Kids under 13 aren't allowed on Facebook, but that hasn't stopped many of them from joining. Now Togetherville, a social network for kids ages 6 to 10, hopes to lure them into a more age-appropriate setting, reports the Associated Press.
The warm ups from this website are very effective because can help and teach a variety of warm ups to both teacher and student. These warm ups can help all parts of physical fitness such as flexibility, muscular endurance etc. It is easy to incorporate all these warm up into the cirriculum becasue they will inform students at a younger age to always warm up before playing. All these different type of warm up can be very helpful for students when they want to participate in physical activities without the teacher there. I recommend looking at this website for more details.
This is a kid friendly site where they are able to manage and keep track of their daily step counts and daily activities. Great way to keep them thinking healthy outside the class room.
Previously mentioned web service Backupify backs up all your online accounts (Gmail, Twitter, Facebook, Flickr, and a ton more) to the cloud, normally for a nominal fee—but until January 31, 2009, all Backupify accounts will be free with unlimited storage. After this period, the service will go back to a paid pricing structure. Anyone who signs up for an account during this free period, however, will remain free—and unlimited—forever. So if you've been considering the service (or feel the need to backup your Gmail, Twitter, Facebook, Flickr, Wordpress, or many other supported online accounts), now is the time to sign up. If you don't see your service listed, sign up anyway—they've announced that YouTube and Linkedin backups are coming soon, and they plan to continue to launch support for more services. It can't hurt—after all, it doesn't get much cheaper than free. [Backupify via ZDNet]
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