By
Linda Breazeale MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Mississippi's Extension Service employees still
travel dirt roads, but they are also on super highways;
their communication efforts have made similar
progress. New
video conferencing lines are enabling the Mississippi State
University Extension Service to save costs in travel and
time as well as expand their reach into communities
throughout the state, nation and world. Dan
Brook, head of Extension's Computer Applications and
Services, described the 64KB frame relay lines installed in
1997 as "dirt roads" compared to the T-1 lines now installed
or being installed in many county Extension
offices. "The
benefits in e-mail speed alone are remarkable. The T-1 line
is about 24 times faster than the frame relay line, and a
file that would take an hour to download on the old system
will take less than three minutes on a T-1," Brook
said. The
video conferencing capabilities are opening even more doors
for Extension workers and their clients. The first sites
established in 1999 were at MSU and Verona. Then came sites
at the Research and Extension centers in Stoneville and
Raymond and the district office in Hattiesburg. Participants
in video classrooms and conferencing got their first
glimpses of the technology's potential. "Three
years ago, Extension conducted 32 video conferences. The
next year, we had 103. That number doubled in 2003, and this
year, we'll probably have 100 more," Brook said. "The
accessibility to the sites and the links to specialists,
professors or administrators in other locations are the keys
to this technology's success." Reba
Bland, Extension leadership development area agent based in
Lafayette County, said she and her co-workers across the
state use the technology to video conference with
Mississippi Homemaker Volunteers and Master Clothing
Volunteers. "Our 40
executive board members with the Homemaker Volunteers have
been able to start planning their annual meeting much
earlier by using the video system," Bland said. "In the
past, they would have all their meetings at MSU; this way,
we are saving on the cost of travel and can have more
productive meetings by working out many of the details
sooner." Bland
said the accessibility of the system helps groups involve a
wider range of people. Individuals who might not be able to
travel because of work, family or health issues may be more
likely to attend a nearby video conference. Susan
Seal, distance learning coordinator for MSU's Extension
Service, has witnessed the growth in the system's use. She
credits the technology's success to MSU Extension's push to
deliver educational information to a wider
audience. "We're
ahead of most state Extension services with this technology.
On any given day, it may be used in a one-on-one setting or
to link more than 100 people learning about cattle nutrition
or child-care workshops," Seal said. "We often use it for
Extension meetings so that agents don't have to travel to
MSU or other sites for meetings. Since we pay a flat rate
for the service, using it is cheaper than a long-distance
telephone call." -30- Released:
Sept. 30, 2004
Community
News
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Interactive
video saves travel costs
Contact: Dan Brook, (662) 325-3226
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:28:16
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/commnews/cn04/040930video.html
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