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Blogs
Blogs are a great way to expand your professional persona, share your experience at events, and publish ideas. Our blogs provide an easy way to participate in the higher-education IT community. Log in today and get started!
EDUCAUSE 2009--Are You Ready?!
EDUCAUSE 2009 participants are beginning to arrive, and the EDUCAUSE staff is putting the final touches on making this one of the best annual conferences ever! Be sure to first visit us at registration in Lobby D to pick up your namebadge and tote bag. We're continuing the "self-stuffing" for totes this year, so that way you pick up only the materials you want. Greener totes, greener conference, greener Denver! If you or your colleagues were unable to make it this year, try live-streaming select sessions from the conference. (EDUCAUSE thanks Sonic Foundry for webcasting our sessions.)
xmlrpc ?
never did get the new xml rpc worked out for here, so i'be been slow posting things.
Learning about Interactive Whiteboards for the Classroom
Created by Kelly Walsh (The College of Westchester) on November 1, 2009
Examining the “State of the SMART(board)” in education.
Back in April, I researched and blogged about interactive whiteboard tools that are available as online applications. These are great tools for the classroom that are quick and easy to implement, and best of all, they are free or low cost. However, the functionality available with these applications is only a fraction of that provided by many of the installable interactive whiteboard systems available today.
EDUCAUSE 2009: Denver and Online, Here We Come!
Welcome to our Conference Highlights! During the EDUCAUSE 2009 conference, be sure to check this page remotely from your computer or on-site at the e-mail kiosks for live blogging about conference buzz and information, schedule updates, association news, the live streaming session schedule, member Flickr photos of the conference, tweets, and more.
EDUCAUSE 2009, November 3–6, is just days away! Some of you may be worried about the heavy snowstorm we just experienced in Colorado the past couple days. Rest assured, it's already melting, and we're expecting sunny 50s and 60s during the conference—welcome to Colorado! As you get ready to travel, here are some last-minute resources and reminders. Daylight saving time will end on Sunday, November 1, at 2:00 a.m.
New ELI 7 Things... Brief Explores Google Wave
Google Wave is a web-based application that represents a rethinking of electronic communication. Users create online spaces called “waves,” which include multiple discrete messages and components that constitute a running, conversational document. Users access waves through the web, resulting in a model of communication in which rather than sending separate copies of multiple messages to different people, the content resides in a single space. Wave offers a compelling platform for personal learning environments because it provides a single location for collecting information from diverse sources while accommodating a variety of formats, and it makes interactive coursework a possibility for nontechnical students.
Librarian of Congress Extends Certain Classes of Work Exemption from Prohibition on Circumvention
Created by Anna Gould (EDUCAUSE) on October 29, 2009
Librarian of Congress James Billington is extending on an interim basis an exemption from the prohibition on circumvention for certain classes of work. In other words, people are still allowed to circumvent technology protections for specific classes of work so long as they "engage in noninfringing uses." The Register of Copyrights, Marybeth Peters, is preparing a fourth triennial rulemaking proceeding in which she will issue recommendations on which classes of work are appropriate for the exemption. Originally, the three-year rule was to expire on October 27. The Register, however, was delayed in making her recommendations, so the Librarian extended the current policy. Effective October 28, the extention will remain active until the Register makes her recommendations and the Librarian of Congress issues final regulations. It is expected that final rules will be adopted in a few weeks.
Tune In November 13: Higher Education in the Age of Cloud Computing
Universities have served important functions in society for more than a thousand years. They have done so in part by creating places that promote reflection, discussion, discovery and learning. For many people, the university-as-place is central to the purposes of the university. The university is also an idea and, increasingly, ideas—in the Internet—have enormous power to stimulate learning and discovery. Indeed, what many now describe as “Web 2.0” is a view that the web is evolving into a social environment that has the potential to extend the influence and reach of institutions and individuals.
5 top-rated low cost web hosting sites (for web programmer e-portfolios)
Created by Kelly Walsh (The College of Westchester) on October 25, 2009
The final post in a series that examines tools for students to create and host e-portfolios for little or no cost. Over the last two weeks, I researched free options for creating and hosting e-portfolios for college students, to help with job search efforts. I settled on Google Sites as a great option for laying out a site to display text, images, video, web links, etc., but it won’t support Java scripting or other functionality that may be required by students who wish to display web programming savvy. With that in mind, this week I am looking into inexpensive web hosting sites.
Timely Open Education Essay As Canada Prepares to Shoot Itself in the Foot Over Copyright Regulations
Colin Currie, writing in this quarter's Educause Quarterly, offers a quick survey of the history of open education, beginning with Britain's Open University.The OU's forty-year evolution (amazing list of delivery methods) reached a new and exciting phase with its OpenLearn initiative: Free education and free educational resources for teachers around the world. A similar move at Canada's Athabasca University (Open AU). An additional move at Athabasca is the AU Press, an open source university press. At the same time the Canadian government is considering extensive changes to copyright in Canada.
Are we in the final throes of the net neutrality struggle?
It is often felt that once an issue is memorialized on paper that the real discussion and debate is already over. This may or may not be the case with the Notice of Public Rule Making (NPRM) that the FCC released yesterday, but it does make one wonder. The Republican Commissioners and AT&T in particular, are acting like the fight has just begun… but has it? Google and Verizon made a joint statement that many areas of agreement exist, including the preservation of an “open” Internet. The old worn argument that all regulation is bad and stifles the market seems a bit foolish in the light of the recent melt down of Wall Street. As chairman Genachowski pointed out, historically, regulation has often worked to maintain competition and protect the consumer, thereby strengthening, not stifling, the market.
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