How to make a student iPad podcasting studio. | SchoolTechnology.org - 0 views
How To Capture Ideas Visually With The iPad | TeachThought - 0 views
How to Set Up Gmail for School iPads and iPods - 0 views
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One challenge for teachers with students using devices like iPad and iPod touch is collecting student work. Unfortunately, there is not one consistent way for apps to export what a user creates. Some apps connect to Dropbox, some share through iTunes, some export to a website, some share through an IP address, but most apps email content as an attachment. In order to send images, movies, and documents as an attachment, email must be set up on the device. Logging in through web-based mail won't work because you cannot attach files when using web mail in iOS. Email has to be set up in iOS's Mail app in order for an app that shares through email to actually be able to send.
INFOGRAPHIC: How Mobile Phones Are Dramatically Changing The World - Business Insider - 0 views
How to Manage a Classroom of iPads - 0 views
Coaching Both Parent And Child - 1 views
I want to see my kid happy and grow to his full potential. That is why, when I see him having trouble opening up to me or to other people, I feel bad as a parent. I feel that I am not doing a good ...
How to Design Your First iPhone App - 0 views
How to have more meaningful iPad professional development | eSchool News - 0 views
How to Hire Android Application Developer For Your Development Project? - 0 views
how-tablets-can-make-you-a-more-effective-teacher/ - 6 views
Socrative | How It Works - 1 views
Reasons How HTML5 Continue To Prove Major Force in the Mobile App Development - 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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Travis Allen's Blog - 2 views
QR Codes: How To Create Your Own - 0 views
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