Over the past few months I have been trailing various offline blog writers. On Windows I’ve tried Zoundry which I found very easy to use and Microsoft Livewriter which while in Beta (still in development) is pretty good and I guess my pick for xp. On the Mac I’ve tried Ecto and Marsedit and have decided to go with Marsedit. My reasoning is it was the easiest to use while trailing so many different ones. I would like to hear any others using anything better and of course there is online which is what I use anyway since it is seldom I don’t have a connection. Mind you Edublogs has been down for a week for an upgrade and it was handy to have somewhere to get things down to upload later. Thus when I’ve finished editing a bunch of posts they will be there.
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Here’s something that I assume will eventually come to NZ, Google street view as viewed on google maps. Some cities in the US are completed, the following image comes from Castro street in San Francisco.
Maybe you’ve seen one cruising the streets in your city: A platinum gray Volkswagen Beetle with a camera that looks like a small disco ball fixed to the roof. They’ve been driving the streets in major cities across the country, snapping some 125 million images to be digitally woven into 360-degree views of everything from New York’s South Street Seaport to San Francisco’s Haight-Ashbury neighborhood.
For a laugh check out some of the random images snapped at mashable.
“Progress should mean that we are always changing the world to fit the vision, instead we are always changing the vision.” – G. K. Chesterton, 1908
I heard this on a podcast today and it reminded me of a statement made in this address where David Tuck, National President of the Head teachers in the UK stated that:
“We have: an overabundance, a glut, a surfeit, an excess, an embarrassment of initiatives. I don’t know what the collective noun for initiatives is, but in this instance I would like to suggest it might be a “lunacy of initiatives”.
In reading through his whole address there are a number of issues he brings up that certainly apply to New Zealand schools, especially with the constantly increasing political pressures for schools to deal with everything from obesity, “P” to road safety. I recall when teaching in the UK my school was in the process of being replaced by a privatised business academy, from visiting their website I see that they have still been having problems with ofsted (UK ERO) and although the buildings look impressive I don’t believe privatisation is the answer, rather I hope we can try and manage the changes better. So before testing reaches levels like in the US (I see there is serious testing for pre school) let us have these discussions as a education community.
Having used the flv player and then the anyflv player I am now converted to democracy player. It is Mac and PC and seems to play pretty much anything in full screen mode.
Stumbling upon the Paris in Prison photos on a wiki site made me realise the scope of wiki’s for a wider purpose, not that I’m encouraging you to create a fan site for the socialite but it was funny all the same.
While I find writing a blog entry a chore at times, contributing to wikipedia or a wikispace is fairly easy. All you have to do is click on the edit tab and while having rubbish written on a wiki does happen it is easy enough with PBWiki or any of the other free options such as Ben Nolan’s and Foopad really it is a matter of personal preference. For some examples of ones being used by teachers check out this wiki or this one on pbwiki. Some of the quotes from the page express its simplicity
The interface is easy to use. I made my wiki in less than 15 minutes.
- Paula M. Storm
Assistant Professor & Science Technology Librarian, Eastern Michigan University
The results have been great. Simple to use (no reading of instructions), bugs
that we had with uploads were fixed without having to report them, and the
service is fast.
- Doug Chang, private tutor
Want to start a blog in Iran? Then you’ll have to register it with the government – which has recently begun to require that all bloggers register at samandehi.ir, a site established by the ministry of culture of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s government. All you need do is give your personal information, including your blog’s
username and password – otherwise it will be filtered and blocked so that nobody in Iran, and perhaps outside too, will be able to access it. This has led to an outcry among many Iranian bloggers who consider the net an independent and free forum for expression.
And then I followed the links to the President’s personal blog wow in english and farsi. The comments alone are enough to help with a social studies class.
Quite important to share this information from David Warlick about blogging and while the statistics are from teachers who use blogging so they will be reasonably positive, I enjoyed the statistics regarding the care they take with their writing on a blog. I guess for our two colleges we have to get over the students initial issues with writing rubbish on wikis and blogs (eg the attack on the katikati college wikipedia entry) but this will pass and then we should hopefully see similar results to those quoted in these statistics. Also for a great blog site for students check out the schol site from ncowie.