now with few problems. Doesn't have every feature of BB or WebCT, but it's getting there feature-wise, it's free, the developer community is pretty responsive and it's *very* simple to modify. I've been able to hack in numerous little features and integrate with a half-dozen other campus systems with very little effort.

    Better known than Dokeos and Moodle in the US is the Sakai project This is a big collaboration between a bunch of research-1 schools (MIT, Stanford, Michigan, Indiana) with about $6 million in backing from the Mellon foundation. I might have used this in place of Dokeos if it existed when I installed it, but then again maybe not. It's a much more top-down piece of design as opposed to the very bottom up Dokeos and Moodle.

    I gave a talk at a conference over the summer about Open Source CMSs and the trends. BB/WebCT/Angel and the like should be very, very scared, at least for their core CMS products. There's been little real innovation in them in the past few years so the OS ones have a static target to shoot for and lots of schools are really, really sick of the companies backing them. Blackboard contacted the Sakai project heads about a collaboration- the response was "We've not interested in working with you." BB will survive by diversifying and moving to financial services- they sell a one-card system (doors, meals, vending machine, bookstore, etc) that is also a credit card, and they get a cut of every purchase. That's what is going to keep them alive, since BB the product itself is in trouble.

    --
    "Seven Deadly Sins? I thought it was a to-do list!"
  37. A student's thoughts by NeoSkandranon · · Score: 2, Insightful

    My university uses WebCT. It is a flaming piece of shit. I'm not sure if it's WebCT or just the entry/login portal, but I can't access webCT in anyhting other than IE because somehow cookies fail to set otherwise. It slows to a CRAWL under any kind of load. It's difficult to use, both for students and professors. The senior admin for my campus' network has basically admitted that the only reason we use it is because we're locked in for a time, and yes it does suck.

    Blackboard wasn't quite as bad (used it at a community colleg) The UI was sketchy but at least i can use it under firefox.

    --
    If you can't see the value in jet powered ants you should turn in your nerd card. - Dunbal (464142)
    1. Re:A student's thoughts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm a WebCT administrator for a college in Canada. I can tell you that WebCT works just fine with Firefox, because that's what I use to administrate it. The problem in your cookie problem definately lies in the university's portal.

      Not that I'm a WebCT apologist - I think it is terrible too, and I've been trying to convince my college to move to a fairly new (not open source) LCMS that originated out of the University of Waterloo in Ontario called Desire2Learn. It's pretty good, and much cheaper than the "enterprise" version of WebCT.

      The problem with Moodle is that it doesn't scale up very well. I've discussed it at conferences with some Canadian Universities that have run pilots and they've found that while it may be a solution for smaller institutions, a decent sized university would have trouble accomodating their entire student body.

      I could go on and on about all this, but I'll shut up here.

    2. Re:A student's thoughts by NeoSkandranon · · Score: 1

      Thanks for your comments. Being a lowly non-compsci student it's difficult for me to get in touch with anyone on campus in a position to give me a straight answer.

      The portal we use is labeled Sunguard SCT. ever had any experience with it?

      --
      If you can't see the value in jet powered ants you should turn in your nerd card. - Dunbal (464142)
  38. Open Source Options by yorktimsson · · Score: 2, Informative

    Several people have mentioned Moodle, a PHP-scripted system, but there is also Boddington, which is Java (no, I don't know whether it's J2EE). Oxford University has a Boddington instance that allows guest access. It's a totally different paradigm to the WebCT / Blackboard 'corse' one. Let's hope that both of these open source options grow and provide real competition for the single commercial product.

    1. Re:Open Source Options by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      I've been using a system developed at Michigan State University, LON-CAPA http://www.lon-capa.org/, for three years now. The software is open source, runs on linux servers, and it actually allows for free flow of information. I am free to make any of my course content freely available to anyone using LON-CAPA at any institution. Since all servers are interlinked, you simply access others' files on a virtual file system. I find it years ahead of WebCT and Desire2Learn (the system my campus has bought into) for writing homework problems involving equations and calculations. LON-CAPA was designed by engineers and scientists for engineering and science courses. Since they have no advertising budget, the only way to spread the word about LON-CAPA is by word of mouth. If you are a student of a teacher, support OSS, and think that information should be free, I suggest you check it out.

  39. Blackboard & WebCT: still a work in progress. by Foktip · · Score: 1

    Wait - they were seperate companies in the first place? My school uses a crazy combination of Blackboard and WebCT, which it just switched to. It doesnt work AT ALL... the interface is ridiculous, tedious, buggy, slow, completely backwards, and theres no help options. It took me 4 hours to figure out how to sign up for courses, and even then i "made a mistake" that required days worth of administrative stuff, and then had to wait 3 weeks to "gain access" enough to fix the problem.

    It seems as though the registrars have lost too much control over "registering" because of this program. Also, this thing seems to be imposing other unfair restrictions on students, such as insanely restricted registration periods, enorcing max class sizes (previously you could sign a form to get in anyway but this web system doesnt allow that), enforcing NO tolerance on overlapping classes (again, the previously used forms which required Prof signatures dont work), not allowing you to switch sections on core courses, not allowing "probationary" students to sign up for anything at all... etc. Blackboard and WebCT havent allowed enough control for ANYONE to do ANYTHING, and everything is STILL royally messed up after a month of classes. Those at the bottom of the administration scheme (who actually do the work) dont have access enough to make the system fit with our schools policies.

    Apart from that, none of the teachers even use the programs "advanced" features, such as mail, test dates, assignment categories, etc. They all have their own websites, which they like because they can actually format them however they like.

    I seriously hope theyre working hard on improving it.

  40. 2 wrongs make a right? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe they'll learn from each other and combine forces to produce an e-learning platform that's both functional and reliable...

    OR...

    It'll just suck much worse than it already does. We have a Blackboard setup that involves 5 web servers, 7 app servers and a HUGE Oracle DB over Sun Hardware with 24 cpu's and about 36GB of RAM (yes, those numbers are right) and we still got crashes and periods when the service just wasn't available for 3 to 5 days straight.

    Of course, we have a massive user base but a product that costs that much by itself + consulting + hardware + more consulting should get better results IMHO.

    The combination of perl and bad jsp/servlets really hurts performance. And of course we had to switch off all search options and the student tracking module. Those are permanently turned off for everyone.

    Their support is also awful by the way. And the Building Blocks API doesn't work half the time due to undocumented features or functions that just don't return any values.

    WebCT was better in functionality but we tested it using their hosted solution and response times for the server where terrible.

    So what's gonna happen now? At least I hope it doesn't get worse.

    First the hurricanes... now this... it's armmaggedon!!

    1. Re:2 wrongs make a right? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      we still got crashes and periods when the service just wasn't available for 3 to 5 days straight.

      WebCT is no better.

  41. corporate culture - whose is better? by arachnia · · Score: 2, Interesting

    We have been dealing with WebCT (the company) for quite some time now from the application and system administration standpoint. Our experience with the company is that the very few technical people they have are decent people who are pretty knowledgable. However, it is just about impossible to interface with them directly because nearly everything needs to pass through a minimum of one layer of management.

    Dealing with WebCT's management, unlike their technical folks, is an exercise in frustration. The dominant behaviors I have noted from their management are:
    - they are nothing but apologists (mouthpieces) for their company,
    - they spend a great deal of their time protecting their technical people from customers (arguably, this is normally a good function but not when you have an LMS that is non-functional and campus is screaming at you), and
    - they spend a great deal of time in CYA-based activities, i.e., they continually blame the customer for problems with the application in order to shirk responsibility for the poor performance of the product.

    I'd like to hear from people who have dealt with the Blackboard management team. What is their corporate culture like? Do you think they will be more responsive to their customers than WebCT is?

    I'm hoping that most of WebCT's current management team gets pink slips once the merger is complete.

    1. Re:corporate culture - whose is better? by Therlin · · Score: 1

      BB's tech support went through a lot of changes. It went from decent, to poor to pretty good. Your school is assigned a support manager. You build a relationship with that person over time. This person is not simply a problem taker, but it is actually a knowledgeable technical troubleshooter who will do his or her best to get your issue fixed asap. Our rep is a freaking unix wiz and when he is in our system troubleshooting some people and he finds something totally unrelated that could be enhanced, he asks for permission and goes for it.

      Not everything is perfect of course, we have had a trouble ticket open for over a year and they have yet to figure out the cause of the bug (although they are pretty close to fixing it now). They also get swamped at the beginning of every semester so responses that normally take less than 24 hours can take up to 3 days.

      But overall we are pretty happy with their current support structure.

      As for enhancement requests, they seem to be fairly receptive. I've even received emails from some of their developers asking for more information because they liked the idea.

    2. Re:corporate culture - whose is better? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I'd like to hear from people who have dealt with the Blackboard management team.

      WebCT's support is(was) better. And yes that is faint praise.

      Do you think they will be more responsive to their customers than WebCT is?

      I wouldn't bet on it. Esp. when they figure out what to cut to pay Credit Suise back for the loan they took out to buy WebCT.

    3. Re:corporate culture - whose is better? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can't speak to BB's support, but I echo everything you said about WebCT. I support it at a small liberal arts college and loathe it. When I can finally connect to their senior techs, the are generally pretty good, but it can take as long as 72 hours to get a response, which just does not cut it when students and faculty are locked out of their course materials. This merger provides me with the justification for getting us off of webct as soon as our contract runs out, so while I am dreading the migration work that will come of this, I'm ecstatic that this has happened.

    4. Re:corporate culture - whose is better? by itazurakko · · Score: 1

      I second your observations. Once I get to work with the programmers (I'm a programmer myself, writing glue) things are fine, but it's hard to GET to that stage. Every meeting, they send sales people/managers. I feel like saying, hey, you know? We bought it already. You can quit the sales pitch!

    5. Re:corporate culture - whose is better? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      are you sure the problems weren't yours to begin with? also why don't you spend money for elevated support? you get what you pay for you know.

    6. Re:corporate culture - whose is better? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We have been dealing with WebCT (the company) for quite some time now from the application and system administration standpoint. Our experience with the company is that the very few technical people they have are decent people who are pretty knowledgable. However, it is just about impossible to interface with them directly because nearly everything needs to pass through a minimum of one layer of management.

      -REALLY? WE'VE NOT HAD THIS EXPERIENCE UNLESS IT'S A CRITICAL PROBLEM IN WHICH YOU ACTUALLY DO WANT MANAGEMENT INVOLVED TO ENSURE THINGS GET DONE AND TRANSITIONED BETWEEN TECHS'S SHIFTS ETC.

      Dealing with WebCT's management, unlike their technical folks, is an exercise in frustration. The dominant behaviors I have noted from their management are:
      - they are nothing but apologists (mouthpieces) for their company,

      WHAT COMPANY MANAGEMENT ISN'T?????

      - they spend a great deal of their time protecting their technical people from customers (arguably, this is normally a good function but not when you have an LMS that is non-functional and campus is screaming at you), and

      -IF WE'RE DOWN WE WANT THEIR MANAGEMENT AWARE. YES IT SUCKS WE'RE DOWN BUT WE WANT TO HAVE SENIOR PEOPLE ON IT.

      - they spend a great deal of time in CYA-based activities, i.e., they continually blame the customer for problems with the application in order to shirk responsibility for the poor performance of the product.

      -WE'VE HAD VERY FRUSTRATING HW PROBS THAT THE END USER AND NON TECH PEOPLE DON'T CARE ABOUT AND BLAME THE APP. WHEN A PROBLEM IS STRICTLY WEBCT'S THEY USUALLY OWN UP TO IT WE'VE FOUND.

      I'd like to hear from people who have dealt with the Blackboard management team. What is their corporate culture like? Do you think they will be more responsive to their customers than WebCT is?

      I'm hoping that most of WebCT's current management team gets pink slips once the merger is complete.

      -THAT'S JUST PLAIN MEAN :)

  42. Cisco Learning by handmedowns · · Score: 1

    I work for Cisco Learning Institute (the company that handles the Cisco Networking Academy online stuff) and they have a pretty decent suite of software. They're just not very well known. If you're looking to move away from blackboard / webct because of this or for whatever reason, checkout www.ciscolearning.org

    --
    The road between democracy and tyranny is paved with secrecy in the name of security.
  43. how much worse can their software get? by pdschmid · · Score: 1

    both products are pretty bad compared to applications available in other fields. There was a time when Blackboard e.g. didn't support the moving of files, and I think WebCT did neither. That was way back then...in 2003. Maybe this will lead to better software from a new competitor...

  44. Open source LMS by tigerquoll · · Score: 1

    There are heaps of open source LMS projects. Some like Moodle seem to have legs. Others are in various stages of development. There is a list on the LMS talk site.

  45. pssst... WebCT's not publicly traded by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    yes i realize you're telling a joke, but WebCT is a private company.

  46. God damned Blackboard.... by realityfighter · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This is a wide tangent, but...

    I am SO sick of professors who use Blackboard/WebCT as a way to get around ordering textbooks or reading packets. I've had professors scan in hundreds of pages from a book, put them on a web in PDF form (two pages to a screen, so you had to read sideways), and expect us to print them out and bring them to class as though they were textbooks. This was done in the name of "saving us money," but really it was just a cop-out for professors who were too lazy to plan their courses ahead of time, or didn't want to get caught in the act of mass copyright infringement. Most of the students spent far more on printer ink than they would have at the copy shop or the bookstore, not to mention the wonderful feeling you get when your ink runs out in the middle of printing your term paper.

    If anyone reading this is teaching a class next semester and is even remotely thinking about digitizing their textbook, DON'T DO IT. It only stretches the students' time and resources thinner, and wastes reams of paper - info packets printed at home are lucky to survive an entire semester without getting water damaged, torn apart, or lost in a pile of identical papers from other classes. A good rule of thumb is, if it's more than ten pages, put it in the reading packet. If you absolutely have to put something big online, make sure the PDF is readable on the screen, and don't expect the students to lug stacks of printer paper to class with them. The Blackboard/WebCT isn't there to make the students do your work for you.

    --
    A strain of paranoid prevention can be worse than the disease, whate'er the intention.
    1. Re:God damned Blackboard.... by cloudmaster · · Score: 1

      Never mind of course that simply putting the materials from a classroom-based course on a web page is not an effective way to teach an online course. I wish I could slap each and every educator who just put their notes in Blackboard, failed to participate in most any online forum with the students, and then is surprised when results are poor and/or students say that they won't take an online course again.

      I worked for five years at a company that created real online content from classroom-based courses. These people were educators with real onine educational experience. It's amazing how well online learning can be done if just a little time is put into thining about how to differently approach things in this forum. It's also amazing, to me, how little University/College/School instructors care...

    2. Re:God damned Blackboard.... by DeXtroMe · · Score: 1

      I honestly can't say I agree with you here. If even one of my professors had done this I would've saved over $100 on crap textbooks we don't use in class anyway. One teacher told us that when last year he tried to not require textbooks he received a quick reprimand from the dean, saying that their contract with the 'eFollet' (how the hell do you even pronounce that name?) on-campus bookstore required that every class demanded at least one textbook bought from the store. Corporate money grubbing bullshit if you ask me.

    3. Re:God damned Blackboard.... by willijar · · Score: 1

      If lecturers are really doing this then they are probably infringing copyright unless they got permission from the copyright holder. Perhaps you should tell them (or the administration) that.

    4. Re:God damned Blackboard.... by MisterSquid · · Score: 1

      I am a professor but I have never used Blackboard. I have made PDF files of copyrighted material available to students. However, the agreement was usually that students buy the books when they became available. (My university does not have its own bookstore, if you can imagine such a thing, and ordering books can often be tricky). In other words, my bad both for ordering early enough and for breaking copyright (though in the end I considered such distribution backup/timeshifting before the fact of ownership).

      Having said that, I do not know of any professor who does not plan a course in advance of its start. Piecemeal distribution of materials over the course of the term may indicate many things, but a lack of advance planning is unlikely to be one of them. It's possible, but very unlikely. There are too many dependencies in a course to leave it up to just-in-time planning.

      Second, some materials while under copyright are out of print. You can't buy a class set for even top dollar because the demand is perceived to be too low by the major publishing houses and the other stuff for which there is a consistent but small demand and which would be published by smaller houses just, well, costs too much to reprint. In this case, I break copyright because I am fulfilling my mission as an educator, bringing to light material that is important but that is restricted by commercial interests.

      As a side note to you, consider purchasing a second-hand laser printer off eBay instead of printing with an inkjet. For about $120 you'd be amazed how much money you save in that first year.

      --
      blog
  47. Huh? by MichaelPenne · · Score: 1

    When did UMich go to 100k users?
    Last I heard they had about 27,000 on 27 servers(!) and UI was going to be the scalability test with 90k.

  48. Why not switch OSS? by failedlogic · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Are you from an institution considering Blackboad or WebCT? Don't. It is the worst software that students and faculty can use. Don't believe me? Read all the other comments on /. and do a Google search.

    I am a university student and several professors have been dilligently trying to upload files using WebCT for the better part of a week and its technical glitch after glitch and the stuff is not being posted up. This is a campus-wide issue. Shame to have wasted our tuition $$$'s on something I and a whole bunch of students rarely use.

    I'm hopeful this with this merger, they decide to use an OSS management system. I could see a problem if the system was just a group of programmers getting together to make one. Since some systems have backing from Berkley and MIT, I would think that the university I attend would have used it.

    I would be more in favor of separate systems. One to run quizzes, one for file transfers (hell there's something called FTP for that), another more secure one for grades (no grades are not on the WebCT thankfully). I can access most course-ountlines from other institutions from the WWW and using google searches and they're not on password protected servers. I don't see why institutions feel they should hide everything from others. A classroom discussion board would have been nice too.

  49. WebCT sucks by Sargeant+Slaughter · · Score: 1

    A couple of my professors started using it last year. I don't know if it's the professors or the software, but I don't like it. It is ugly, non-intuitive, and I hear the university has to pay an arm and a leg for it. Seems like the CS dept should be able to come up with something better...

    --
    I hear and I forget. I see and I remember. I do and I understand. -Confucius
  50. WebCT = Zero Innovation and that OneCard thing... by Da_Biz · · Score: 1

    There's been little real innovation in them in the past few years so the OS ones have a static target to shoot for and lots of schools are really, really sick of the companies backing them.

    Geez, isn't that the truth? I've been using WebCT at Portland Community College for over four years. It's not a bad application, but is in dire need of some enhancements. For instance, whilst registering for classes, there isn't a way to look up the classes you're interested in, and selecting it to register. I need to open up another web session, go to the PCC.edu website, find the CRN, copy it, paste it into WebCT, and then see whether or not there's room. This is far, far too many steps.

    BB will survive by diversifying and moving to financial services- they sell a one-card system (doors, meals, vending machine, bookstore, etc) that is also a credit card, and they get a cut of every purchase.

    Geez, I hope this isn't related to the PortlandState OneCard (from the creepily named Higher One company):
    http://www.psuone.pdx.edu/onecardinfo.html

    I, for one, really really do not like the idea of this card. It's a debit MasterCard that's also used to provide access to campus facilities. Sorry, but that just seems like too valuable of a number to just be swiping through your random card reader around campus. I could see a "man-in-the-middle" style of compromise on this system (passively recording the debit card numbers for later use).

    All financial aid disbursements are put into this card as well. Ergo, the fine folks at HigherOne, who I'm pretty sure are being paid by PSU, are making both fees for providing this 'service' to PSU, as well as money off of the interest on this card. Boo!

    Oh, and that's $20 to you if you're not interested in having this card:
    http://www.psuone.pdx.edu/faq01.html#4

  51. Actually met Murray Goldberg, founder webct by jackbower · · Score: 2, Informative

    Way back in 98, we were evaluating platforms for online learning. WebCt was still fairly small and Murray was the presenter to demo the product to us. Anyway, there were about 20 schools looking and we all met at a cabin to eat & drink. We invited Murray along and he came over, drank several beers with us and talked about how WebCt was started. As I remember it, he developed it for his classes to use then got a grant to develop it for the whole university (Canada somewhere). That lead to other universities using it and they spun WebCt of into a standalone corporation. Back then support was outstanding but as things grow and money gets involved, people figure out that having a tech answer the phone probably is not a good use of his/her time. Fast forward a few years and buy outs later, we dropped WebCt and developed our own in-house and have not looked back since then. At times I wish we still had a commercially supported product so I would not have to be the ass that says no to a feature request but announcements like this make me glad we developed our own. Wish everyone that uses WebCt or Blackboard well.

  52. I've seen this on TV by Alcimedes · · Score: 2, Informative

    It's like where they put chocolate and peanut butter together. Only evil.

  53. Funny Story by crawly · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The university I went to decided to use blackboard as part of there student-teacher interactions. They (being the university administration) decided however that whatever material was put onto blackboard became property of the university, not the lecturers. Needless to say the adoption and use of blackboard by the faculty is almost zero.

    --
    GCS/S d-x s+(+): a C++++$ UL+$ P+ L++$ !E--- W++@ N++>$ !o !K-- w++$ !O !M !V PS++>$ PE !Y PGP+ t+ 5++ X++ R tv b
  54. Re:WebCT = Zero Innovation and that OneCard thing. by edremy · · Score: 1
    I, for one, really really do not like the idea of this card. It's a debit MasterCard that's also used to provide access to campus facilities. Sorry, but that just seems like too valuable of a number to just be swiping through your random card reader around campus. I could see a "man-in-the-middle" style of compromise on this system (passively recording the debit card numbers for later use).

    Too late, already been done. Note BB's response to the security issues- this is one of the major problems I have with them.

    --
    "Seven Deadly Sins? I thought it was a to-do list!"
  55. Yay? by geoff127 · · Score: 1

    I will first mention I have never used Blackboard. However, I have used WebCT (currently do use it for 4 different classes actually) and I honestly don't like it. The interface is not easy to use, the pages tend to load wrong, or just not load, the chat and message boards remind me of the internet circa 1997, and there is no real flow. That, and IT at my school can't seem to figure out how to work it, I haven't been able to see one of my classes and they (school? WebCT? not sure which) haven't been able to fix it, and it's been 4 weeks now. Hopefully this merger will be a good thing and get rid of most, or all, of these shortcomings. The other online system I have used is uCompass and that is by far superior to WebCT, hands down. Much better flow, better layout, pages always load right, content is easier to find, message boards and chat look and work as they should, and the prof. has the ability to edit the course colors, which is actually a good thing when you have 4 online classes.

  56. So few positive comments... by Bonewalker · · Score: 1
    Amazing how few and far between anything resembling a positive comment is on this topic.

    My school has been using BB for several years now, and we are actually considering paying the money to upgrade to the Enterprise version. I think I need to forward this /. story on to those that pay the bills.

    My experiences:

    1. No batch delete courses - (we found this out the hard way)
    2. No sharing of content across courses
    3. Glitches abound: everything from instructor's Enroll User buttons being grayed out to the occasional "Access Denied" errors when students and/or instructors try to access a course
    4. Our support team hardcoded a URL into the system which prevented any of our Virtual Classroom options from working...and they figured it out after an entire year had passed
    1. Re:So few positive comments... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >> No sharing of content across courses

      One of the major benefits of upgrading to the Enterprise version is the inclusion of the content sytem which allows for a single repository of content that is version controlled and can be shared between courses.

    2. Re:So few positive comments... by alanh · · Score: 1
      No batch delete courses - (we found this out the hard way)


      Actually, this is available with the included snapshot tool (we've been experimenting with this feature locally for the past couple of months). However, it doesn't seem to work 100% correctly on our system: content is blown away from the Database, but it remains on the file system.
      --
      - AlanH
    3. Re:So few positive comments... by Bonewalker · · Score: 1

      Is the snapshot tool available in the Basic Edition of BB? I guess I need to do some research on it, if it is. Hmm...where to start? :)

  57. Stop Complaining about blackboard!! by advs89 · · Score: 1

    My high school assigns dell latitudes to their students to take home, and we have to get all of our info from blackboard (please /. effect it!!! I need an excuse for not doing my homework)... I bet not a single one of you had to put up with this in high school!

    --
    Rirelobql xabjf gung EBG-13 vf gur yrnfg frpher rapelcgvba rire, ohg jbhyq lbh jnfgr lbhe gvzr npghnyyl qrpelcgvat vg???
    1. Re:Stop Complaining about blackboard!! by ccoder · · Score: 1
      Everybody knows that ROT-13 is the least secure encryption ever, but would you waste your time actually decrypting it???

      YrrgXrl vf fvzvyne gb Ehff Xrl ohg vafgrnq bs genafyngvat jungrire lbh glcr be jungrire vf ba gur cntr vagb n abezny ynathntr (Ehffvna sbe rknzcyr,) guvf rkgrafvba nyybjf glcvat naq genafyvgrengvat Ratyvfu vagb 1337 naq bgure rapbqvat fpurzrf fhpu nf EBG13, Onfr64, URK, HEY rgp. Sbe fbzr rapbqvatf guvf rkgrafvba jvyy genafyngr gur grkg onpx vagb Ratyvfu.

      --
      "During times of universal deceit, telling the truth becomes a revolutionary act" -- George Orwell
  58. Think that's bad, try IntraLearn by doublem · · Score: 1

    IntraLearn, the LMS written in Cold Fusion that doesn't scale past 500 logins a day.

    Well, not without a LOT of custom code by yours truly.

    In 2004,they were STILL shipping a SQL Server based product without database indexes! Their lead developer had never HEARD of indexes!

    Blind SQL writes, so if you try to add an identity column to the database, the program breaks. I never even knew you COULD write to a SQL table without specifying the columns, since it's such an incredibly bad idea to do so, but they did it in 90% of the queries.

    Raw SQL errors sent to the users, NO error trapping.

    No version control. Want to release a new version of a course? You can't fork off the old one, make the changes, and then replace the old one, you have to do it all manually.

    Let's not forget the bug that would cause an 80% score on an exam to be randomly recorded as an 8%. Never happened to any other scores, but 80% passing grades routinely became 8% failing grades. I had to write custom code to get around this absurd bug. Mind you, this is a bug that was around for four years at least, and as far as I know, unpatched to this very day.

    And forget having the system just GIVE you a list of all the studnets assigned to a course, you have to go into SQL for that.

    The LMS market is full of scam artists who have a few years of teaching if that. Programmers are hired based on who will work for less and no other factors, and the "design" decisions of a man with no actual programming experience are considered gospel because "he used to work in corporate education."

    And these guys are considered to be a GOOD LMS.

    Make no mistake, this is a market ripe for the OSS picking, if the programmers can just get past the contacts that keep IntraLearn and their ilk in business.

    --
    "Live Free or Die." Don't like it? Then keep out of the USA
    1. Re:Think that's bad, try IntraLearn by Unordained · · Score: 1

      Make no mistake, this is a market ripe for the OSS picking, if the programmers can just get past the contacts that keep IntraLearn and their ilk in business.

      Also not to make a mistake: it seems the market is just as ripe for non-OSS developers willing to do things better ("correctly" would be nice, but not required) for a reasonable ("cheap" or "free" would be nice, but not required) price. It's not a binary "bad closed source" vs. "good open source" question.

    2. Re:Think that's bad, try IntraLearn by doublem · · Score: 1

      You're right.

      The market is ripe for any half witted twit who can code his or her way out of a paper bag. If you finished "Perl for Dummies" and understood the content, you already have the programming skills to run circles around most the current LMS vendors.

      And trust me, writing a migration tool would make the sales process that much easier.

      "Oh, you mean we won't have to enter all our course ware a second time? We can just let you do it and all the courses will just BE there?"

      Trust me, this will blow the mind of many, and there will be some users who can't wrap their minds around the concept. A lot of people have gotten used to the concept of having to reload everything from scratch when switching LMS vendors.

      Oh, and Lectora integration is a MUST, as well as SCORM and AICC compliance.

      So if anyone needs a utility to migrate their course ware OUT of IntraLearn, let me know.

      I've already written code for exporting IntraLearn courses form one server to another, and from IntraLearn to Lectora. I can't reuse that code for professional reasons, but there's nothing that would prevent me from using the knowledge I gained in the process to do another implementation.

      --
      "Live Free or Die." Don't like it? Then keep out of the USA
  59. Open Source Competition by TheSpoom · · Score: 1

    It'll come from an open source equivalent. It'll take a while, but I guarantee if their product isn't very good, someone (or a group of someones) will come up with a better OSS equivalent.

    --
    It's better to vote for what you want and not get it than to vote for what you don't want and get it.
    - E. Debs
  60. part of the problem is ... by whymw · · Score: 1

    I am a CIS instructor that uses WebCT for online courses and find the interface clunky and non-intuitive. To me the problem lies in the fact that WebCT is trying to put together a fairly complex site for a course but has to present tools that the typical liberal arts instructor ( non tech ) can use. It is similar to the problem I have with Access as a database - databases are complicated but Access wants to make a comfy interface for the casual user, and the resulting product really is not good for any kind of user. I suppose at the same time while I am not very happy with WebCT, it is easier than building a site from scratch.

  61. Re: If they want something professors can use... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If they want something more professors could use, then maybe they should provide an interface that lets the professors use FORTRAN. But, of course, the English department would still be out of luck.

  62. This is good news! by shr3k · · Score: 1

    Dear Users,

    WebCT and Blackboard merging? This is very good news. The resulting future product will be world-class, stable, and very usable. Consolidation can be a good thing when more effort can be put into fewer parts.

    Sincerely,

    Oracle and Peoplesoft

    1. Re:This is good news! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I seriously think that the pressures from companies like Oracle, PeopleSoft, HorizonWimba, Respondus, etc. are tired of making thier products work with two separate companies who's products are supposed to do the same thing. With WebCT 6, an Oracle or MS SQL database is required. Sure, this is great for a bunch of reasons, but now Oracle is in the hands of both companies and I belive they have enough weight to pull a merger like this.

  63. Blackboard blows by robertgeller · · Score: 0

    While the concept of "class sites" where profound interactions between teacher and student can take place seems nice (and it really does), it was implemented in such a way that even the most intelligent of geniuses can't figure out its interface and why some things were done the way they were.

    First of all, we use Blackboard in my county, and it was an exciting thing when we first got it. Wow, we thought, we could finally check our assignments online! But the novelty quickly wore down when teachers realized that they had to go to Hell and back to enter in their class rosters and get each of their classes set up under the interface. It then became a source of conflict between teachers and students when sometimes teachers forgot to put in their assignments for the day and students would come to class with the excuse that because their teachers forgot, they were somehow no longer obligated to do that class's assignments. This just led to more problems than it fixed.

    Then, Blackboard would go down several times a year for "maintenance" or some other nonsense for periods of up to a few days. How can teachers and students rely on a service that goes down for days at a time?

    Furthermore, the interface is just awful. It looks like some kindergartener went into MS Paint and made all the little buttons that you see for each class on the left.

    Lastly (that I can list right now), there are too many security and ethical concerns with listing grades online, at least in my county. So, we're not even utilizing that (and more) functionality of Blackboard, which in many respects is the coolest part about it! I would definitely like to be able to log on to Blackboard and check the results of a quiz or test I recently took, or even see a list of all my grades so far so that I could know and act accordingly.

    Maybe this merger will bring about positive changes, but somehow I doubt it. I just hope some decent OSS alternative comes around.

  64. FanTAStic. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative
    So, a company that raises prices in mid-year, screws with features (SSL support in IIS, for example) so that the "basic" edition of their software can't be used securely, and has some serious problems (the original version of Blackboard 6 had gradebook problems, and there was an issue where students could take tests for other students) just bought the other heavy hitter in the course management software.

    Blackboard is one of the most hated companies in higher ed. Nobody likes doing business with them. That's why so many large institutions are standing behind open source projects. The support sucks, too - they're really unwilling to try to duplicate problems on their systems, and upgrade procedures often go badly. They do things like release big updates just before the academic year starts, and then not support the previous version until you upgrade and risk breaking your system. Big database schema changes in minor point releases aren't unknown, either.

    1. Re:FanTAStic. by retendo · · Score: 1

      And with both of these systems once you do the work of putting lot's of content in there is no way to easily extract it, meaning that all the content you loaded is locked into their product.

      Nice, huh?

      Yes, professors should keep local copies of all coursework organized properly. And everyone should keep a back up of all the numbers in their cell phone.

      Right?

      Right?

    2. Re:FanTAStic. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Blackboard is one of the most hated companies in higher ed. Nobody likes doing business with them.

      Did I hear somewhere, that the biggest stake of BlackBoard is in Microsoft?

      So a big fish swallows a smaller, an even bigger fish swallowed the big fish :-(

      Hope MD will keep his word: http://moodle.org/mod/forum/discuss.php?d=32114#14 9536

  65. Competition by webscathe · · Score: 1

    There are quite a few small companies that provide online course management solutions. However, I don't know of any as big as Blackboard or WebCT.

    A lot of high schools in my area are starting to use a site called GradeConnect which seems to be mostly free to use.

  66. Whatever dude by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Whatever dude, just cause you work for BlackBoard doesn't mean that you know what you are talking about. I've worked for a compeditor and we did some research into your product. Not only does the useability suck (as everyone on this site is happy to report) but your architecture sucks as well. Scales worse than a Microsoft product.

    Can you say complete rewrite?

    I hope you can.

    1. Re:Whatever dude by n4KdR4zr · · Score: 0

      sure you do. My post was a joke. Evidently no one here reads fark (http://fark.com/).

      --
      "... drowning in information, ... starving for knowledge." --John Naisbitt
    2. Re:Whatever dude by n4KdR4zr · · Score: 0

      A joke actually that's supposed to poke fun at people like yourself who always seem to pop up in these threads claiming to work for [fill-in-the-blank].

      A pox on this you-can't-post-right-after-you've-posted thing.

      --
      "... drowning in information, ... starving for knowledge." --John Naisbitt
  67. Re:Saving paper by lahvak · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I have serious doubts about online class managment systems saving paper. From what I have seen, most students print anything posted to Blackboard or WebCT. Then they loose it, and print it again. I hear from computer lab assistants that many students leave printed syllabi and assignments sitting on the printer. They print it, then they leave and don't even bother to pick it up, because they know they can always get it again online.

    --
    AccountKiller
  68. Used Blackboard extensively by dogmatixpsych · · Score: 1

    I teach at a large university and have been using Blackboard for a while. It has dramatically improved within the past couple years. I've never used WebCT but I hope this merger does not decrease the quality of Blackboard. It certainly isn't perfect, but I've found it very useful for posting my PowerPoints after class and for posting general announcements. It also makes keping track of students' grades simple (they can then see their grades in "real time" and let me know if they are missing or have too many points - yes some students do occasionally say I gave them too many points). While I don't use them for my classes, the online quizzes you can set up in Blackboard can work very well (especially is you don't care if they are open book or not). It seems that most people here have had problems with WebCT and not Blackboard. There may be better products out there, but I've never had any problems with Blackboard.

  69. WebCT sucks a.s.s. by Naito · · Score: 1

    Had to use it for a course one year....nothing is properly linked to each other, each "module" is so completely separate I might as well be looking at a different website. The profs don't know how to use it effectively either, and it seems to just be used as an excuse for the bad profs to avoid seeing students face to face. Haven't seen a SINGLE effective use of WebCT in my entire time at school. And this is the leading university in Canada. Bleh.

  70. Will Moodle or any OSS LMS scale? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm the Online Learning Systems Manager at an Australian Uni.
    These are some of the thoughts that are going through my head just now.

    We use WebCT just fine for a campus of over 25K students. I'll go open source but Moodle or Sakai or whatever other product must scale, must be fast, must be intuitive, must be easy for students and lectures to use and must be able to provide all the functionality that a top end LMS can provide.

    I can't go OSS because I get a warm fuzzy about it.
    Feel free to address the following but here is what I am thinking:
    What's the migration path to the new OSS product?
    Will it integrate with the library software, the student portal, the student system and all the other disparate systems on campus?
    How many staff do I need to hire that can provide the love and hugs that an OSS enterprise LMS needs? Say I need three programmers and a sys-admin, that's ~$400K (cost to employ after super contributions and payroll tax etc.) to install run and keep the software current. Or I can spend ~$150K to pay the license and the sys-admin and stay with WebCT. I will have to retrain all the academics and staff that put courses online = 6 months of labor = 6 months opportunity cost. TCO is cheaper with WebCT and I get ~$12million in R&D and access to a vibrant powerlink developer community. I just don't think I can afford free software and if I can I'm not getting the same ROI I get from WebCT.
    The LMS is as important as the bricks and mortar buildings. It is the mechanism through which students learn much of their material. The students pay about the equivalent of a years salary after tax to do a degree. In many ways the LMS is the university. I can't futz about with trying to get some OSS product to work, scale and migrate thousands of courses in an environment that is used 24/7.

    Steve

    1. Re:Will Moodle or any OSS LMS scale? by daveb · · Score: 3, Informative

      I'm just someone who uses BB for teaching but trialed Moodle last year unofficially. Hopefully there will be better answers to your queries:

      What's the migration path to the new OSS product?

      BB migration to Moodle - sucks (as far as I could figure). But apparently is getting better

      Will it integrate with the library software, the student portal, the student system and all the other disparate systems on campus?

      Probably - but it will be bespoke (so will integrating the proprietry one). At least you can code it to integrate with your student managment system and anything else. Just try doing that with BB without breaching license.

      How many staff do I need to hire that can provide the love and hugs that an OSS enterprise LMS needs?

      That depends on whether you want them to run the LMS or extend it. The Sys-admin I worked with, who currently maintains the (hugly expensive to licence) Blackboard reckond that the maintenance and running costs of Moodle would be no more than Blackboard. But - if you want to extend the modules to do funky things then yes you will have to pay developers

      Say I need three programmers and a sys-admin, that's ~$400K (cost to employ after super contributions and payroll tax etc.) to install run and keep the software current. Or I can spend ~$150K to pay the license and the sys-admin and stay with WebCT.

      well if you want to pluck numbers out of the air to make sure that the migration won't work - then yeah. Why do you need 3 programmers? I was able to take the course material from BB and put it into Moodle without anyone changing one line of code. I'm not talking import - that's crap - but I was able to do the same or more with Moodle straight out of the box than I was able to do with BB.

      I will have to retrain all the academics and staff that put courses online = 6 months of labor = 6 months opportunity cost. TCO is cheaper with WebCT and I get ~$12million in R&D and access to a vibrant powerlink developer community. I just don't think I can afford free software and if I can I'm not getting the same ROI I get from WebCT.

      yeah yeah more fictitious $. Why did you say 6 months rather than 2 or 18?. Yes training is a very real and expensive issue. But you are talking $150k each and every year to licence Web-CT - isn't it worth figuring out just what the cost really is?

      The LMS is as important as the bricks and mortar buildings.
      Absolutly

      I can't futz about with trying to get some OSS product to work, scale and migrate thousands of courses in an environment that is used 24/7.

      sigh - isn't it sad that we are still hearing "no one got fired for buying IBM" rather than actually being interested in doing a solid investigation of the real issues. If you think that non-OSS is even slightly more workable, scalable and migratable then you have either been lucky or never tried to scale, work with or migrate proprietary systems. Those issues tend to become worse the more they cost ... NOT better

      For my money - Moodle is becoming a pretty decent product - and I do not care that it's OSS. Let me say that again I do not care that it is open source. I want a good LMS that is NOT going to cost my students the earth each and every year.

      However - the issues raised are very very large stumbling blocks. I was able to manually load all of my course material into Moodle which is currently on BB. A migration for an institution cannot be manual. I am also not happy about Moodle's quizes or ability to use resources that are supplied by publishers.

      I'm not using Moodle now solely because of those last two issues. But most of the features that I use daily in Blackboard are available in Moodle. And usually those features are more advanced in Moodle (the discussion board stuff is light years ahead of BB). Our sys-admin also doesn't care whether the stuff he looks after is OSS or not - he just wants it to work without headaches or faculty yelling at him. He much prefered Moodle and was dissapointed that he couldn't migrate the institution

    2. Re:Will Moodle or any OSS LMS scale? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thanks for taking the time to respond. I promise that when the time comes:
      We will do the numbers and not pull them out of the air.
      We will give all runners equal weighting, and will judge on merit and we will not be predigest against OSS.

    3. Re:Will Moodle or any OSS LMS scale? by Flambergius · · Score: 1
      I administrate a Moodle installation with 3000+ users at a 5000 student college. I'm also sort of a fringe member of the Moodle development community.


      What's the migration path to the new OSS product?

      BB migration to Moodle - sucks (as far as I could figure). But apparently is getting better


      I can't talk from experience as we never used Blackboard, but at least California State University Humboldt and San Francisco State University have done the migration. There was quite a bit of discussion of their plans and experiences at Moodle.org. I would think it has gotten better than sucky. (Naturally, any migration would still be a large project, with considerable risks involved.)

      Will it integrate with the library software, the student portal, the student system and all the other disparate systems on campus?

      Probably - but it will be bespoke (so will integrating the proprietry one). At least you can code it to integrate with your student managment system and anything else. Just try doing that with BB without breaching license.


      It can integrate as well as anything. Moodle is basically "just a LAMP application". The state of whole service is contained in the database, so it can integrate with anything that can integrate with a relational database (MySQL or Postgres usually).

      Willingness to integrate, if by that we mean the ease of integration and/or readily available tools for integration, is a bit more complicated question. I would say Moodle has good set of tools for integration with Student Information Systems. Student Portals is much too wide field to say anything very definite ... there are quite ready integrations of Moodle and OSS content management systems. We ourselves are just in process of rolling out a new Student Portal on top of Sun's Java Portal Server and will be "integrating" Moodle and JPS. Nothing that I know of integrates well with Library Systems.


      How many staff do I need to hire that can provide the love and hugs that an OSS enterprise LMS needs?


      Moodle needs very little love and hugs. In the two years (pilots+production) we have used Moodle there has been only one occasion of loss of the whole service due to an error in Moodle code. (There have been network and power outtages and a admin brain freeze or two). Moodle does depend of several other services to function, database being the most important and probably even most error prone, at least in the sense that DB management is more difficult to than managing a web server. Also, Internet Explorer causes some problems.
      In normal operations, a competent admin should be able to handle sizable Moodle installation singlehandedly with plenty of time to do the small/incremental improvements that such a setup will need. Implementing new features into Moodle code base would require additional resources.

      In terms of "how many users can it handle" Moodle does scale. New Zealand Open Polytechnic with 30000+ users is the largest Moodle installation that I know of. In the nest class (over 20k users) there are 10 or so installations. Much of the work enabling Moodle to handle such demands was done by the NZ Open Poly and they continue to be very active in making Moodle scale better, latest burp was that they expect to eventually be able to handle 100k+ users.

      To me Moodle's biggest strength is its development community, which is quite unique mix high work ethic, technical competence and deep understanding of the application domain. Moodle isn't the technically best open source project I have been part of, but it is the best tool by a development community I have been part of.

      --Flam
      --
      Computers are useless. They can only give you answers - Pablo Picasso
    4. Re:Will Moodle or any OSS LMS scale? by ooh456 · · Score: 1

      I love these questions that presume PHP/MySQL won't scale as well as a Win or Java based architectures. The answer is... on the same hardware yes it will scale and it perform as well if not much better due to the 'no-frills' 'no nonsense' nature of the beast.

      You think those web hosts out there who offer php/mysql accounts for $9.95 a month are doing so because it doesn't scale well? Most of them are running hundreds of databases and websites on each server with millions of hits per day under managable loads.

      GUESS WHAT? MOODLE PROBABLY SCALES THE PISS OUT OF BLACKBOARD OR WEBCT. AND IF IT DOESN'T SCALE FOR SOME REASON YOU CAN TUNE IT OR FIX IT BECAUSE YOU HAVE THE SOURCE CODE. IF THAT DOESN'T WORK YOU CAN GET YOUR MONEY BACK.

      If you ask Blackboard or WebCT if they scale they will send over two grinning salesmen to scream "SURE!" and then send you a bill for $50,000 to buy more server licenses. Want your money back if it doesn't work? Tough luck.

    5. Re:Will Moodle or any OSS LMS scale? by MichaelPenne · · Score: 1
      Hi Steve, you could talk to the folks at New Zealand VLE, run by Catalyst IT. They have over 40,000 users on a redundant Moodle cluster and growing.

      For just running Moodle, you should be fine with the same hardware and number of sys admins/trainers/support folks you use for WebCT.

      Custom development is optional, but a nice feature to improve the overall experience. I've an article on Moodle scalability with links to information about the NZVLE cluster and PHP scalability here

      NZVLE

      IMO, the main downside is retraining on a new system, however, I think you are going to have to do that anyway soon, I can't see it making good business sense for BB to keep supporting CE or Vista much longer.

  71. In defense of WebCT by Iaughter · · Score: 2, Informative
    Dear Slashbots,

    Moodle and Sakai simply don't do the same things on the same scale as WebCT and presumably Blackboard. It's like comparing Dia to Visio, of course we'd all rather use Dia, but we go with the more functional product.

    WebCT "Campus Edition" vs WebCT "Vista"
    Campus Edition was this hacked together organically grown POS. I worked a little with the web services functionality of Vista and I must say that it's well-done. All of Vista's functionality is accessible through an Apache Axis layer. Admittedly it's complicated, but that because it's designed for VL educational institutions.

    WebCT Vista is a thoroughly engineered modern product. Those of you complaining about the UI aren't treating it fairly. One could literally write their own web UI by hooking into Vista without editing product code at all.

    It's even pluggable. It's relatively easy to write multiple authentication/session modules. Does Sakai even have LDAP integration possibilities?

    The last thing that I want to do is to disparage the f/oss efforts, but from reading the current posts one would question why anyone uses these real, enterprise-capable course management systems instead of these less functional, less capable and less proven f/oss packages.

    1. Re:In defense of WebCT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is so true. I have traveled to many many universities over the last 5 years talking to people about these systems - primaily WebCT, but BB as well. Their comments are so radically different from most that I am seeing here, it amazes me. I am wondering why the huge concentration of negative (and poorly argued/supported) claims when I know that the truth is actually quite positive.

      Of course no platform is perfect - but the vast majority of users I've spoken with find that WebCT is quite effective at doing what it is designed to do. Its UI (as any UI) could obviously be improved. But it seems as though you people judge anything less than perfection as crap. This is not the case.

      The truth is that people use these systems all over the world, and that their use in increasing at a huge rate. This is happening because the vast majority of both faculty and students use, like and appreciate these systems. I have seen numerous campus studies (in the US, Canada, teh UK, Japan, Finland and Australia) and they are amazingly consistent - 80 - 90% acceptance of WebCT (I assume BB is similar). And the number one growth driver on campus is student demand. They see WebCT in one course and expect it in the remainder.

      *Of course* it is not perfect. But despite the incredible retoric to the contrary here, they are, by and large, well used and well respected systems.

      Try to calm down and be rational people.

    2. Re:In defense of WebCT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Moodle and Sakai simply don't do the same things on the same scale as WebCT

      Totally incorrect. Other than that, great point!

      Moodle is several orders of magnitude easier to use than WebCT, especially for non-techie teachers. And it scales quite well, thanks.

      It's even pluggable. It's relatively easy to write multiple authentication/session modules.

      Moodle uses pluggable authentication modules (PAM) and can be used with just about any authentication scheme under the sun.

      WebCT Vista is a thoroughly engineered modern product.

      Sure it is. 8-/

    3. Re:In defense of WebCT by Stalin · · Score: 1

      Why do students accept it? Because their teachers have forced them to use it. If they don't use it they don't get grades.

      Personally, I loathe the product. I have had to do tech support for WebCT, the old POS and the new Vista POS, and use it in classes at CSU. Every semester, the majority of our tech support calls are about WebCT. In fact, I recently ran a report on our ticketing system for WebCT problems and the report came out to be around 20 printed page. That was for the time period between the start of classes on August 22 and mid September. No, most of that space was not taken up by troubleshooting logs. I did include the initial trouble request but those generally take up a quarter of a line at the most; the rest of the information was date, time, and names.

    4. Re:In defense of WebCT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can't believe you Moodlers don't give up this big talk. Moodle was started by stealing the visible Perl in WebCT by a WebCT administrator in Australia. It's funny. Thank you Apple for losing that case to Microsoft. Moodle is basically benefiting from a lawsuit that Microsoft won. The seedy side to Moodle.

      I bet the people "hating" WebCT and BB haven't seen any of the new versions of WebCT or Blackboard. You are clearly uniformed if you think that a template based "single pedagogy" PHP based app like Moodle is equal to even older versions of WebCT. Back to the farm for you my friend ...

      To everyone else:

      You will never convince Zealots that believe in "Open Source" that there are huge risks and costs involved in using systems that have no formalizes support, releases, services, user testing, QA, and I could go on.

      And if you think you could build a better product than Blackboard or WebCT? You should save the big talk and get busy building it ... then collect your 180 Million dollars and go live on an Island somewhere so we don't have to read your BS.

    5. Re:In defense of WebCT by killingwish · · Score: 1

      Sakai does have LDAP possibilities, although a single solution has not been adopted by the core sakai tree. There are at least two different LDAP integration (for authentication) solutions developed out there. Vista impressed me at the demo I saw of it. It seemed like WebCT was finally on the verge of creating something based on sanity. And now this. The press release from Blackboard seemed to hint that there would be a few years of "Blackboard/WebCT interoperability" before Blackboard stripped the best (arguable) pieces of WebCT Vista out and slapped them into Blackboard. No real hopes of improvement in my opinion. I refer to Sakai as "The Sleeper". There is growing interest in it; it just needs to be proven, and have better documentation. What? An OSS project with incomplete documentation? I must say that the initial documentation attempts at Sakai are encouraging -- except a re-do of their main site virtually hid all of their great beginnings at documentation. I don't know if they've realized it or not.

    6. Re:In defense of WebCT by cgicw · · Score: 1

      Iaughter pretty much hit the nail on the head. Everyone here is trashing these systems but they haven't seen it and the OSS options in action from an administrative standpoint. I administer Vista for a University with 40k+ students, no open source CMS option has the desired features, support, QA or ability to scale for that size of an institution. Of course, an open source system is something we would like to move to or at least be able to use at the bargaining table but right now it's not even possible to use them as a bluff because they simply do not compare.

    7. Re:In defense of WebCT by itazurakko · · Score: 1

      Web services are okay, yeah.

      But one of my MAJOR PEEVES? Why on earth do the SIAPI calls (remote manipulations that happen over https) not return any meaningful response to the caller? I suppose more fundamentally I should be asking, why on earth the user-management/course-management automation isn't also done with web services. But given that it isn't, I'm getting mighty tired of running code that uses SIAPI to automate user and course creation (given that we have 130,000 users, we HAVE to automate!), from another machine, and getting back responses that will only say "3 errors have occurred. Please check the webct.log for details." So, which 3 users didn't get created? No tellin'.

      Not to mention, which webct.log is it even in? We've got 8 front ends running WebLogic, it could be on any one of them (although apparently we're going to dedicate one of those for remote app handling, if we do some fanciness with the load balancer).

      Feh.

      However, I'm with you that Vista is light years more "enterprise" than CE ever was. Now if they'd only make real web services calls for the stuff currently done with SIAPI, and get the "templates" manipulable remotely (they don't have IMS ids! Grr) I might be happier.

      I will say that the existence of the web services and the fact that we CAN automate a lot of things (and hopefully make other pluggable modules) was a big factor in our choosing Vista.

    8. Re:In defense of WebCT by EvilMagnus · · Score: 1

      Moodle and Sakai simply don't do the same things on the same scale as WebCT and presumably Blackboard. It's like comparing Dia to Visio, of course we'd all rather use Dia, but we go with the more functional product.

      While you're right about Moodle, Sakai does do things at the same scale as BB and WebCT. UMich has a Sakai install with 27,000 users. Sakai works for big installs.

      Sakai also has the best test-taking modules out there, period. It's still got some rough edges, but it's at least as functional as WebCT and BB - the paradigm is just a bit different.

      --
      -EvilMagnus
    9. Re:In defense of WebCT by EvilMagnus · · Score: 1

      UMich has Sakai running for 27,000 students. There's not much difference between that and 40,000 - you just need a few more application servers.

      Sakai also has far better test & quizzes than anything else out there. The pedagogy that's gone into it is astounding.

      Both WebCT and BB sent reps to the last Sackai conference (SEPP in Baltimore). They see the product as a direct competitor, and are using it as an indicator for feature requests.

      --
      -EvilMagnus
    10. Re:In defense of WebCT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are wrong about Moodle not scaling. There are at least 10 institutions running Moodle with >20K users, including NZ Polytechnic with 40K users. Another big user is Athabasca University in Canada, which is a big player in totally online education. At Athabasca the faculty overruled their IT department's choice of WebCT Vista as their course management system.

    11. Re:In defense of WebCT by claudew · · Score: 1

      Wow! Spoken like a true anti-Moodle zealot. None-the-less, the short-term outcome will be the same. A picture is worth a thousand words: http://byewebct.com/

    12. Re:In defense of WebCT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You make a serious accusation about "A WebCT administrator" stealing code. We all know that no WebCT administrator would ever do that. You wouldn't do that, would you? Just because you are facing the axe of your new Blackboard masters does not mean you should project onto others.

      And why would anyone steal code from a vastly superior application like WebCT? We all know that everyone *loves* WebCT with a passion due to its intuitiveness, personality, and visible Perl.

      Let's look at all of the Perl code that those Moodle "farmers" have stolen:

      Lines of code in Moodle (as of Sept 1)
      php: 176697 (99.60%)
      perl: 638 (0.36%)
      sh: 40 (0.02%)
      pascal: 36 (0.02%)

      (Data reported by the system administrators of the largest Moodle deployment: http://eduforge.org/projects/nzvle/ 6K+ courses, 40K+ students and growing.)

      No wonder WebCT hasn't sued.

      To your other accusation: In fact, many Moodle farmers have used recent iterations of WebCT and Bb, yet they prefer Moodle. As for myself, give me a WYSIWYG editor any day. (I suppose you shun word processors in favor of issuing line commands.) I could cherry pick Moodle's other strengths, the lesson module, or the random distribution of student writing samples for anonymous peer-review, but I've only been using computers to teach since 1988 so I am just a simple farmer.

      Anyway, good luck with your CV.

    13. Re:In defense of WebCT by stronk7 · · Score: 1

      Hi Anonymous Cobarde,

      I would be really grateful to your comments because, caused by them, I've been laughing some minutes. Your message includes all the required elements to call my attention (Apple, Moodle and Open Source). Great!

      When somebody lies and, in my modest opinion, you are lying like a "zealot" (in your own words), it's good to give him a warning about the negative feeling that it causes to people trying to communicate their opinions. Please, Cobarde, I assume that you are an expert user of the product you are defending and I'm pretty sure that you will find better reasons to defend it without the use of insults and lies.

      I think I don't hate WebCT nor Blackboard. But reading your comments it seems that I should do it. Would you be able to reason out simply why? Perhaps you will be able to convince me about it. If not, for now, I prefer to respect both products and no-one line against them will be created from my keyboard (although I admire people without doubts like you, being able to fix the pros and cons of one product with some, more or less, gratuitous affirmations and no-sense phrases).

      Calling "single pedagogy" to something like Social Constructivism is really aberrant and I hope that people (learning professionals) reading it don't associate your wrong knowledge of such cool philosophy with any type of relation or dependency, personal or professional, between you and WebCT. It could have absolutely bad consequences about people perception over WebCT, thinking that it's against such "simple pedagogy". And I think it isn't against it, can you clarify us that aspect?

      About what's better, well, I only can affirm one thing: They are different. Point. As you will know someday if you participate in something more interesting than your lies (and there are tons of thing more interesting than them out there) people uses to play and test products to, finally, make a decision from the alternatives analysed. Sometimes, the decision is easy (based in the fulfilment of some key requirements) and sometimes the decision is hard (to value all the variables in the equation).

      I'm sure than you, thinking a bit, would be able to talk seriously about the advantages of WebCT. Ok, no problem. Imagining that you are not a liar I believe you. And? You (nor me) will do people change their decisions or preferences based in a subjective opinion about the benefits of using one product. Nowadays, people wants to experiment themselves because, in the past, liars have forced them to make wrong decisions because their declaration was riddled with lies, so some sort of distrust is always present. Whereas it's regrettable, it has caused one, in my opinion, great effect. It consists of people, thanks to the "democratisation of the technology", being able to select the best for their own. Simply, leave your product to the arena and we'll see how it's accepted. I must recognise that, for people used to fool customers, it's a bit difficult to do that. I'm not worried about it, and you?

      Finally, I won't type anything about some of your phrases because, simply, they are absolutely unjustified, inappropriate, incongruous, impolite and out of place (thanks Apple's Dictionary).

      Well, this is my first post to slashdot. I must be graceful to your previous message because it encouraged me to write this lines and I think that it's enough for now. Just a final recall to moderation (if possible) and all the best for WebCT, Blackboard and, of course, Moodle.

      Ciao, one non expert in anything moodler :-)

    14. Re:In defense of WebCT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You should join forces with Howard Strauss. It'd make a great comedy act.

    15. Re:In defense of WebCT by Rewd · · Score: 1

      Ha ha ha ha! :-D You have no idea about any of this do you?

  72. United For The Common Cause.... by Slugster · · Score: 1

    ...of fucking college students out of even more money.
    I had a class that used a webct "book" once, the book was a technicolor rag, nearly useless. About 180 out of its 250 pages were colorful pointless or redundant diagrams or borders, or "real life examples" that perfectly mirrored what was being explained in the paragraph--two inches away. The insructor rarely even opened it, but we had to "turn in" quizzes through the webCT online bulletin board. And the password each student used was shrink-wrapped inside each book, with a useless-CD as well. The bookstore would not accept any opened software for return or resale, and the webCT cancelled each year's passwords every year--forcing all students to always buy a new copy, just to get a new password, so they could turn in classroom assignments online, through the webCT website.
    ...-Which if I am remembering right, was basically just a few short online quizzes and an email/bulletin board service. Whoopee.

    That was a couple years back, but at that point webCT simply couldn't make a decent book.
    And the way the system is working, they will never need to--because the people who choose to use it are not the same people who pay $65 for it and then throw it away five months later.
    ~

    1. Re:United For The Common Cause.... by starwed · · Score: 1
      And the way the system is working, they will never need to--because the people who choose to use it are not the same people who pay $65 for it and then throw it away five months later.

      Hopefully this will change; the reason being that current prof's experiance differs so much from current students. The physics dept. where I TA right now has exactly the same issues. But all of the TA's realise what bullshit this is, and most of the prof's are sympathetic once they actually understand what's going on. I'd assume that as new faculty bring more hands on experiance into Universities, they'll support OSS (or at least non evil) systems.

      This is probably especially true in fields such as physics where a reasonable number of the faculty already use Linux and other OSS.

    2. Re:United For The Common Cause.... by cgicw · · Score: 1

      FYI, you are slightly misguided in your anger. It is not WebCT that is sticking it to the students it is the publisher of the book - WebCT has nothing to do with the material that is used with the system. Text book publishers will "partner" with WebCT to integrate their material with the system and that is how they keep their book selling, by forcing students each year/semester to get new books. WebCT simply gives them a way around students buying used instead of new.

  73. WebCT and Me by Apathetic1 · · Score: 1

    I've had some experience with both WebCT and Blackboard. WebCT was in use at my previous school, Blackboard at my current one. I have to wonder what Blackboard is thinking. I haven't run into any huge, glaring problems with Blackboard yet (although apparently many people here have); WebCT is just garbage.

    After using WebCT for a few weeks I concluded that they're one of those companies that just doesn't understand the web. WebCT had an aneurism when it detected that I wasn't using the One True Browser. They eventually updated the list of allowed browsers to include newer versions of Netscape but the "DANGER! DANGER!" message never went away on Firefox.

    From what I saw, WebCT allows professors to choose any format they'd like for course web pages which, in my case, meant that you had to learn how to navigate a badly written Frontpage site for each course in which you were enrolled.

    At least with Blackboard there seems to be a modicum of standardization. Hopefully they won't take the "flexibility" of WebCT and try to add it to Blackboard. The last thing I need is helpful improvements to a system that sortof, mostly works.

    --

    My username does not make me Apathetic. It's irony, get it?

  74. Re:Saving paper by toddestan · · Score: 2, Informative

    Not to mention that the cheapest way to is still to photocopy. Laser printers cost a bit more per page, and inkjet printers cost a lot more per page. Whenever they say they post things online to save paper, they really mean they are just shifting costs over to students (though this is really only the case in universities that charge per page printed in the labs like mine did).

  75. This merger is awesome by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is a great merger. I love WebCT and was surprised ... but I would imagine that Blackboard and WebCT will both benefit from this. I can see how some smaller schools might get spooked and run to Moodle/SAKAI but the tools available through the new WebCT/Blackboard will be just light years ahead (they already are). Moodle folks sound a bit worried. I am sure there will still be a market for Moodle. Not to fear.

  76. Used to use WebCT by rm69990 · · Score: 1

    For my online correspondance, I used to use WebCT. It was ugly and a real pain in the ass to use. Some examples.

    Each course had its own email account. This meant that if I wanted to read an email from Course A and I was working on Course B, I had to open another window, log into Course A, then open the email. On Insight2Learn (my school just switched to it, it is a competitor to WebCT....or else custom built by the school, not sure which), it is one email account, so I could just click email in Course B and read email from Course A.

    No Paging Feature. Email is sometimes overkill. If I want to send a quick "Will do" to my teacher, I don't want to have to open another window, sign into webct, and then email the teacher. In Insight2Learn, I click the pager icon, type the message in the new window that automatically pops up, and click send, to any teacher or student in any course.

    STUPID LINKS!!! The way the javascript is set up on this stupid thing, if I want to middle click Email in Firefox to open it up in a new tab, I get a blank window. I have to either manually open a new window and sign in, or else click on email and leave the page i am on.

    Missing Emails. Assignments got lost all of the time. Don't even get me started on this.

    Flash. I am retaking a course that I originally took in WebCT, and am now taking in Insight2Learn. Flash content only occasionally loaded in WebCT, it always loads in Insight2Learn.

    Shitty Compatability. If I want to use Opera for homework, I get a stupid message every time I open a new page about how I'm using an incompatable browser. Literally. A little box comes up EVERY TIME. This is despite the fact that all of WebCT's features work with no problem in Opera. I mean, seriously, pop the box up once when you first log in saying it might not work, and then leave me the fuck alone.

    All in all, I hope WebCT dies a horrible death. Maybe students all over the world will luck out and blackboard will kill their products. Even my teachers hated it, they are the ones who recommended changing the system.

    >:-(

    1. Re:Used to use WebCT by rm69990 · · Score: 1

      Replying to myself here. Desire2Learn I meant to say, not Insight2Learn (need to sleep more lol).

    2. Re:Used to use WebCT by nimblebrain · · Score: 1

      Being just about to marry a teacher in a system where a switch was made from WebCT to Desire2Learn, and knowing what utter chaos D2L threw the school into, I've got some opinions based on the frustrations I've seen.

      If you're an online teacher, paging features suck. I've seen how much of a workload online teaching involves, and this is just one more "ringing phone" that utterly destroys teacher productivity. It's too easy to use, and the student-to-teacher ratios for all courses (100:1), even though not necessarily at the same time, are overwhelming. The pages are often on common questions, as well, which makes them more appropriate for discussions, where the question can be answered once (e.g. why are the images broken in quiz #2?) instead of answered over and over (imagine 30 kids raising their hands in class and asking the same question :).

      The e-mail in D2L works much better for students that way than WebCT did, but I can tell you that it's pretty bad for teachers. Privacy legislation (at least here) prevents identifying minors without explicit consent, and the D2L e-mail boxes are not limited to the D2L courses, tripping the legislation (at least, this was the essence of the explanation I heard). This means you get reams of e-mail from students identified only by ID# with no name unless they sign it and (though this may be simply a D2L failing) no course identification ("Could you tell me what you meant in question 3 in the last quiz I re-took?"... ack!).

      My fiancée used the WebCT e-mail organization by course to concentrate on getting that course's questions, assignments, etc. done, which is invaluable if you teach multiple subjects. All of them, including managerial odds and ends, getting tossed into the same bucket makes it much harder to be organized.

      There have been some serious D2L teething problems, with questionable hope of them ever going away. One great feature of D2L was supposed to be sharable learning objects, and being able to use "baseline" courses as templates and modify them for individual classes. Well, in amongst various server hangs and crashes, the very features the system was bought for have had to be turned off.

      I won't defend WebCT, especially in light of what I've heard here on this forum (being too browser-specific and losing work are two subjects that choke me, too), but this was sure a frying-pan-to-fire move, and it has caused a lot of stress around these parts.

      Maybe D2L can stabilize itself, maybe not. If so, I hope they do it soon. My future married life depends on it!

      --
      Binary geeks can count to 1,023 on their fingers :)
  77. WebCT is awful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There are so many open source and commercial products that are far better.

    A very primitive java chat screen is what you get. No webcams, no shared white board, no real save ability, limited buffers so you lose much of the discussion.

    Blech!

  78. No ready for prime time? by b0fh · · Score: 1

    I work on CS on University of Lleida (SPAIN), we're part of sakaiproject and we use it for our
    virtual campus, and it's the second year we're using it: without any problem. This year we'll finish moving our webct courses to sakai. Believe me, it's ready for prime time!

    --
    -b0fh of apostols.org-
  79. HTMLeZ by ari_j · · Score: 2, Interesting

    My undergraduate university's Aerospace department has a product that competes directly with Blackboard, called HTMLeZ. The main college has Blackboard, while the Aerospace college (which includes the Computer Science department I graduated from) uses HTMLeZ. Students who have to use both (most anyone at some point) vastly prefer HTMLeZ. There are other competing products out there, so this doesn't give Blackboard a monopoly on the market - it just gives them a better cornering of the market for crap.

  80. Moodle performs well by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Are you running it on a 486 or something?

    We run one of the largest Moodle installations in the world and the only performance problems we've had are with the database. That was easily fixed with some decent DBAing.

    1. Re:Moodle performs well by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, it's running on an AMD Athlon XP-M 1400+. A 1.2Ghz machine with 256 meg of ram, doing nothing but running the web server and handling email for the school.

      The DB is running fine, the bottleneck is specifically the moodle pages themselves. I grant, that if I could afford a machine with 8 4Ghz cpus and a couple of gig of RAM, that it would run faster.

      However, again, that was not my point.

      It should not require 21 meg of RAM and 19% of cpu to display the WELCOME page to a non logged in user. That is simply unreasonable, and indicates either bad design or a lack of design in the code.

      Is Moodle good? Again, yes, that is why I use it. I like it a lot. However, as was my point in the original comment... and I do wish people would actually read the comment and understand the point before barking bs at me, I believe that Moodle's "Big Break" will not come from the consolidation of it's competition but in the refining of it's codebase to be smaller, faster, and more efficient.

  81. Ok I won't get you excited on Google suite here by TarrySingh · · Score: 1
    yet! Err Umm on second thoughts why not?

    Look at systems like Moodle, the guy who once was a Web CT system Admin and got nuts and started writing up this program which is widely used in high Schools all aorund the world.

    I had a communication with the Chief Architect of the Sakai Project as he conducted an interview with the guy and the guy's apparently in for the money now. Well who isn't? This darn socienty is based on money and trade. I think Sakai too when it's mature will generate *some* revenue as well. And that I think is OK, *making money* mindset will have sales force on an overdrive and developers disgruntled(look at MS lately). I think the whole idea of developing software is to actually NOT be able to reach a consensus. Because it never can be like that.

    Maybe Google might wanna consider getting into the Education business, you never know. But seriously the Sakai initiative has a lot of potential!

    --
    Scott McNealy to Michael: "Suck my Sun!" Michael Dell to Scott : "Lick my Dell!"
  82. I that WebCT sucks then why... by TarrySingh · · Score: 1

    did Blackboard merge? Will it help them get any better?

    --
    Scott McNealy to Michael: "Suck my Sun!" Michael Dell to Scott : "Lick my Dell!"
  83. There is an open source alternative! by xtype2.5 · · Score: 1

    It's called Moodle. Check it out. I use it in my classes for content delivery and testing. Cheers!

  84. Re:enrolling system admins by kleppingerg · · Score: 1

    > It's impossible to enroll a system administrator in a course, no matter what. They can only self-enroll. This is not true. You can use Batch Enroll Users, from the System Admin panel, to enroll system admin users in any course. You can also enter the Properties area for any course, from List/Modify Courses, and enroll any user at all, including system admin users.

  85. student view by kurtis25 · · Score: 1

    As a student I prefer blackboard. WebCT has the interface of some websites I made in middle school. It's user options are useless. BB is not much better but is nicer. Sighhh now I must log on to Webct for my class.

  86. Inconceivable! by Charles+Jo · · Score: 0

    So 2 companies I have never heard of before are going to merge to become 1 company I only heard about because of their merger announcement. Hmmm.

  87. Re:WebCT = Zero Innovation and that OneCard thing. by DoktorMel · · Score: 1

    Blackboard's BB One is unrelated to this. Blackboard's Commerce System is a suite of applications that revolve around hardware for a swipe or proximity card that lets you do door access, vending, laundry accounts, library, meal services, etc. They also offer services that allow local merchants to accept student ID debit accounts as payment. That's what BB One is. It's really quite cool and convenient.

    --
    -- The Sage does nothing, and nothing is left undone. --Lao Tzu
  88. Open Source Alternative by loyukfai · · Score: 1

    I don't have much experience except for some light usage of WebCT back then, but the user interface was poor, it's complicated and not initiative.

    Personally I think it would be a better act for the educational sector to come up with an open source alternative themselves. They can even make it student projects to expand on modules.

    Or they can just expand on a CRM system like Drupal.

  89. What no one is talking about - coursepaks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No one seems to be picking up on what I consider to be the most unfortunate aspects of this merger - I think among other things this is an attempt to consolidate control of the textbook and vendor coursepak market, which is one of the toughest impediments to moving from webct or blackboard to one of the open platforms (Moodle, sakai, dotlrn, atutor and so on). I think the combined company wants to own the equivalent of the .doc file for course epaks. There have been efforts to rally folks around SCORM which to my view aren't really working so far. Meanwhile now we have a company that combined controls most of the courseware market, at least in the US, which gives them increased bargaining power with the textbook and vendor markets 'see, just make your materials compatible with our product/s, we deliver most of the market, and you save money.' It's the same old vendor lockin story we hear over and over again.

    I'd be curious if anyone else has this impression, or insight here.

  90. Home grown by redfoot · · Score: 1

    At my institution we've been using a home grown system called SPIDER since 1998, built using PHP & mySQL. Its easily customisable, so we can add whatever features we want to it, when we want, and can tailor the system to meet the needs of our staff and students. It provides all the usual stuff (file, class, user mangement) as well as providing multi-tiered administrative control of classes, degrees and "clusters" [groups of related degrees]. It links in to our Oracle based MIS to get access to relevant student and class data, and uses LDAP to authenticate with our DS. Its user-centric, allowing users to customise the site to their needs (rather than course designers forcing their course/class design on the user) and classes are 'open access' - any registered user can access any class material on the system they want. We currently have over 10,000 users, and it runs on a £3000 worth of hardware with plenty of resource to spare. Guest logins are available on the SPIDER development system.

    1. Re:Home grown by redfoot · · Score: 1

      wrong url - should be SPIDER development

  91. Re:Will Moodle or any OSS LMS scale? Why not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Of course an Open Source LMS can scale. .LRN http://dotlrn.org/ has been installed for systems of 25,000 students and more. Its Open Source under the GPL and has a strong developer community as well as a commitment from the schools using the software.

    An installation for 200,000 students is planned http://dotlrn.org/news/one-entry?entry_id=101407

  92. One wonders if M$ is behind this by cgicw · · Score: 1

    Microsoft and Blackboard created an "alliance" back in 2001 and now Microsoft is naming their new OS Vista, the name that WebCT's more recent CMS goes by.

    Where do we draw the line on what is a coincidence and what is Microsoft tossing out chump change to protect their choice of name for the new OS?

  93. Re:WebCT = Zero Innovation and that OneCard thing. by Da_Biz · · Score: 1

    They also offer services that allow local merchants to accept student ID debit accounts as payment.

    Yes, but what happens if someone is able to obtain these numbers in the aforementioned "man-in-the-middle"-type attack, and uses easily obtained mag strip encoders to encode someone else's number onto their card? Sounds like one could go on a fine shopping spree with that at the bookstore, local merchants, etc.

  94. Don't forget .LRN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    don't forget .LRN, which is 100% open source, and serves roughly 250K users around the globe. fully I18N, fast, runs well on Linux and other Unix, etc. http://www.dotlrn.org/

  95. If you want to extend a module the smart way by MichaelPenne · · Score: 1

    If you want to extend a module, the smart way is to talk to the module maintainer abput your plans first so that your changes will be easily integratable into the planned direction for the code.

    I would call that the path of a professional programmer, myself, rather than hacking away incommunicado and then complaining b/c you took a direction that was not the best path for the project as a whole.

    1. Re:If you want to extend a module the smart way by nietsch · · Score: 1

      Well guess what, I did. That is how/why the other developer kept his changes out of CVS, which gave me no chance to incorporate them while I was working on it.

      Maybe brushing off new developers/code is the best path for the project as a whole?

      --
      This space is intentionally staring blankly at you
  96. Blackboard erasing WebCT (picture this) by eTherapist4Faculty · · Score: 1
  97. Hi Matthew by MichaelPenne · · Score: 1

    ;-) /nt

  98. Or if you want an alternative that is ready by MichaelPenne · · Score: 1

    now, Moodle is:-).

  99. Moodle is running above 40,000 by MichaelPenne · · Score: 1
    at New Zealand Virtual Learning environment, and there are a number of institutions in the 10-20k users range.

    It's actually Sakai that has yet to prove it's scalability, 27k users on 27 servers as at UMich is not exactly 'scalable'.

    Moodle is also much closer in features to WebCT/BB and goes well beyond them in several areas (such as the advanced eLearning development tool Lesson (demo at World Conservation Learning Network), soon to come Gallery2 integration, easy to set up LDAP integration (well it's beyond BB Enterprise here, you have to hire a BB programmer to help you set up LDAP, not sure about how easy it is with Vista).

    Sakai 2, well it's back around Blackboard 5/Moodle 1.2 feature set, it requires a pretty bit step back to switch to it from Blackboard 6 or even 5.5, while Moodle 1.5.2 is much more comparable, in both features and scalability, to the commercial systems.

    What features are available in Samigo that are not in the Moodle 1.5.2 quis and/orlesson modules?