Updated: 10/6/2006; 12:50:51 PM.
landonline
online educational delivery applications that are primarily course management systems (for product comparisons please see Landonline.EduTools.info)
        

Friday, October 06, 2006

Test Post from Writely. Well, Novak blew my mind the other day by introducing me to Net Vibes, an online portal that takes advanctage of AJAX's capabilities. Imagine a portal where you can drag and drop the channels to different locations on the page. VERY cool. Of course, this program I am using now, Writely (www.writely.com ) is also quite a find. The purpose... [Michelle's Online Learning Freakout Party Zone]
12:48:50 PM    comment

Classroom Response Systems. One of the committees I am currently serving on is evaluating Classroom response systems, AKA "clickers". There has been a lot of activity in this space here at UBC, particularly in Physics. My colleague Jim Sibley has been posting about these tools quite a bit lately in advance of our deliberations. I ran across a very interesting site from Vanderbilt... [Michelle's Online Learning Freakout Party Zone]
12:46:54 PM    comment

Test Post from Live Writer. I thought I might try out the Live Writer interface for creating Weblog posts. This would be a test one. I wonder how this will turn out? I just added a photo. Lets see if it works well!... [Michelle's Online Learning Freakout Party Zone]
12:45:35 PM    comment

Impact of VoIP and QoS on Open and Distance Learning - P. C. SAXENA, et al; TOJDE. Social changes always follow technological changes; indeed each new invention brings about advances in our lifestyle. Not long ago letter writing was the only means of keeping in touch with relatives and friends who did not live nearby. With Alexander Gra [Online Learning Update]
12:39:34 PM    comment

Karine Nails It.

Great post from Karine about how your university can prepare to handle crises connected video and video sharing sites like YouTube. We both got the same email from one of our readers that prompted her post, but Karine managed to turn it into an artful, actionable recommendation.

[Syndication for Higher Ed]
12:31:04 PM    comment

The Next Level of Open Source - Inside Higher Ed. On Tuesday, Yale University announced that it would be starting a version of an open access online tool for those seeking to gain from its courses. But the basis of the Yale effort will be video of actual courses — every lecture of the course, to be combi [Online Learning Update]
12:28:08 PM    comment

Google Reader updates (and a video too!).

Wow, just read this over on TechCrunch that Google Reader has been updated and they put up a video too. Nice! But I’ll still go over and do a more in depth video. I’m also downloading it and will see if it gets me to switch off of my favorite NewsGator.

UPDATE: I’ve loaded all my feeds into it. It’s quite nice. Works fast, clean UI. Does what you’d expect a news reader to do (brought in my OPML file from NewsGator without complaining).

Some things I’m still missing. Is there a “river of news” option here? That’s what I’m looking for. I want to just have a continuous scroll where I can go through my news feed. No folders, just a chronilogical view of all my items. OnFolio used to get pretty close to that, but I haven’t see any company really change the news reader metaphor very much. I’d also love to see a reordering of the list of feeds based on who publishes most (right now it’s just alphabetical). Or, who has the most links according to Google BlogSearch. Wouldn’t that be cool?

Some problems exist. I clicked on “email” at the bottom of a feed item and it gave me a “Bad Request” error. “Your client has issued a malformed or illegal request.” I’m using latest version of Firefox.

I don’t understand what the “Share” icon does at the bottom of each item. I click on it and it just changes to “Unshare.” OK, I guess I gotta go do some homework about where that gets shared to. It’s a mystery to me. But, what do I know? I’m blonde.

Oh, yeah, where’s the integration with Google Blog Search? One of the most powerful things I’ve been showing audiences lately is you can track anyone in the world who says anything on a blog. Say someone says “Scoble sucks” on a blog, even one without any readers, well, it could show up in my Google Reader. I don’t see a way to build a “search subscription.” NewsGator has that built into its online reader. NewsGator also has a community ranking feature built right in. Imagine if Google were going to build its own “Digg-style” community? In fact, there’s a URL where you can star things, but it’s not clear that there’ll be a site where I can subscribe to everything that people have “starred.”

It’ll be interesting to read the reviews about this and see where it goes.

[Scobleizer - Tech Geek Blogger]
12:25:30 PM    comment

Readers per URL among blogging services: is it important?.

Microsoft Live Spaces has something like 75 million spaces, and about 125 million unique visitors a month (at least those were the last numbers I saw shared).

Wordpress.com, according to Automattic’s CEO (that’s the company that makes Wordpress), Toni Schneider, in an interview I had with him yesterday, has 400,000 Wordpress.com blogs, but has 25 million unique visitors per month.

Which service is going to be more attractive to advertisers? Which one builds a better business?

I wonder if anyone is doing a comparison of readers per URL among all the blogging services (and MySpace and FaceBook too)? Anyone doing research on these kinds of metrics?

[Scobleizer - Tech Geek Blogger]
12:22:29 PM    comment

Report: Google to buy YouTube for $1.6B.

(InfoWorld) - Google Inc. is in discussions to acquire YouTube Inc. for about US$1.6 billion, although the deal is far from done and the talks could collapse, The Wall Street Journal reported on Friday, citing an unnamed source familiar with the matter.


Google's reported interest in YouTube would reflect a sense of urgency on the part of the search engine giant to improve its position in the red-hot online video market.

Google entered the market in early 2005, at about the same time YouTube was founded. But so far the success has gone to the scrappy startup, not Google.

In September, YouTube nabbed almost 46 percent of all U.S. visits to video Web sites, while the video section of News Corp.'s MySpace.com came in second with 21.2 percent, according to Hitwise Pty. Ltd. Google Video came in third with 11 percent, followed by Microsoft Corp.'s MSN Video with 6.8 percent and Yahoo Inc.'s Yahoo Video with 5.6 percent.

YouTube, in typical startup fashion, approached the market aggressively, opening up their service to anyone wanting to upload their videos, and quickly became a phenomenon. It embraced tagging and sharing features, creating the most popular online video community.

Meanwhile, Google took a much more conservative approach, at first only featuring videos obtained through formal agreements with professional production houses. Consequently, users had to pay to view many of the videos in the catalogue. Months later, it added an upload feature for regular users, but closely policed submissions. It wasn't until recently that it opened wide the service's door and added tagging and sharing capabilities.

Yahoo, Microsoft and AOL LLC are also playing catch-up to YouTube, whose model these large Internet companies are adopting.

Google, Yahoo, Microsoft and AOL need a strong position in this market, due to the increasing popularity of online video. Collectively, traffic to the top 10 video Web sites increased 164 percent between February and May of this year, according to Hitwise. As traffic to online video sites increases, so does the interest of advertisers, who in turn generate most of the revenue for Google, Yahoo, Microsoft and AOL.

For many years, online video remained an unfulfilled promise, hobbled by high broadband prices, inferior image quality and reluctance by TV networks and film companies to put their shows and movies on the Web. However, in the past 18 months, video on the Web has gained momentum, helped by a critical mass of users with broadband access, improved quality and a willingness by production companies to distribute their films and programs online.

Neither Google nor YouTube immediately responded to requests for comment.

By Juan_Carlos_Perez@idg.com (Juan Carlos Perez). [InfoWorld: Top News]
12:06:53 PM    comment

On Education: Demoting Advanced Placement. The public school in Scarsdale, N.Y., which is known for turning out some of the nation’s finest college prospects, is contemplating eliminating Advanced Placement courses. By JOE BERGER. [NYT > Education]
12:04:58 PM    comment

© Copyright 2006 Bruce Landon.
 
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