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Roland Gesthuizen

Free Technology for Teachers: Historical Facebook - Facebook for Dead People - 0 views

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    "Derrick Waddell created a Facebook template for historical figures to leverage student interest. This template, available through the Google Docs public template gallery, asks students to complete a Facebook profile for famous people throughout history with a place for pictures, an "about me" section, a friends column, and a map to plot the travels of historical figures. It will not result in an actual Facebook account being created."
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    Amazing concept, building on what some teachers probably already managed to do with a pencil and paper worksheets but with an online language that some students will be already familiar with.
Ian Guest

David Rumsey Historical Map Collection - 4 views

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    "The historical map collection has over 30,000 maps and images online. The collection focuses on rare 18th and 19th century North American and South American maps and other cartographic materials. Historic maps of the World, Europe, Asia, and Africa are also represented."
John Pearce

Google Maps Mania: The History of Weather on Google Maps - 1 views

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    "Weather Underground's WunderMap now allows the user to view historical weather records on a Google Map. A calendar control above the map allows the user to select a date and view the historical weather records for that day. The records include radar, storm reports and even weather related photographs and webcam images taken on that day."
Rhondda Powling

How An Amsterdam School Uses Facebook Timeline In History Classes - 2 views

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    "Students at Het 4e Gymnasium Amsterdam have had their history class infused into their digital lives...The students have built Facebook Timelines for four history subjects:..Historical events were represented by uploading a variety of media including audio, video, photos, maps, and historic documents."
John Pearce

BBC News - Online appeal unearths historic web page - 2 views

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    "A search to recover the very first web page has unearthed a relic from 1991. The page turned up after Cern launched a public appeal for files, hardware and software from the web's earliest days. The original page is missing because the web's creators did not preserve the early work they did on what has become a historic document."
Roland Gesthuizen

www.Visual6502.org - 2 views

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    "Here we'll slowly but surely present our small team's effort to preserve, study, and document historic computers .. Have you ever wondered how the chips inside your computer work? How they process information and run programs? Are you maybe a bit let down by the low resolution of chip photographs on the web or by complex diagrams that reveal very little about how circuits work?"
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    Amazing stuff when you examine how the computations and calculations work from deep inside a computer chip! Nice historical computing project.
John Pearce

ChronoZoom - 7 views

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    ChronoZoom is an open source community project dedicated to visualizing the history of everything to bridge the gap between the humanities and sciences using the story of Big History to easily understand all this information. This project has been funded and supported by Microsoft Research Connections in collaboration with University California at Berkeley and Moscow State University. You can browse through history on ChronoZoom to find data in the form of articles, images, video, sound, and other multimedia. ChronoZoom links a wealth of information from five major regimes that unifies all historical knowledge collectively known as Big History.
Rhondda Powling

How Minecraft could help teach chemistry - 1 views

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    "Minecraft is more than just a game and used carefully it can also be a powerful educational tool. It allows young people to create and explore places that are completely inaccessible by other means. Within the blocky world, they can roam around historical sites, delve into the geology beneath their feet or fly through the chambers of a heart, and much more besides. The rich resources of these virtual worlds, coupled with the educational version of the game, allow teachers to immerse young people in a comfortable but exciting learning environment. Minecraft has the ability to bring just about any conceivable structure to the classroom, and beyond.
Andrew Jeppesen

film | story - Home - 7 views

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    Database that links films to historical events. Search by country or subject. Useful for finding movies to compare perspectives on some historical events. Eg. By clicking on Japan it shows films about Japan but some are made in Japan, some in US, some in China.
Ian Guest

Historical timeline charts related to computer/electronics - 6 views

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    A useful collection when you're trying to think back whether it was Facebook or Twitter came first ... or Apache or Python or Linux for that matter!
John Pearce

Election Speeches · Museum of Australian Democracy at Old Parliament House - 1 views

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    "Each election, Prime Ministerial candidates lay out their parties' platforms in campaign speeches. These speeches are more than just historical records; they tell us about national concerns and political obsessions, wars and drought, industry and society. They speak to - and in some cases, exploit - our aspirations and our fears. We've collected speeches by successful and unsuccessful candidates from every election from 1901 right up to the present day."
John Pearce

Google Maps Gallery - 3 views

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    A number of organizations offer public map data through Google Maps, but finding it can be tricky -- if you even know it exists. That may not be an issue now that Google has just launched its Maps Gallery. The web portal showcases location info from both Google and a slew of its Maps Engine partners, ranging from the World Bank's internet usage stats to National Geographic's historical overlays. This is really just the start of the search firm's map discovery efforts, though. Google tells TechCrunch that it wants to surface public maps in regular search results, and it would also like to draw attention to Maps Engine Lite data created by amateur cartographers.
John Pearce

In the future, internet search will give us super powers - 0 views

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    "The days of internet searches being a matter of typing words into a box on a web page may be numbered. Even the expressions "search it" and "Google it" could soon go out of fashion, just as "going online" is already passe because these days we're always connected. Steven Weitz, senior director of search for Microsoft's search engine Bing wants our physical and virtual worlds to merge to a point where we will be able to stand on a street corner and the answer to "where am I?" will bring up not only the street name but historic and tourist information, places to eat as recommended by our friends and the best public transport option to get to an appointment on time."
Ian Guest

The Learning Theory Podcast - 1 views

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    "This bi-weekly series takes a critical look at some of the major and minor learning theories. In each episode we will explore the historical background and basic tenets of a unique theory of learning, and discuss the theory's application and implications."
Teresa Rush

Museum Box Homepage - 0 views

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    This site provides the tools for you to build up an argument or description of an event, person or historical period by placing items in a virtual box.
John Pearce

Terry Moore: How to tie your shoes | Video on TED.com - 2 views

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    "Terry Moore found out he'd been tying his shoes the wrong way his whole life. In the spirit of TED, he takes the stage to share a better way. (Historical note: This was the very first 3-minute audience talk given from the TED stage, in 2005.)"
Kathleen Morris

Twapper Keeper - "We save tweets" - Archive Tweets - 4 views

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    "Do you want to archive tweets from your conference? Maybe archive trending hashtags or keywords for historical or analysis purposes? Maybe save your own personal tweets? Twapper Keeper is here to help!"
John Pearce

Vanished - 3 views

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    "Vanished" is a two-month-long game, which debuted the week of April 4 and stems from an initial scenario revealed in recent video messages on the site. The premise is that people living in the future have contacted us in the present, to answer a question: What event occurred between our time and theirs that led to the loss of civilization's historical records? Students must decode clues in hidden messages, and in response find and provide information about Earth's current condition, such as temperature and species data, to help people in the future deduce what wound up happening. "
Ashley Proud

SpatialGenie Login Page - 1 views

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    Search and discover map layers of Australia. You can view historical maps, early maps of capital cities and railway systems. You can also investigate many other map layers that show information such as bushfires, earthquakes and tsunamis.
Rhondda Powling

How Minecraft could help teach chemistry's building blocks of life - 2 views

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    "Minecraft is much more than just a game. Used carefully it can also be a powerful educational tool. It allows young people to create and explore places that are completely inaccessible by other means. Within the blocky world, they can roam around historical sites, delve into the geology beneath their feet or fly through the chambers of a heart, and much more besides. The rich resources of these virtual worlds, coupled with the educational version of the game, allow teachers to immerse young people in a comfortable but exciting learning environment. "
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