Edu_RSS
El Mundo and ElPais.es On Top of Malofiej Awards
Spanish newspapers are traditionally among the best in infographics but the 13th Malofiej awards have put them on top of the list. El Mundo and El Pais.es have both been awarded with the Peter Sullivan best-of-show prize in print and online category respectively. El Mundo was honored for its coverage of the March 11 terrorist attacks while ElPais.es was so for its presentation on the anniversary of Cervantes' Don Quixote. The announcement of the awarded works is on the
official weblog (in English), which has also been publishing short pieces of e From
Poynter E-Media Tidbits on March 21, 2005 at 10:54 p.m..
ID position - BCIT
INSTRUCTIONAL DEVELOPMENT CONSULTANT BCIT LEARNING AND TEACHING CENTRE The BCIT Learning and Teaching Centre (LTC) provides a wide array of program, curriculum and instructor development services that support learning and teaching in a variety of delivery modes at BCIT. As... From
Rick's Café Canadien on March 21, 2005 at 10:53 p.m..
[pcf05] Trumba breakout
Trumba is an online calendar strong at aggregating group calendars. It looks full featured. Subscription based. Integrates with existing calendering tools. In beta. Jason Calacanis asks why this is different than Yahoo calendar. They say: No ads. It will cost under $50/year. The Seattle Times is using Trumba, e.g., when you use their movie schedule, but the focus is on end-user sales. In their presentation, they make too many big claims about revolutionizing and democratizing parenting, communities, large organizations, etc. In my view: It'd be enough if it were a really great calendar. [ From
Joho the Blog on March 21, 2005 at 10:48 p.m..
Volunteers Needed Urgently: Help ALA Stop the FCC's Unlawful
"Many of you already know about ALA's involvement (with other library associations) in challenging the FCC's 'Broadcast Flag' rule, a rule that will prevent librarians from being able to distribute or make available copies of broadcast television programs on the internet. It will also require you to purchase new electronic equipment that your library now uses to read or manipulate digital television signals (such as DVD players, recorders, TiVos, appropriately equipped computers, etc.) if that equipment is not Flag-compliant and your library does not already ow From
The Shifted Librarian on March 21, 2005 at 10:04 p.m..
Working Draft: Compound Document Use Cases and Requirements
2005-03-15: The Compound Document Formats Working Group has released the First Public Working Draft of Compound Document by Reference Use Cases and Requirements Version 1.0. A compound document combines multiple formats, such as XHTML, SVG, XForms, MathML and SMIL. This draft introduces compounding by a reference like img, object, link, src and XLink. Compounding by inclusion is planned for a later phase. Visit the Compound Document home page. (News archive) From
World Wide Web Consortium on March 21, 2005 at 10:03 p.m..
Last Call: Timed Text Distribution Profile
2005-03-21: The Timed Text (TT) Working Group has released a Last Call Working Draft of the Timed Text (TT) Authoring Format 1.0 Distribution Format Exchange Profile (DFXP). The format enables authors and authoring systems to interchange style, layout and timing associated with text. DFXP helps to transform and distribute subtitles and captions to legacy systems. Comments are welcome through 11 April. Visit the Synchronized Multimedia home page. (News archive) From
World Wide Web Consortium on March 21, 2005 at 10:03 p.m..
InfoWorld power search
I've cooked up a little filter for InfoWorld.com's Ultraseek search results. It has always seemed to me that stuff like this should be much easier to find: ... From
Jon's Radio on March 21, 2005 at 10:03 p.m..
Don't throw out the SOAP with the bathwater
I showed up twice in print this week defending the WS-* technologies. First, in my column: What goes around comes around. Three years ago, mine was one of the voices urging the Web services movement not to lose touch with the Web's essential nature, as embodied in the architectural style known as REST (Representational State Transfer). Perverse devil's advocate that I am, I'll now switch sides and urge the REST movement not to dismiss Web services and SOA (service-oriented architecture). ... Now that the benefits of RES From
Jon's Radio on March 21, 2005 at 10:03 p.m..
New Stormwater Information Website Launched to Assist Professionals in Making Informed Decisions about Stormwater
StormwaterAuthority.org offers comprehensive, relevant resources, news, and information, to assist civil engineers, contractors, site owners, developers, and municipal planners with stormwater management decisions. [PRWEB Mar 16, 2005] From
PR Web on March 21, 2005 at 10:02 p.m..
Comerica Sponsored "JA in a Day" Event to take place at Purche Avenue School
On March 17, 2005, over 30 volunteers from Comerica Bank will teach the Junior Achievement programs to 681 students kindergarten through 5th grade students at Purche Avenue School, 13210 Purche Aveune, Gardena, CA 90249. Junior Achievement's "JA in a Day" program teaches children how they can impact the world around them as individuals, workers and consumers. Comerica is providing one employee for each classroom to facilitate the Junior Achievement activities from 7:30 a.m. HYPHEN12:30 p.m. [PRWEB Mar 17, 2005] From
PR Web on March 21, 2005 at 10:02 p.m..
National Flirting Expert to Hold Romance Lessons
Susan Bradley, R.N., noted romance expert, having appeared in numerous articles and on national television, will hold workshops at Sacramento's Learning Exchange this weekend. [PRWEB Mar 17, 2005] From
PR Web on March 21, 2005 at 10:02 p.m..
Girl Scouts and Boy Scouts Pack Teddy Bears for Peace for Iraqi Orphans
The American Health Association, an award winning non-profit community service organization, through its "American Volunteer Corps" has collected 25,000 beanie babies, Teddy Bears, dolls and stuffed animals for the Orphans of War Campaign in Iraq. On Saturday, March 19, 2005 at Heritage Park West in Delray Beach, Florida, the Girl Scouts and Boy Scouts will roll up their sleeves and pack the stuffed toys for shipment. [PRWEB Mar 17, 2005] From
PR Web on March 21, 2005 at 10:01 p.m..
Company Morphs Failed Consumer Electronics Product into an Open Source Educational Kit
Things don't always work out as planned. Once Zan Oliphant, founder of Seattle area garage startup Zanware, realized he couldn't find investors to mass-produce his company's in-wall TCP/IP PC controller, he decided to open up the entire product for the education and hobbyist market. "Investors want to make money, but engineers like me want to make cool things HYPHEN we just didn't see eye-to-eye on that," said Oliphant. [PRWEB Mar 17, 2005] From
PR Web on March 21, 2005 at 10:01 p.m..
Kwintessential Launch New Intercultural Awareness Game
Intercultural awareness is increasingly being recognised as an important skill in today's global economy. Kwintessential have launched a new online Intercultural Awareness game providing a fun introduction into the subject. [PRWEB Mar 17, 2005] From
PR Web on March 21, 2005 at 10:01 p.m..
BP Fuels Up its Online Learning
BP signs a major e-learning deal to transform learning across its business HYPHEN making use of the latest technology to enable a worldwide learning organisation. [PRWEB Mar 17, 2005] From
PR Web on March 21, 2005 at 10:01 p.m..
New Self-Help/Inspirational Novel Draws Praise, Inspires A Musical
A new, self-help/inspirational novel, "The Obstacle Course", by Neal R. Voron, co-founder of RyKy Records (tm), is earning praise from teachers, business people, self-help experts, students, and others for its "pearls of wisdom" about succeeding in the "obstacle course of life". The story has already inspired a musical, due to be released this year as a CD album. Purchasers of the book on Friday, March 18, 2005, can get a sneak peek at streaming audios of a pre-release draft version of the entire musical, plus other bonus items, including "This is Your Life, Not a Dress Rehearsal" by Jim Don From
PR Web on March 21, 2005 at 10:01 p.m..
All You Gotta Do is Ask
A new book on Change Management tells how to release the vast creative intelligence locked within each individual. When workers are simply asked for their ideas and allowed to implement those ideas themselves a dynamic change takes place for both the individual and the organization. [PRWEB Mar 18, 2005] From
PR Web on March 21, 2005 at 10:01 p.m..
Legislators Seek to Curb Underage Drinking
With Spring Break and the NCAA Basketball Tournament among us, combating alcohol advertisements and consumption among young persons is a challenge [PRWEB Mar 18, 2005] From
PR Web on March 21, 2005 at 10:01 p.m..
Science Kit Announces Science Education Partnership Program
Science Kit, a leading educational science supplies company that has been serving the elementary, middle school and high school communities for nearly 50 years, announced today the launch of a new partnership program aimed at science museum websites, school and teacher websites and other science related non-commerce sites. [PRWEB Mar 18, 2005] From
PR Web on March 21, 2005 at 10:01 p.m..
Through the Ages: An Abbreviated History of Our World - by Roger Clapp is an Abbreviated History of the World
Roger Clapp was raised in New England and served as a radioman in the U.S. Navy during the Korean War. Upon graduation from Amherst College cum laude with a degree in history in 1954, he spent 39 years in the advertising business. He maintained his interest in history, however, with the impetus behind the writing of "Through the Ages" stemming from the author's many years as a history buff trying to cope with the mass of information labeled "history." This was especially true throughout his children's education, where he witnessed the frustration that they faced as they progressed fr From
PR Web on March 21, 2005 at 10:01 p.m..
High Schools in Chicago, IL
Public and Private high schools in the Chicago area with Senior Counselor's contact information [PRWEB Mar 19, 2005] From
PR Web on March 21, 2005 at 10:01 p.m..
Writers University
Writers Store(R) LLC today announced their first slate of courses from WritersUniversity.com, a new online learning center featuring a select team of established film- and writing-industry experts. The Writers University faculty is comprised of educators and authors from various fields of creative writing who provide specialized web-based courses developed from years of real-world experience. [PRWEB Mar 20, 2005] From
PR Web on March 21, 2005 at 10:01 p.m..
Ambitions 4 Academy
Various courses like basic photography course,advanced photography course,visual media courses,advertising photography,product photography,practical photography,digital photography,professional photography course. [PRWEB Mar 21, 2005] From
PR Web on March 21, 2005 at 10:01 p.m..
Four2Eight Feet, Inc. Releases New Web site to Assist New Texas Holdem Players
Four2Eight Feet, Inc. has just released their newest web site, www.basictexasholdem.com. The site provide basic strategies, rules, suggested reading, and other information for those new to the game. Although content is being added to to site daily it is now available for viewing and use. [PRWEB Mar 21, 2005] From
PR Web on March 21, 2005 at 10:01 p.m..
Lawn Care Business Start Up Guide Released
Aspiring Lawn Care Business Owners finally have expert guidance at a reasonable cost to start or maximize their lawn care business. [PRWEB Mar 21, 2005] From
PR Web on March 21, 2005 at 10:01 p.m..
never again
So I did something today for the very last time in my life. I'm publishing a comment in the Minnesota Law Review about an article by Brett Frischmann titled "An Economic Theory of Infrastructure." His is a great article; I was happy to write the comment. But today, on the brink of publication, I had to confront the "Publication Agreement." In order to give the Minnesota Law Review my work, I have also to give them my copyright. In particular, they get the "exclusive right to authorize the publication, reproduction, and distribution" of my work. They have in turn sold that right to Lexis From
Lessig Blog on March 21, 2005 at 10:01 p.m..
Code v2.0 and the CC-Wiki license
The wikification of
Code has
launched. To all the insanely insightful souls who've criticized and extended the book, welcome.
Creative Commons has also taken this opportunity to launch a beta version of a newly branded tweak of an old license -- the
CC-Wiki license. We've been talking to wiki developers for some time now. They've been looking for a license that was (1) share alike, but (2) require From
Lessig Blog on March 21, 2005 at 10:01 p.m..
Voluntary Student Unionism Legislation Introduced
The Higher Education Support Amendment (Abolition of Compulsory Up-front Student Union Fees) Bill 2005 has been introduced to Parliament. The bill and the Explanatory Memorandum are available on the Parliament of Australia website. From
EdNA Online on March 21, 2005 at 10:00 p.m..
MANE blogrolling
Some of you may have noticed the addition of a blogroll to these pages, down a little on the right menu bar. This is a list of blogs we tend to read and link to, which means a group of... From
MANE IT Network on March 21, 2005 at 9:55 p.m..
Career Change Story
Former auto mechanic and rock 'n roll musician Frank Koscielski returned to college at the age of 37. He describes the experience as, "an epiphany, an awakening to new possibilities." Learn how Frank got an PhD and transformed his life.... From
Adult/Continuing Education on March 21, 2005 at 9:47 p.m..
Gustave Flaubert: manuscripten van Madame Bovary
http://www.univ-rouen.fr/flaubert/ De NRC schrijft over de Flaubert-site bij de universiteit van Rouen waar gewerkt wordt aan een transcriptie van de manuscripten van Flauberts Madame Bovary. Men heeft e.e.a. uitgewerkt voor een klein deel van het boek: eerste deel, hoofdstuk zes. Vanuit de tekst van het boek kan per alinea geklikt worden om te gaan naar een overzicht (voorbeeld), per tekstfragment, van de bronnen voor de betreffende alina. Van de bronnen zijn er verschillende typen: ontwerpen voor de roman, kladversies, een 'definitief' manuscript, en de versie van een copiist. E From
CHI weblog elektronisch publiceren on March 21, 2005 at 8:00 p.m..
A Columnist Adds Depth
You don't have to like New York Times op-ed columnist
Maureen Dowd's point of view to enjoy the way she writes and gets it across (well, maybe you do!) Now there's new depth in her column. In
"A Wink and a Fraud" last week (obvioulsy, Dowd is building up material for
online library of publications. If you are interested in these kinds of topics, be prepared to set aside many hours for what you find, (and also to turn on your 'academic publications' From
EdTechPost on March 21, 2005 at 7:52 p.m..
Summer Founders
The brilliant Paul Graham is offering to seed some summer projects that could turn into start-ups. Take a look... [Technorati tag: PaulGraham]... From
Joho the Blog on March 21, 2005 at 7:49 p.m..
Micah on Schiavo
As the American government loses whatever tiny shred of genuine decency it had and as the American media loses its last breath of proportionality, Micah Sifry blogs about how the Schiavo affair ever made it out of the waiting room where a devastated family was faced with a tragic choice. [Technorati tag: schiavo]... From
Joho the Blog on March 21, 2005 at 7:49 p.m..
Steven Levy Critiques Weblog Diversity
The blogosphere abuzz with debate concerning issues raised in this recent column by Newsweek Senior Editor Steven Levy: "
Blogging Beyond the Men's Club Since anyone can write a weblog, why is the blogosphere dominated by white males?" Levy notes: "Why, when millions of blogs are written by all sorts of people, does the top rung look so homogeneous [white and male]? ...The top-down mainstream media have to some degree found the will and the means to administer such care [to make sure public dis From
Poynter E-Media Tidbits on March 21, 2005 at 6:54 p.m..
[pcf05] Presenting companies
Companies who get their own positions have 2 mins each to give us an overview. Here are my one sentence summaries of their 2 min summaries: Trumba: We help people build calendar networks. EVDB: (Brian Dear, yay!) Did you ever find out about an event after the fact? Endeca: Guides users through complex sets of choices. (= faceted classification) Siderean: Guides uesrs through complex sets of choices. (= faceted classification, but also manages ontologies) Impinge: Chips the size of a grain of sand for RFIDS. Grouper: Share music and videos to "socialize your media." Epocrates: Deliver info to d From
Joho the Blog on March 21, 2005 at 6:49 p.m..
[pcf05] IRC
Join the IRC: irc.freenote.net #pcforum [Technorati tag: pcforum]... From
Joho the Blog on March 21, 2005 at 6:49 p.m..
[pcf05] Security and Identity
What will computing be like in 5 years? Jayshree Ullal (Cisco): There are no secure perimeters. We need to be much more real-world. It's going to be based on defining trust domains — the school you're from, the location you're from — which will be different than now when everything is separtae, e.g., you anti-virus, your firewall, etc. Esther: Will we be able to go to an Internet cafe and anonymously log on? Ullal: You shouldn't be allowed to now. We need authentication and feedback mechanisms, etc. [Ack!] John Thompson (Symantec): We should keep the Net environ From
Joho the Blog on March 21, 2005 at 5:49 p.m..
[pcforum05] Mulcahy, Schwartz, Ward
Steve Ward of IBM talks about its Chinese business. He says it's an international team with more women than men. [He also says he keeps a list of attendees at meetings and checks people off as they talk, which, although it's undoubtedly a good management technique, I find slightly creepy.] Anne Mulcahy (Xerox) talks about the partnership with Fuji. Jonathan Schwartz (Sun) talks about doing business in China. [I found little unexpected in their responses, so I zoned out. Sorry.] Esther asks what you do about corruption? Ward says that you make clear that your company has certain belie From
Joho the Blog on March 21, 2005 at 4:49 p.m..
Trek-based science
Diana Schaub is against cloning in part because of what she's learned watching Star Trek, which is, basically, that death is a part of the great circle of life: The show has "left me receptive to the view that mortality is, if not precisely a good thing, then at least the necessary foundation of other very good things," she wrote in an article last year. "There is something misguided about the attempt to overcome mortality." ..."Both Lincoln and the Enterprise argue that there ought to be certain moral limits to the scientific project, and they help us articulate what those... From
Joho the Blog on March 21, 2005 at 4:49 p.m..
Links in Books
(via
Tim) I've been lamenting lately how difficult it has become for me to read books these days because a) I think my brain is getting used to the shorter snippets of blog reading and b) because they don't have any links. I can't tell you how many times I've wanted to click on a word to see what it means or get more information from a primary source. Well, there looks like there might somewhat of a solution to problem b) from
Atlantic Monthly which h From
weblogged News on March 21, 2005 at 4:47 p.m..
Women in Online Media: My Letter to Newsweek
The March 21 issue of Newsweek includes an intriguing column by Senior Editor Steven Levy: "Blogging Beyond the Men's Club – Since anyone can write a weblog, why is the blogosphere dominated by white males?" This has sparked quite a debate online, in weblogs, podcasts, and discussion forums. I shared my thoughts on this topic in the following letter to Levy... From
Contentious Weblog on March 21, 2005 at 3:54 p.m..
The very long half-marathon
Saturday morning I ran the Brooklyn Half-Marathon, a supposed final "tune-up" before the Paris Marathon which looms before me on April 10th. Since I've been skiing a lot more than I should be, and running a lot less (with the slim hope that all the skiing will be close enough to running to "count"), I'd lowered my goal for Paris from Sub 4:30 Marathon to Just Finish and Have Fun. Judging by my performance on Saturday, Just Finish will be a challenge, and Have Fun will be unachievable. Guh! Who would have thought 13.1 miles could be sooooo looooong? Perhaps it was because I skied fo From
megnut on March 21, 2005 at 3:45 p.m..
My Night Bunking with The Sifry's
The Sifry boys, Dave and Micah, are out like lights — they are so cute when they're asleep! — so I'm writing this from under a "tent" I made with my blanket and my knees. I told them I wouldn't be blogging this, but, what the heck, I don't think they'll mind. We're sharing a room at PCForum, and I know their many fans would love a peek into what they're like when they're not out indexing blogs or fighting for our rights. I was in bed reading when I heard them fumbling at the door, so I quick as... From
Joho the Blog on March 21, 2005 at 2:49 p.m..
Google is hiring
Google is hiring someone to work on a UI for blogging... (Thanks to Steve Garfield.) [Technorati tags: google blogs]... From
Joho the Blog on March 21, 2005 at 2:49 p.m..
OurMedia launches
JD Lasica's and Marc Canter's OurMedia.org has launched, "a grassroots media organization, site and registry." Here's the one-line explanation from the home page: "Share your videos, audio files, photos, text or software - for free - with a global community of creative individuals." Looks good, especially for an alpha release. [Technorati tag: media]... From
Joho the Blog on March 21, 2005 at 1:48 p.m..
The Needs of the One
...simply can't distract the entire world from the deaths of the many. Or can they? President Bush has, for the very first time in is entire presidency, cut his vacation short in order to return to the White House and sign an arguably unconstitutional bill forcing a feeding tube to be shoved back down the throat of a brain-dead woman in Florida. This unprecedented action by Bush (cutting his vacation short) attests to the newsworthiness of the issue.I knew Karl Rove would figure out a way to revive this lame duck president from his failure to convince Americ From
rushkoff.blog on March 21, 2005 at 1:45 p.m..
Google Faces a Law Suit Over Syndication
Agence France-Presse (AFP) has sued internet search giant Google for $17.5 million in damages for copyright infringement. The news agency, which is headquartered in Paris, says that Google has been publishing photos, headlines and news stories without AFP permission on its popular Google News Beta. "We allow publishers to opt out of Google News but most publishers want to be included because they believe it is a benefit to them and to their readers," Google spokesman Steve Langdon told Reuters. AFP sells subscriptions for its news content to so From
RSS Blog on March 21, 2005 at 11:59 a.m..
Generation Y Embraces SMS - Rob McGann, ClickZ
Among the nation's 134 million adult cell phone users, people between the ages of 18 to 27 are the widest users of text messaging, according to a study by the Pew Internet & American Life Project. The study was based on a nationwide phone survey of 1,460 From
Techno-News Blog on March 21, 2005 at 11:49 a.m..
(re) Descubriendo blogs
Una selección periódica, muy personal, de buenos weblogs de hoy y de ayer. Arte Club Leteo Tempus Fugit por Raquel Herrera Ciencia El Navegante Internet Time Blog por Jay Cross Educación Blog du Professeur Xavier Strubel: Ce blog a pour... From
eCuaderno v.2.0 on March 21, 2005 at 10:51 a.m..
A Little Moolah Goes a Long Way
Xbox games will soon contain a new system of microtransactions -- a few cents to a couple dollars for things to enhance gameplay. The embedded 'store' tallies will yield a revenue stream of maybe $5 million per game for game publishers. From
Wired News on March 21, 2005 at 10:46 a.m..
Scammers Snag Money on Net Phones
Using caller ID spoofing, electronic grifters can take not only your identity, but they can also transfer your money directly out of an account. The low security level in voice over internet protocol, or VOIP, makes it possible. From
Wired News on March 21, 2005 at 10:46 a.m..
Are Socialites Still Networking?
Social networking sites were all the buzz last year, and Friendster was spreading like a social disease. Where are they now? By Joanna Glasner. From
Wired News on March 21, 2005 at 10:46 a.m..
Diesel Hybrids on the Fast Track
Hybrid vehicles -- powered by gas and electricity -- are the trendy picks for the fuel-economy crowd, but they may soon play second fiddle to the next generation of diesel cars. By John Gartner. From
Wired News on March 21, 2005 at 10:45 a.m..
Graeme Daniel
Looking at the growing mountain of ICT-based materials intended for use by teachers in classrooms, and given the relatively low level of feedback from readers, we sometimes pause to wonder about teachers' attitudes, opinions and practices From
wwwtools on March 21, 2005 at 9:47 a.m..
e-Learning sees schools hit the superhighway
via.. ScotFEICT The UK government has announced plans for: "Every school in England will also get broadband internet access by next year, under new plans aimed at using the latest digital technology to improve the classroom experience." "Pupils will also... From
ERADC Blog on March 21, 2005 at 7:46 a.m..
Sunday, March 20, 2005
I would like to state that I am king of Mario Kart Double Dash – if only in Casa de Tjahjono – as I crushed the old hen in eight out of ten races tonight. From
RHPT.com on March 21, 2005 at 5:54 a.m..
Nearing Grokster
Petitioners have filed their
reply brief in Grokster. Nothing too unexpected; some egregiously bad arguments (see footnote 5, for instance). Pay careful attention to the arguments on both sides about what past conduct/versions of the software are actually before the court. EFF has posted
a very helpful summary of the various positions on both sides. And EFF is also running
A Copyfighter's Musings on March 21, 2005 at 5:45 a.m..
Credibility: Whose News to Choose? (Audio)
We have met the gatekeepers, and they are us! Online media gives average people direct access to the kind of primary information that formerly only trained journalists would get. Plus, net users get exposed to a diversity of issues and perspectives that's far broader than what mass media could ever present. Still, most of us were raised on mass media. We're used to equating credibility with traditional journalistic news organizations. We used to know what "real news" was, and where you found it. We used to know whose news to believe. That was a very dangerous illusion. Now it's From
Contentious Weblog on March 21, 2005 at 2:52 a.m..
The 18 commandments of knowledge-conscious managers
Martin Dugage has written an article on the 18 commandments of knowledge-conscious managers. To quote: I like the idea that Knowledge Management is really about Knowledge Conscious Management, or to put it differently, Managing in the Knowledge Age as Professor... From
Column Two on March 21, 2005 at 1:47 a.m..
flickr -> yahoo (danah boyd)
Although probably the worst kept secret in social software’s history, Flickr finally announces that Yahoo! will be acquiring them. If done right, this can be quite beneficial for everyone, especially if, as reported, Yahoo! doesn’t try to swallow it and... From
Corante: Social Software on March 21, 2005 at 12:47 a.m..
Simple rules for CoP self-organisation
Shawn Callahan has written a blog entry outlining some simple rules for CoP self-organisation. To quote: Communities of practice are often regarded, with good reason, as self-organising social systems. I was wondering the other day whether some simple rules for... From
Column Two on March 21, 2005 at 12:45 a.m..
Cool tool: SlideShowPro
If you are into making audio slideshows like the ones you see in NY Times, or putting photo galleries on the Web, check out
SlideShowPro. It's Flash-based and really simple to use. It gives an aesthetic and professional feel to your presentation. I' m lovin' it! From
elearningpost on March 21, 2005 at 12:45 a.m..