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Fiona Beal

JAM with Chrome: Play music live with your friends online | Official Google Blog - 0 views

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    "JAM with Chrome: Play music live with your friends online"
Fiona Beal

This is your brain on music - CNN.com - 0 views

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    "This is your brain on music"
Fiona Beal

Free Technology for Teachers: Interactive Music Theory Lessons - 0 views

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    offers music theory lessons covering everything from basic note recognition to difficult chord inversions
Brenda Hallowes

copyrightfriendly - Copyright-friendly music and sound - 0 views

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    a site with links to copyright friendly music and sounds.
Fiona Beal

3 Steps in creating an HTML image slideshow with music | SnackTools blog - 0 views

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    "Here are the main steps in creating a music photo slideshow using PhotoSnack:"
Fiona Beal

Easily Add Musical Notation in a Google Doc - So Cool. So Simple! | Ed Tech Ideas - 0 views

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    "Easily Add Musical Notation in a Google Doc - So Cool. So Simple!"
Fiona Beal

historyteachers's Channel - YouTube - 2 views

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    Music videos we made to make teaching history more fun
Fiona Beal

Ricci Adams' Musictheory.net - 0 views

shared by Fiona Beal on 21 Nov 11 - Cached
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    music
Fiona Beal

SchoolNet SA - IT's a Great Idea: Do you know about the free Acapello App on iTunes? Mu... - 0 views

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    "Do you know about the free Acapello App on iTunes? Musical students will love it!"
Fiona Beal

14 Alternatives to SlideShare for Top-Notch Presenters | PDF Converter Tips Tricks Blog - 0 views

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    "However, SlideShare is not the only website that specializes in hosting and sharing presentations. There are other great, high-quality sites that let you upload, host and create or discover great presentations and slideshows shared by other presenters. 1. AuthorStream -  a free platform for uploading, hosting and sharing PowerPoint presentations online. It has a pretty large user base and helps you discover great presentations in various categories: business and finance, education, product manuals, science, technology, and many others. 2. Empressr  - a free online tool for creating rich media presentations without having to be a technology expert. Add images, video, audio and music to your Empressr presentations to create visual stories and share them privately or publicly in an instant. 3. MyPlick is a free service for sharing, embedding and discovering slide shows and presentations on the web. They support Microsoft PowerPoint, PDF and OpenOffice documents for slides, and various audio formats if you want to add narration to your presentations. 4. PowerShow - yet another community for hosting, sharing and viewing PowerPoint presentations online. It converts uploaded PowerPoint slides to multimedia Flash slideshows while preserving all types of embedded effects, photos and live links to YouTube videos. Everyone can publicly share and view personal and educational presentations for free. PowerShow additionally allows its users to earn money with their presentations by marking them as "pay to view" and setting a price for viewing them. 5. Prezi - a virtual whiteboard for transforming presentations into compelling stories and visually flowing lessons. Prezi is perfect for creating impressive resumes (called Presumes) and portfolios that will undoubtedly help opportunity and job seekers to stand out from the crowd. 6. Projeqt - create and share dynamic presentations from scratch or by converting old static slides. Simply upload PowerPoint, PDF
Fiona Beal

Photos you can use on your blog without breaking the law… | IFB - 1 views

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    " By: Jennine Jacob Image by Digital Sophia What kind of photos can  you use on your blog? Sure there are loads of bloggers who lift images from other sites, but due to copyright infringement laws, they may be breaking the law, and vulnerable to lawsuits. Yuck. So which images can you use? Referencing the source, isn't always enough. Some websites will allow  you to use their images for a fee, as I heard this morning from a blogger who was notified by a well-known fashion website that she had to pay to use their images… Now, I love copyright law as much as the next gal, but this particular website asks bloggers all the time for free images, and they certainly benefit from the traffic bloggers drive to their site. I had half the mind to write an angry letter to them, then I realized that maybe it's us bloggers who should band together and start charging them to use our photos, they certainly have more money than us. ❤ Before I digress… while you may not be able to use images from some of the big fashion sites on your own blog, that doesn't mean that you're at a loss. There are plenty of images out there that are free to use, you just familiarize yourself with the different kinds of licensing, and different sourcing procedures. Take your own photos When I was in design school, our teachers encouraged us to take our own photos. Why? Not because they just liked giving us additional work, but because they said that designers who use stock photography all looked the same. I think it's also true with blogs. Most of the best fashion blogs out there take their own photos, because you're really seeing things from the authors unique perspective. Learning about photography is also fun, and you're site will benefit from having a distinct look and feel from it that will stand out from the rest. And no one can sue you unless you publish a picture of someone without a model release. Ask for press photos I've had pretty good luck with this, design
Fiona Beal

Movie-making for everyone | Plotagon - 0 views

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    "Plotagon lets anyone create an animated movie directly from a written screenplay. Write your story, choose characters, settings and music. Press play and your movie is done. It's that simple."
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