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Janos Haits

Integrate Your Apps | Zapier - Sync the Web - 8 views

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    A zap is a combination of a trigger and an action. Our dashboard lets you pause, unpause and test your zaps.
David Wetzel

Ideas and Strategies for Using Voice Thread in Science and Math - 0 views

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    Are you searching for a way to share documents, presentations, slideshows, or a series of photos or images with your students? Then Voice Thread is the free Web 2.0 tool for you and your students (teachers can register for a free education account).
Tad Vas

The Hunt for the Ultimate Curation Tool: Cliqset is Getting Closer - 1 views

  • The Hunt for the Ultimate Curation Tool: Cliqset is Getting Closer
  • If a thousand social networks bloom, with cross-network communication and real-time replies, how will you manage to find and share the best things that your friends put into your stream? Innovative social network aggregator Cliqset launched a new version this morning that offers a very interesting answer to that question. Cliqset is a service that lets you publish and subscribe to 80 different social networks, from Twitter to YouTube to Delicious to Foursquare.
  • The service's integration of the Google-led Salmon messaging protocol lets Cliqset users message across social networks, something Cliqset hopes will be adopted by many social networks and breathe new life into the long tail. If you can message people on Status.net from inside Twitter, there's all the more reason to take a long look at Status.net's interface, for example.
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • Speaking of Tweetdeck, Cliqset says it is doing API work of its own that should enable Tweetdeck to serve up streams from 80 different social networks very soon. That sounds very cool, and like something that deserves its own coverage. Cliqset is the most sophisticated, forward looking tool for stream reading on the internet today. It's also awkward, unstable, confusing and full of more potential than actualized usefulness. But that balance changes a little more with every iteration. You should check out Cliqset - sooner or later it could win you over.
David Wetzel

Opening Minds in Science and Math with a New Set of Keys - 0 views

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    The use of web based technology is growing by leaps and bounds every day. These online tools are the new set of keys for opening your students' minds. The vast resources on the Internet are making the use traditional methods of teaching and learning obsolete in countless ways.
David Wetzel

What Does the Online Digital Footprint in Your Classroom Look Like? - 1 views

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    In contrast to the digital footprint you use for your personal learning network, this focus is on the online digital footprint students' use in your science or math classroom. The power of a well designed digital footprint brings the capacity to transform a classroom into an online learning community. Within this community your students use digital tools to create and develop a personal learning network.
Eloise Pasteur

The Otherland Group - Blog: Google's Virtual World Lively, the Second Life Killer - 0 views

  • And of course, the web is already overflowing with head lines saying "The Second Life Killer is finally here!" Hmmm... While you ALWAYS have to take Google's project seriously ... is hard to see a Second Life "Killer" here.
  • Lively reminds me of IMVU, Vivaty and the early Kaneva. It is not a virtual "world" but a network of loosely connected scenes. This is a quite popular model for many platforms calling themselves "virtual worlds", which appeared on the market in the last 3 years. I am uncertain, if this model will be too successful in the long run.
  • This does not mean, that this could not reach a huge target audience. But the competition is already there. And some of the products already on the market do not look too bad. Vivaty, which has a very similar approach (as far as one can judge it now), has the big advantage of being tightly integrated with Facebook and AIM.
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    A different analysis of Lively but with a similar conclusion
Eloise Pasteur

Dusan Writer's Metaverse » Google's Lively: The Virtual World is No Metaverse and Hints in their TOS - 0 views

  • As GigaOm reports, it’s more akin to the 800 lb gorilla in the room giving a wave and saying “Yeah, I’m here.” Only it turns out that it’s wearing a tutu and has blue hair.
  • Instead, Google gives us. Hmmm. Well, it’s kind of like IMVU. Or Kaneva. And certainly a lot like Vivaty, whose integration into Facebook makes it the current, um, 3D Facebook:
  • Why Be Lively? So what gives? So far, there’s nothing NEW here, nothing that wasn’t done on a 100 other platforms. So why do it at all?
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  • Google’s Lively is basically a chat client. But then to some, so is Second Life. And it has some advantages: - The Google name and reach - Clean, sculpty looking objects - A small download - A peppy, bright, bubbly sort of chat space - Link to your Google profile and log-in information (G-mail etc.) - The ability to embed youTube videos and watch them with your friends - A maniacal giggle (with its downside that it’s text activated, just say the word laugh and you’re laughing as in “That’s nothing to laugh about”) And it has distinct disadvantages as well, in particular no support for the Mac (were they in SUCH a huge rush? Did the Vivaty launch onto Facebook accelerate their plans ahead of support for the Mac platform?), bugs, crashes, avatar limits, and a bit of a learning curve.
  • may be protected by intellectual property rights which are owned by the sponsors or advertisers who provide that Content to Google
  • And on advertising: 17.1 Some of the Services are supported by advertising revenue and may display advertisements and promotions. These advertisements may be targeted to the content of information stored on the Services, queries made through the Services or other information. 17.2 The manner, mode and extent of advertising by Google on the Services are subject to change without specific notice to you.
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    Some commentary on Lively, its possibilities as an SL killer, and its possible revenue stream. Looks more like advertising heaven so little or no chance for user created content?
anonymous

Dropbox - Home - Secure backup, sync and sharing made easy. - 0 views

  • What makes Dropbox different? Super fast We're obsessed with performance every step of the way. Effortless sync Changes to your files are instantly synced across your computers. Works like you do No complicated interface to learn.It's seamlessly integrated into your desktop. Always accessible All of your stuff is available via the web, so you can get it no matter where you are. Share the love Invite friends and family to a shared folder for easy collaboration around files. Don't worry about it Make a mistake?You can undelete files or restore old versions in a snap.
Clif Mims

Web Tools for Educators / Education Examples - 1 views

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    Examples of Web 2.0 tools being used in classrooms
Helen Baxter

drupal chat module of 123 Flash Chat Server Software - 0 views

  • With the chat module for Drupal, you will be assisted in embedding a real-time chatroom with Drupal database integrated into your website. Once logged in Drupal, users don't have to re-enter their username or password again to access chat.
Graham Perrin

Opinion: Google's wave drowns the bling in Microsoft's Bing - Software - iTnews Australia - 0 views

  • The browser battle renewed today
  • Microsoft's hand may have been moved by the launch of Wolfram|Alpha
  • much promise in connecting people to knowledge
  • ...16 more annotations...
  • the first round clearly goes to Wave
  • collaborative technology that blurs the lines between email, wiki, SMS and Twitter
  • Wave integrates many of the features of disparate systems in common use
  • application programming interfaces would make it easier for third-parties to customise web applications
  • Microsoft's Bing, launched under the NineMSN banner in Australia
  • Go offline and the wave data stayed with you
  • wave that was turned back into an e-mail
  • waves worked best on standards-compliant, Webkit browsers
  • emails (which could be translated between languages in real time) to a wave user
  • ultimately it would mean a user could save all their work in the browser and dump it on the intertubes when they go back online
  • The same held true for instant messages and tweets
  • getting people to change their rusted-on habits
  • a shift from discrete applications to just one to handle all communications
    • Graham Perrin
       
      This is almost certainly too much for me to swallow.
    • Graham Perrin
       
      I like discrete applications.
  • Safari
  • Mozilla
  • Chrome
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