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Roland Gesthuizen

ARIS - Mobile Learning Experiences - Creating educational games on the iPhone - 0 views

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    ARIS is a user-friendly, open-source platform for creating and playing mobile games, tours and interactive stories. Using GPS and QR Codes, ARIS players experience a hybrid world of virtual interactive characters, items, and media placed in physical space.
Claude Almansi

IFPI SuisseIndustrie phonographique : « Game Over » (le jeu est terminé), mêm... - 0 views

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    Durant sa phase de démarrage, l'action « Game Over » s'adresse aux pirates diffusant de nombreux fichiers musicaux sur Internet. Vez: «Il s'agit principalement de personnes adultes et exerçant une activité professionnelle, donc de personnes capables de payer pour leur musique et non de quelques enfants. Ces adultes volent de la musique parce qu'ils espèrent qu'on ne les traquera pas. Mais ceci est différent dès aujourd'hui.»
Claude Almansi

Cory Doctorow: You shouldn't have to sell your soul just to download some music | Techn... - 0 views

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    Here's the world's shortest, fairest, and simplest licence agreement: "Don't violate copyright law." If I had my way, every digital download from the music in the iTunes and Amazon MP3 store, to the ebooks for the Kindle and Sony Reader, to the games for your Xbox, would bear this - and only this - as its licence agreement. "Don't violate copyright law" has a lot going for it, but the best thing about it is what it signals to the purchaser, namely: "You are not about to get screwed."
James Sigler

iTWire - Teaching tech to tots: The use of Linux and open source in pre-schools - 0 views

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    This article highlights a suite of education games called GCompris for K-6 students. It gives a good definition of what Edubuntu is and how it is different than just Ubuntu. It is one more reason to use Linux instead of MS Windows in schools.
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    Great article on Edubuntu Linux
Roland Gesthuizen

BBC News - Raspberry Pi: A £15 mini-computer - 0 views

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    A piece of technology not much bigger than an adult's finger could help a new generation discover how to programme computers. Games developer David Braben and some colleagues came up with the Raspberry Pi - a whole computer on a tiny circuit board made with not much more than an ARM processor, a USB port, and an HDMI connection.
Sarah Smith

Ticket To Read (TM) - Welcome - 0 views

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    Ticket to Read lets your students practice important reading skills at school, home, or the library--anywhere they can get on the web. Designed for grades K-5, users can work independently on reading skills, which frees the teacher to focus on other students. Exciting texts, continuous feedback, and opportunities to earn points for prizes makes Ticket to Read your student-friendly ticket to success.
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