« change | Main | curriculum »
Monday, October 08, 2007
Here Comes Interactive Video Streaming
Somebody, in analyzing how new technologies come to be used by the general public described the adoption process as a bell curve. The early adopters (5-10%) are on the left of the curve, the masses are in the middle, and there are some late adopters on the right. One of the reasons I like reading blogs, is because you can tap into the early adopters knowledge of new technologies without having to try everything yourself. I'd put myself at the end of the early adopters on the curve. This week I've heard about two new sites that support video-conferencing in different contexts. Will Richardson mentions UStream which is a site that allows you to stream your webcam and/or watch others doing this. Obviously not a new concept, but this site makes it easy enough that it is reaching a wide part of the bell curve. The implications for education and professional development have to do with the ease with which you could now stream yourself out there. Oovoo got mentioned at the School 2.0 ning site. It allows up to 6 simultaneos video streams to be shared for video conferencing and also includes a feature to send video emails. Pretty cool stuff.
Wednesday, January 10, 2007
Putting the Printing Press in Perspective
This is an incredible time! It seems like every day brings news of some new tool or an easier way to do something that extends our ability to communicate, interact, and publish online. Today on the wizards list-serv someone mentioned Stickam, a website that creates an easy way for anyone to include a live stream from their webcam onto the Stickam site or onto any other webpage. This new tool certainly adds to the challenges that schools face in teaching kids what is appropriate, safe, and for that matter, useful.
This revolution of communication tools is allowing anyone with an internet connection to publish in any medium, and allows people to network and connect in new ways [text, audio, video, synchronous, asynchronous, one-to-one, one-to-many, many-to-many]. Content is subscribable, taggable, and popular content bubbles to the surface of user-created folksonomies. It makes the revolution which the printing press wrought seem almost mundane... and we're only on the cusp of this change. This is an incredible time. For my own little publishing contribution this week in this brave new world of online presence, I just put up a home movie [Windows Media Player required] of our new dog, Gilmore, from our trip to Hilton Head. He wasn't quite sure how to pick up a frisbee that lands face down :)
This new publishing phenomenon also raises sticky issues about intellectual property and copyright -- my video uses clips from three songs as background music. Since they are each only a short portion of the song, I felt okay about including them. I came across an interesting rule about copyright of music for online radio last week (can't remember the source), but as I understood it, it said that providing music online is acceptable so long as the user cannot control the stopping or starting of the songs, or save them. I guess this is how the internet radio station Pandora is able to operate. Speaking of Pandora, and new ways of connecting-- it's a customized radio station: you tell it what types of music you like and then it sends you a stream of music based on your taste.
So all this new media leaves me wondering if we even realize the impact it is having and will have on our society. Working within a school it certainly seems imperative to address it and deal with some of the thornier issues with our students. Unfortunately, as many ed-tech gurus have noted, our students are getting very little exposure inside school, and almost all of it, on their own at home. We do lecture them about the dangers of giving out personal information on the internet, but meanwhile, they may be streaming their lives to a new network of like-minded computer-connected users flung far and wide. In some ways it feels like the train has left the station and we're still sitting in a coach & buggy wondering what that loud noise was.
Monday, November 27, 2006
Craigslist with Pictures
If you use craigslist to buy or sell merchandise, check out listpic.com which takes craigslist content but displays it as images on a calendar, making it easier to immediately see all the items and know whether they are recent postings.
Wednesday, October 11, 2006
Mojopac portable usb application device
Mojopac is a piece of software (30 day free trial) that turns a USB device into a virtual hard drive. You can install applications on it. Then when you connect your USB device to some other computer, you can run those applications (and have all your documents, settings, etc). Kind of cool idea. I'm testing it now.
Wednesday, September 13, 2006
"Now we have our whole brains to think."
‘‘Usually we have to write everything down and our brains get used for that,” he explained. ‘‘Now we have our whole brains to think.” This quote is from a student talking about a tablet computer. It's from an article in the local gazette. I feel the same way about my tablet.. and my brain :)