Group items matching
in title, tags, annotations or urlKelly Fitzgerald ~ EdTech Nut: Using Collections in TweetDeck to Save Tweets - 1 views
-
I use TweetDeck. It is a useful tool for following along during a Twitter chat as it allows you to build columns that help to keep track of the many different feeds, notifications, mentions, etc. It can be difficult to check out the resources shared and keep up with it all. There are many methods for 'saving' the resources shared. Kelly Fitzgerald @LISDTechie uses the collections feature in TweetDeck to gather those resources to review at a later time. Here she offers advice about how to add a collection and start saving those wonderful resources people are sharing.
Spigot - 5 views
Clive Thompson on 3-D Printing's Legal Morass | Wired Design | Wired.com - 2 views
-
"Last winter, Thomas Valenty bought a MakerBot - an inexpensive 3-D printer that lets you quickly create plastic objects. His brother had some Imperial Guards from the tabletop game Warhammer, so Valenty decided to design a couple of his own Warhammer-style figurines: a two-legged war mecha and a tank. He tweaked the designs for a week until he was happy. "I put a lot of work into them," he says. Then he posted the files for free downloading on Thingiverse, a site that lets you share instructions for printing 3-D objects. Soon other fans were outputting their own copies. Until the lawyers showed up."
Edmodo Hits 15 Million Users [Infographic] | Edmodo - Safe Social Networking for Schools - 3 views
-
"It's been an amazing year of growth for Edmodo. We started the year off with just under 5 million users and today, we're pleased to share that we have officially crossed over the 15 million user mark! To highlight this milestone, we want to share the following infographic which displays fun facts about Edmodo usage throughout the world."
My Other Computer is a Data Centre | Betchablog - 3 views
-
"..... did you know that there are a whole lot of other things that you can do on YouTube? If you go to www.youtube.com/editor you will find a reasonably capable online video editor at your disposal. Sure, it's not Premiere Pro or Final Cut, it's not even iMovie, but for a completely free video editing tool that runs in nothing but your web browser, it's surprisingly functional."
Free Technology for Teachers: 5 Ways Student Can Create Audio Slideshows - 5 views
7 Habits of Highly Effective Teachers Who Use Technology | Angela Maiers, Speaker, Educator, Writer - 9 views
Cel.ly Supports Schools: Group texting for education - 3 views
-
Cel.ly is primarily a free group texting service. Group texting saves time, improves communication, provides documentation of texts, and sets the stage for easily using many other cell phone tools. The Cells referred to in Cel.ly are instant mobile networks. With Cel.ly, you can have open group chat, one-way alerting, or a hybrid where curators can approve messages
A Brief History of YouTube [Infographic] - 4 views
-
"Today's infographic goes over YouTube's history in its relatively short existence. The first video (called "Me at the zoo") was posted in April of 2005 and a year and a half later in October of 2006, YouTube was bought by Google for an astounding $1.65 billion. They weren't done growing yet though; within three years there were 1 billion videos being viewed daily, a number which quadrupled in 2012."
Educational Technology Guy: Hojoki - make all your cloud apps work together - very cool & free - 5 views
The Minecraft Teacher - 3 views
iPadagogy - YouTube - 3 views
Google Docs Can Now Be Exported Through Takeout - 1 views
-
"Google Docs can now be exported from the Google Takeout menu, thanks to Google's Data Liberation Front. Previously, users could export and import documents in various formats, but they are now available alongside data from all other Google services in Takeout. Google Takeout was unveiled in summer 2011. It allows Google users to export all their Google data to disk or just data from individual services. It's all thanks to the Data Liberation Front team, which builds tools to give Google users control over their data."
Free Technology for Teachers: Grading Made Easy with Diigo & Jing - 1 views
-
Post fron Richard Byrne "Both Diigo and Jing have been written about on numerous occasions here at the Free Technology for Teachers blog, but I wanted to share my experiences using both tools when grading assignments. I teach an information literacy course for the college where I work as a librarian"
Gooru - 2 views
-
Teachers and students can use Gooru to search for rich collections of multimedia resources, digital textbooks, videos, games and quizzes created by educators in the Gooru community. Gooru is free (of cost and ads) and developed by a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization whose mission is to honor the human right to education.
Microsoft OneNote Comes to the Android Market - 2 views
The History 2.0 Classroom: Social Reading on the iPad: Subtext X Custom ePub - 3 views
-
While there will never be a replacement for a paper book with dog-eared pages, hand written notes in the margins, a broken spine and a proudly worn cover with a hint of dirt and stains, there is an exciting new option to transform the practice of reading to make it more social and collaborative. Subtext is an intriguing iPad application that allows users to read books collaboratively. While reading, participants can insert text, emotions, questions, links and thoughts into the margins of the book. When other readers jump into the text they can see the notations and reply to the existing thoughts in a discussion thread that is neatly tucked away into the margins of the text.
« First
‹ Previous
101 - 120 of 139
Next ›
Showing 20▼ items per page