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Megan Durham

Video: Playing with the Augmented Reality App IMAG-N-O-TRON - 0 views

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    If you haven't read or seen The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore, by William Joyce go and do it right now! But this short little video shows the companion app to go with the book. I love AR and wish I could find more ways to use it in my every day life. Maybe we can create an AR app. so that Jennifer can finally have her backup dancers.
Scott Peterson

iPad Administration - Isn't there an App for That? - 0 views

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    This was an interesting session about using Apple Configurator to maintain a pool of iPads for circulation to autistic students. The good side is customization can be done and quickly, the downside is a one-to-one ratio for apps licenses and iPads, a steep learning curve to the Configurator software, and being limited to what apps Apple provides.
Scott Peterson

Who Really Owns Your Personal Data? - 0 views

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    An article about a trend today to use apps that track and record behavior and wearable fitness devices, and who owns the data those devices store in the cloud. I also found it interesting there was little analysis of how the data could be severely skewed by age and demographics; that the behaviors and data stored could be from people who don't care or want it spread it to the world.
Sharla Lair

OverDrive to Launch New HTML5 Based Reading App - The Digital Reader - 1 views

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    Interesting news from Overdrive.
Sharla Lair

TED Books Launches New iPad App with Enhanced eBooks - The Digital Reader - 2 views

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    For those of you that enjoy TED videos...
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    So awesome. I'm not sure I'll pay $3 for many of these, but it's cool just the same. I'm actually kinda surprised they are directly monetizing their old content.
Scott Peterson

Disruptions: Your Brain on E-Books and Smartphone Apps - 0 views

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    The author talks about how using electronic devices can alter our accustomed behaviors, such as mistakenly swiping a finger when reading a printed newspaper expecting it to turn the page the same as if it were on a tablet. He then carries this over into an argument that the brain changes that cause this hasten the adoption rate for new technologies. Ultimately I disagree with this as it's only becoming habituated to an interface, and not something intrinsic with the medium itself.
Scott Peterson

The Open Utopia - 0 views

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    A different concept that is part of a concept (and Facebook app) called a "Social Book," Thomas More's "Utopia" is put online with all the versions, notes, and commentary, and users are encouraged to write--whether to add commentary, notes, or rewrite the book in portions. I see this being a good utility for "deep thinking" or classic works (War and Peace, The Republic, etc.) but I note there doesn't seem to be a versioning system or method to track edits, and ultimately no way to lead a discussion or system of debate, and in some ways it's like a repackaged wiki. Lastly, outside of scholarly works I could imagine it devolving into a sort of fan fiction or endless rewriting to suit people's tastes.
Jennifer Parsons

Book of Kells Now Free to View Online | Trinity College Library Dublin - 0 views

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    Trinity College Library in Dublin, Ireland, now offers for free the influential Book of Kells, to be viewed online. There's even an iPad app for this!
Scott Peterson

How You Use Your Phone May Tip Off Health Problems - 0 views

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    This was an app I initially gave the benefit of the doubt to, but decided it falls more into gimmick territory. Essentially it tracks a person's movements and phone use, and from there decides if a person is facing health problems. I see too many false positives or deductions that would have to be made--a person could be using their phone less from both not feeling well but also from working out and not having it with them. However the general concept is sound--especially if it becomes connected to a device that monitors and reports a patient's vital signs.
anonymous

Google Drive cloud storage launch planned for early April, sources tell GigaOm | The Verge - 0 views

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    I'm just learning of this today. Apparently they are only offering 1GB of free storage, which puts them at half of what Dropbox offers for free. That said, Dropbox is painfully slow at upload and download and Google storage is insanely cheap. I just bought 20GB of storage for my photo archive and it costs me a WHOPPING $5/year - and the extra storage is shared by all my Google apps which I'm guessing will include Drive. 
Scott Peterson

Are Apps The Future of Book Publishing? - Forbes - 1 views

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    We're at the dawn of the tablet era now. Earlier this month, Apple sold 3 million of its new iPad during the opening weekend, with some analysts expecting over 60 million of the tablets to be sold worldwide. What's more, e-book readers are selling even more briskly than tablets.
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    I heard today that after the Govmn't sued Apple and 5 ebook publishers for colluding to keep pricing favorable, 3 of the 5 publishers have already settled out of court. I wonder if Apple thinks they have a strong enough case...
adrienne_mobius

Very Pinteresting!: The hot social network is taking educators by storm - The Digital S... - 0 views

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    "Everyone's buzzing about Pinterest, a new social media tool that connects people through the things they like-but for a growing number of users in classrooms and media centers, it's fast becoming a powerful resource where teachers and students share images, store lesson plans, read about current events, watch video clips, and collect their favorite apps."
Justin Hopkins

Google Exec, Others Advise Tight Web Security After Writer Hack - 0 views

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    If you don't already know what 2 factor authentication is - it's the use of a second out of band communication channel that is used in addition to your password. In the case of Google it means that when you go to log in they will send you a text message with a 6 digit numerical code that you'll type in as well. This means that would be hackers would need to not only know your password but also have physical access to your phone.  I've already enabled this feature for Google apps @mobiusconsortium.org - if you'd like to enable it for your account (it takes like 10 minutes to get set up and fix your applications) just let me know. 
Scott Peterson

Interactive books for iPad, iPhone, and the web - 0 views

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    An interesting web vendor that is offering interactive textbooks, which is in some ways the repackaging of the original "multimedia" CD-ROM's of the early 1990's, but now offered as a "book." They claim to be partnered with McGraw-Hill and Pearson, and it looks like a user needs to have a perpetual account to use their material although offline access is allowed. Some features such as streaming video and music are separate from the book so they are not true stand alone files, and purchasing a book as an app is currently only for a handful of titles. The list price of several of the books is very steep, and my main concern is how well the multimedia is integrated with the text and if there is any ability to share or transfer a license, which I can't find listed in their website FAQ.
Scott Peterson

Bookless Public Library Opens In Texas - 0 views

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    The Bexar County Bibliotech Library shows both the optimism but also the problems of an all-digital. 10,000 books is a very small collection, and the library is using a vendor's platform app to supply materials. As one of the people in the article mentioned, this was also done before in 2002.
Jennifer Parsons

NASA Presents "The Earth as Art" in a Free eBook and Free iPad App | Open Culture - 0 views

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    Okay, this is pretty darn cool. Thanks, NASA!
anonymous

Generate and keep really secure passwords for free | ITworld - 0 views

  • Of course, they could look for a username that sounds like you in the list of 8 million LinkedIn and EHarmony logins and then just use the password published there, or the ones posted following the hack of 77 million user accounts at Sony or the 130 million credit-card accounts taken from the clearinghouse that processes your credit card payments, or tens of thousands lost by a New York electric utility or the California government services agency you thought was unquestionably trustworthy or the 24 million emails and user names swiped from Zappos or almost anywhere else.
  • you should use a different highly secure password at every site you use.
  • That way, no matter what web-site login database is breached next, your loss can be limited to only the information (or money) on that one site,
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • KeePass -- one of two apps with unquestioned leads; both come with Firefox and Internet Explorer extensions or web sites you can used independently; LastPass – the other of the two leaders. Both are stable, quick, reliable and free;
    • anonymous
       
      I've used LastPass. It's nice, but I prefer to have something local if possible. I'm not really concerned with their security, but it's nice to have your passwords offline.
  • KeePass;
    • anonymous
       
      This one doesn't have a browser integration but it can be kept on a usb key for portability
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