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Steve Yuen

Top 10 Sites for Creating Timelines by David Kapuler - 0 views

  • 1. Capzles- Quite simply one of the nicest timeline creation sites around, with a beautiful user interface as well as the ability to embed into a site. 2. Time Rime - An excellent site with educational instance (great for teachers) that allows users to create multimedia timelines. 3. xTimeline - Share wonderful looking timelines with audio, video, and pictures. Very user friendly too. 4. TimeGlider - Great site that not only lets users create multimedia timelines butlegends as well. There is a "plus upgrade" in the works specificallyfor education. 5. Dipity - Create beautiful timelines with the ability to add video/pictures. 6. Time Toast - A bullet point centered timeline w/ text and pictures. 7. Preceden - A fun easy site to use to create interactive timelines. 8. Timelinr - A very simple to use timeline generator that only displays text. 9. Our Timelines - Create timelines by using preexisting forms (text only). 10. Read Write Think - Very similar to Our Timelines for creating text only timelines.
伊真 鄭

First Look: Google Wave - 0 views

  • it's pretty clear that Google Wave is the online giant's social networking play, an attempt to wrestle away some usage share from services like Twitter and Facebook, obviously, but also with Microsoft's surprisingly popular SharePoint.
  • Waves can consist of any combination conversations (such as email and IM) and documents (collaboration). They provide for rich interaction via text, photos, videos, maps, and more, according to Google. From a usage standpoint, a wave is sort of like an email thread except that it can happen in real time (like IM), is always considered live, and participants can jump in and out of the conversation at any time. A playback capability allows participants to "rewind" the wave at any point and review what's already happened. Edits can be made to any part of the wave at any time, and it's always possible to see who did what. If you think of how an email thread and an IM conversation might be combined into a single entity, that's pretty much a wave.
  • It's based on HTML 5 and Google Web Toolkit
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • It features a multi-pane ("panel" to Google) interface with Navigation ("folders" like Inbox) and Contacts panes on the left, the selected folder in the middle (like Inbox, which Google calls the Search panel), and, on the right, the selected wave (the message, in an email application).
伊真 鄭

Second Life Official Site - 0 views

shared by 伊真 鄭 on 08 Jun 10 - Cached
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    Do you have any suggestions for using SecondLife in education?
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    我想也許可以用在生涯輔導上,讓學生認識不同的職業,去嘗試有興趣的職業,體驗職場生活。
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    That's a good idea. I met a salesclerk one who spoke English very fluently. I asked him for tips on learning English well, and he said that he learned a great deal from SecondLife. Since the operating system and chat is all in English, he was motivated to pick up the language and use it correctly to communicate with others and to experience the "flow" of the game optimally (see Csíkszentmihályi). Although his primary goal was the playing experience, he learned effectively and with a high level of motivation, genuine feedback/reinforcement, and collaboration/interaction through the SecondLife forum.
伊真 鄭

Wave Extensions - 0 views

  • Wave extensions are a way to augment the functionality of waves and the wave client. Currently, the Wave API supports the following extensions: Robots: Robots are applications which can be added to waves as automated wave participants. Robot extensions commonly automate tasks, but can also participate in the wave as a participant, interacting with the conversation based on their capabilities. For more information, see the Wave Robots API Overview and Developer Guide. Gadgets: Gadget extensions provide a shared program which runs within the wave, and to which all participants have access. For more information, see the Wave Gadgets API Developer Guide.
  • Each extension has a specific use case, noted below: A robot is an automated participant on a wave. Robots are programs which run on an application server and can modify state within the wave itself. A robot can read the contents of a wave in which it participates, modify the wave's contents, add or remove participants, and create new blips and new waves. Robots perform actions in response to events. For example, a robot might publish the contents of a wave to a public blog site and update the wave with user comments. A gadget is a small application that runs within a client. The gadget is owned by the wave, and all participants on a wave share the same gadget state. The only events a gadget responds to are changes to its own state object, and changes in the wave's participants (for example, participants joining or leaving the wave). The gadget has no influence over the wave itself. Wave gadgets typically aren't full blown applications, but small add-ons that improve certain types of conversations. For example, a wave might include a sudoku gadget that lets the wave participants compete to see who can solve the puzzle first.
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    Wave API支援兩種extensions:robots&gadgets
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