Five Tips for Creating Graphics for Mobile Devices | Upside Learning Blog - 0 views
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Except for Blackberry most other smart phones have G-sensor, which understands the orientation of the phone and displays information accordingly –
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n case of Blackberry apps separate images need to be created for each model to fit the screen.
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But if you are on Windows PC, while creating graphics for iPhone, you need to set “Proof Setup” under “View” Menu to “Macintosh RBG”
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Mobile learning | edtalks.org - 0 views
The Learning Generalist: Mobile Learning - 7 Interesting Patterns - 0 views
Social Media in Africa, Part 1 - ReadWriteWeb - 1 views
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undergoing a connectivity revolution
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Africa
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Part One of this series looks at social media contributions from Africans, Part Two looks at mobile and connectivity innovations and Part Three looks at how local Governments, NGOs and nonprofits are being affected.
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Mobiles Lernen ist vielen noch zu teuer - Job & Karriere - Karriere & Gehalt - computer... - 0 views
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Der größte Stolperstein sind die hohen Kosten
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Für die Bildungsanbieter ist es sehr aufwändig, da es auf dem Markt noch zu viele unterschiedliche Mobilfunktechnologien gibt. Für die Lernenden ist die Nutzung noch zu teuer, weil die Mobilfunkanbieter für mobile Datendienste noch sehr viel verlangen."
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Die Bildungsanbieter müssten mehr didaktisch-methodisch durchdachte Lernszenarien entwickeln, etwa Inhalte, die weniger die völlige Konzentration vom Nutzer erfordern."
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Social Media in Africa, Part 3: Democracy - ReadWriteWeb - 0 views
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Traditionally, the greatest power that governments have held over their people has been information. The promise that connectivity brings to Africa is that people are now using that abundance of information for oversight of government and more interaction with administrations. To say that the propagation of internet and mobile connectivity in Africa has been disruptive is an understatement.
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When the Ethiopian government instituted an SMS filtering service to censor mobile communication, the developers behind Feedelix responded swiftly. They created their product Feedlix, a java-based client that supports Amharic, Chinese and Hindi characters. The application then uses GPRS, through internet protocols, to mimic SMS and bypass the censoring filter put in place by the government.
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Sokwanele is a civic action support group campaigning for freedom and democracy in Zimbabwe. Their website includes an 'election violence map' that provides detailed information related to localized occurrences of violence related to the election. During the most recent crisis in Zimbabwe, Sokwanele was used to get information out of the country when the government began restricting communication.
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Project K-Nect (North Carolina) - 0 views
DeWitt Clinton » Blog Archive » On Web 2.0 - 0 views
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While the Internet started growing decades earlier, it was the release of the first Mosaic web browser that heralded in a new revolution. Though it reached its peak in less than ten years, the era of Web 1.0 will be long remembered as a turning point in human society. As we are still deep in the midst of all of the change it is easy to overlook just how profound the Internet revolution really is.
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Web 1.0 was the great equalizer. It put everyone on the same playing field. A single individual sitting at a computer in the remotest region of the globe had the ability to publish as easily and as widely as the largest newspapers. While it has taken several years to get to the point where this has become commonplace (for reasons that may be explained in defining Web 2.0), even the earliest days of the web turned the conventions on their head. From private citizens like Matt Drudge to garage startups like Amazon.com, Web 1.0 was the beginning of an era in which the smallest player on the field could have just as much impact as the largest conventional institution.
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Yet the technology of Web 1.0 was simultaneously both ground-breaking and surprisingly traditional. It was ground-breaking in the sense that it reduced the cost of data distribution to nearly nothing. Yet it was traditional in the sense that it generally followed the model of the printing press. (Albeit with very, very inexpensive machinery.) It allowed anyone to run their own printing press, and it removed the middle man from the distribution process. Web 1.0 was a revolution in which hundreds of millions of consumers found their way to millions of new producers.
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Mobog - 1 views
Thinking Machine wiki / Think Mobile Phones for Learning - 0 views
Math Goes Mobile - 0 views
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About 100 ninth-grade students in four schools in North Carolina have been issued smartphones for use in their math classes. No, they're not using the calculator on the devices. They're using the phones to network among themselves on problems, receive instruction from teachers, play math-improving games, or watch an animation showing the problem being solved.
Mogreet The Vote - 0 views
RapidFTR - 3 views
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