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sanamuah

The ultimate guide to finding free, legal images online | Macworld - 1 views

  • You may not realize it, but if you use Google to find an image and then use it in a project, you’re likely breaking the law. Unless you’ve been given permission to use the image by its creator, then you cannot legally or ethically use it. Happily, there’s an easy way to find images on Google that you can use, plus a slew of other sources for high-quality images that won’t cost you a dime—either up front or later on in a lawsuit.
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    Some useful image repositories
Tom Woodward

Home - Find Images - Research Guides at Virginia Commonwealth University - 3 views

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    How the library guides image searches . . .
William

Kevin's Meandering Mind | When Words Become Image Become Sound - 0 views

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    Fascinating conceptual work to explore the use of data to look/listen to something from different perspectives.
Tom Woodward

Off the 3-D Printer, Practice Parts for the Surgeon - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    "Before he operated on Violet, Dr. Meara wanted a more precise understanding of her bone structure than he could get from an image on a screen. So he asked his colleague Dr. Peter Weinstock to print him a three-dimensional model of Violet's skull, based on magnetic resonance imaging pictures."
Tom Woodward

Archivist declares medieval manuscript fragment crowdsourcing project success | Cultura... - 1 views

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    "Now, 369 images, several conference presentations, and more than 67,000 views later, there's evidence that crowdsourcing can work with even the most archaic of subjects. Twenty-eight individuals (from amateur enthusiasts to established scholars) contributed to the project by providing input via comments on the Flickr page. A number of other individuals assisted through emails or phone calls. Thus far, 94 of the 116 identifiable fragments have been identified, and nearly 57 percent of those were identified through crowdsourcing (by date, region, or the text itself). "
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    "Now, 369 images, several conference presentations, and more than 67,000 views later, there's evidence that crowdsourcing can work with even the most archaic of subjects. Twenty-eight individuals (from amateur enthusiasts to established scholars) contributed to the project by providing input via comments on the Flickr page. A number of other individuals assisted through emails or phone calls. Thus far, 94 of the 116 identifiable fragments have been identified, and nearly 57 percent of those were identified through crowdsourcing (by date, region, or the text itself). "
William

Google's Image Recognition Software Can Now Describe Entire Scenes - 0 views

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    This is interesting on several levels. This data could inspire creative work in many disciplines.
Jonathan Becker

The Evolution of an Accidental Meme - Medium - 1 views

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    "We all benefit from the free and open exchange of ideas, and I'm just glad this image has been part of that exchange."
anonymous

My mechanical friend - 2 views

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    Built on shorthand.com . Interesting example of assembling text, images, GIFs, and video in one space--all with a strong narrative element. What if course "modules" were presented this way? Traditional narrative structure, but multimedia elements.
Yin Wah Kreher

VisMet - 0 views

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    Metaphor Lab (Amsterdam), aimed at creating a corpus or visual metaphors, i.e. a database of annotated images that stimulate the viewer to create one or more A-is-B correspondences.
anonymous

"Modern" homepage design increases pageviews and reader comprehension, study ... - 5 views

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    "News sites with modular, image-heavy designs receive more pageviews and have stronger user engagement than sites with more staid, newspaper-inspired designs, according to a report"
Yin Wah Kreher

ESCAPE FROM FLATNESS | educationalchemy - 1 views

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    Maxine Greene (1995) writes:

    "The role of the imagination is not to resolve, not to point the way, not to improve.  It is to awaken, to disclose the ordinarily unseen, unheard, and unexpected" (p. 28)

    In this age of constant information and busy lives, it's difficult to get teachers and parents to read large amounts of research, or to understand the importance of boycotts, resolutions or petitions. The information we wish to share regarding the ill purpose and effects of corporate ownership of education must be expressed using all of the senses, in our bodied actions-instantaneously and with the emotion it warrants. As Nick Sousanis considers, we have to remember that conception (i.e as what we believe, what we think of as "real") largely comes through our perception (i.e what we see with our eyes and how we construct meaning).

    Greene writes that through the "art of knowing"-"The experience and knowledge gained  by this way of knowing opens new modalities for us in the lived world; it brings us in touch with our primordial landscapes, our original acts of perceiving" (p. 149).

    We need to redesign the social landscape with new images, new stories, new ways of understanding what corporate reform "is" and how it works.  What we need is action-creative action collectively inspired in local communities and through national organizing-to UNFLATTEN our worlds.
Yin Wah Kreher

The Geography of Poverty - 3 views

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    images + storymap
Yin Wah Kreher

Ways of Seeing: The Contemporary Photo Essay | TIME - 1 views

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    "In this seven-part series, TIME looks back over the past 12 months to identify some of the ways of seeing-whether conceptually, aesthetically or through dissemination-that have grabbed our attention and been influential in maintaining photography's relevance in an ever shifting environment, media landscape, and culture now ruled by images."
Jonathan Becker

A Brief History of Failure - NYTimes.com - 1 views

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    "What follows is - depending on how you want to think about it - either a gallery of technologies we lost or an invitation to consider alternate futures. Some of what might have been is fantastical: a subway powered by air, an engine run off the heat of your palm. Some of what we lost, on the other hand, is more subtle, like a better way to bowl or type. As new standards emerge, variety fades, and a single technology becomes entrenched. (That's why the inefficient Qwerty keyboard has proved so difficult to unseat.) We can take heart, however, in the fact that good ideas never disappear forever; the Stirling engine didn't pan out in the Industrial Revolution, for example, but it can keep the lights on for a small village. As you look through the images, then, please consider not only what might have been but what could still be again."
sanamuah

Clever App Reveals a Snapshot of Your Location-In the Past | WIRED - 0 views

  • The app aims to bring glimpses of history to your smartphone screen, using images tied to wherever you happen to be. Users receive notifications when they’re near a “pivot” point; raising the phone brings up an image of that place as it appeared from that vantage point decades ago.
sanamuah

Inline Comments - Kevin Weber - 0 views

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    "Inline Comments adds your comment system to the side of paragraphs and other sections (like headlines and images) of your post. It performs native with WordPress comments."
sanamuah

App turns your writing into trippy 3D images - 0 views

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    "WordsEye"
michaelreis

SACSCOC Best Practices/OLC scorecard for ID approaches - 1 views

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    From another institution-- scorecard breaking down popular instructional design metrics (e.g. Quality Matters) with SACSCOC online/blended best practices for compliance.
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