The Launch of EduGeek Journal

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Sorry for the lack of posts around here. I know there has been some great Sci-Fi news and television stuff happening. Heroes has been incredible recently. But more on that later. The big reason why this blog has been neglected recently is that I have been getting another blog going.

I guess I really like this blog thing. Anyway, some I have gotten together with some colleagues of mine to create a blog specifically for Educational Technology. This blog will begin to focus mainly on music and movies. The new blog, EduGeek Journal, will focus on EdTech. So, now, I have divided my massive audience of five in half. Well, kind of. I know one my readers will stick with both, because she’s in to both 🙂

Video Blogs Are Just Around the Corner

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Video Blogs Are Just Around the Corner. Are you ready? I was searching and searching for a video version of Odeo the other week, and I just couldn’t find anything. With Odeo, you just hook up a microphone, and record audio straight into the website. Then you can embed the audio in any website. But it’s only audio, and the world seems to be moving to video pretty rapidly. Then, the other day, I just happened to stumble across what I was looking for: Flixn.

Flixn works a lot like Odeo. You hook up a web cam, press record, and then hit stop when you are done. Then you can get code to embed the video anywhere you want. Pretty neat. Or at least I think – I don’t have a webcam to test it out.

But Flixn seems to go one step farther – you can actually embed the recorder into your site. So, if you have an online class that you want to record video for, you can keep the entire recording process in your site. Hopefully, more Web2.0 sites will move to this thinking – allowing end users to embed their functionality into a site. Then you don’t have to constantly being switching back and forth between applications to get stuff done. Of course, Firefox’s tabbed browsing makes that easy – but it’s still nice to have it all in one place.

Zoho Notebook: Another Great Leap For the Web2.0 World

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I came home from a nice break in a tropical location to get smacked in the fact by two crazy facts of life. For one, there’s still some form of freezing precipitation falling in my corner of the world (but I can’t quite call it snow). Ouch. The second one: Google is not coming out with as many cool things as they used to. At least when compared to companies like Zoho.

I can deal with that, as long as the G-powers that be don’t pull the plug on this blog for pointing that out. The coolest new invention from the Zoho labs: Zoho Notebook. The goal of Zoho Notebook: allow the user (you) to put any content (text, audio, images, video, etc) anywhere on a page, and then share that with others anyway you want.

Don’t most web pages allow you to do that? Sure – if you know the code. Zoho Notebook gives it all to you in a nice user interface. And – the best part is – you can record audio or video straight from your computer into your page. Or upload a pre-recorded file. All you need is a microphone or a video camera hooked up to your computer.

Also, they allow you import content from Zoho Writer, Sheets, and Show (think Word Doc, Excel, and PowerPoint online). All with Skype integration. Nice. Here’s a quick overview video of some of the features:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xabm8hRyXrk

I was noticing that Zoho also has online virtual office, chat, wikis, planers, etc. I am slowly wondering if I need to switch to Zoho from Google for some of this stuff. Come on Google – get on the ball and buy this stuff!

Google AJAX Search API

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I’m not totally sure what to make of this one, but it sounds interesting. It seems that Google has created a search function that allows you to insert a Google search area into your site in a custom way. One of the most practical seems to be that it would allow you to use Google to search your site.

One of the really intriguing ones is the blog comments search API. You can add a small Google search area next to a blog comment area, and then the results can be added to the end of the comment as “clippings.” Sounds like a great idea for educational purposes. I would like to see something like that for discussion posts, too. That way, you can quickly find results to back up your posts in an academic settings.

I haven’t fully dug into these ideas yet, but they sound interesting.

Congratulations! You Are Time’s Person of the Year

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Just don’t expect a prize 🙂 This has been all over the Web, but I think it is still cool. And it’s Christmas time, so I don’t exactly expect to stay o n top of this blog while I am relaxing on vacation. Anyway, due to the growth or user input based websites like YouTube and Wikipedia, Time magazine has decided to name the entire world person of the year.

Of course, this is due to the growth of the Web2.0 revolution, which I have been heavily focusing on in this blog. This is great news for Ed Tech folks like me, because the more recognition online tools get, the more development there will be on that front. I read about a YouTube like site for artists the other day. I need to dig that one out. Stuff like this is really exciting for the future of Online Education.

Of course, I say I will be taking a break for Christmas, but who knows? So much geeky news to report. A new Transformers movie trailer to drool over, cool new websites popping up every where, and I finally got to see an episode of Battlestar Gallactica this weekend. Yes, I am the only geek in the world without cable. So I had to wait until I was out of town in a hotel to see it. But, the upside is that, while flipping through cable channels looking for something to watch, I finally found a Star Trek series that my wife actually likes (Voyager).

Putting It All Together: An Online Lesson

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So, I’ve been talking about all of these random tools for online education. But what can actually be done to teach with these tools? Here’s one idea I have for a lesson. Combine an online PowerPoint presentation with an embedded audio from a podcast. Then you have a complete lesson that accommodates all three learning styles (the kinesthetic people have to click to go to the next slide).

Here’s an example. This is my presentation from the 2006 IOL conference in Austin. I uploaded the PowerPoint to SlideShare, and re-recorded the audio with Odeo Studio. All online, all free, all pretty cool. The audio was pretty much a one-shot, quick re-do on my home computer this last weekend, but it is possible to use a free program like Audacity to record your speech, then edit in music and sound effects, and finally upload that back into Odeo.

Click on the play button to hear the audio. Something like this may need a good set of instructions for students to follow, but could end up being a good, low cost alternative to something like Camtasia.

YackPack: Will Voice-Based E-mail Catch On?

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YackPack Screenshot

We’ve all ran into the same big problem with e-mail: it’s so hard to read a person’s mood in the message. Are they angry, happy, bored? Many an enemy has been made in the world over the mis-typed or ill conceived response. Even a smiley really doesn’t help that much – mainly because so many people misuse them. “Your such an idiot :)” – so obviously a joke… right? Phones usually always beat e-mails in the accurate communication department. So, can you combine voice with e-mail to overcome these problems?

Some companies can have made attempts at this. Google Talk introduced a Voice Message system for email that I’ve touched on before. YackPack is a website that seems to move the concept of email totally into the voice realm. Basically, with YackPack, you record messages to leave for people that are also on YackPack. They can then open the message, listen to it, and respond to it.

Sounds like a fun tool, but will it catch on? We tried it at my office, and it died out pretty quick after the cool factor died down – like, after one day of use. Other tools, like Google Talk and Skype, still find usage in my everyday work flow. But YackPack didn’t quite catch on. I still think it is a step in the right direction.

The biggest problem for us was that YackPack has a funky interface that is unusual to learn. It’s not hard, it just is so different from how e-mail is set-up. I think they could greatly improve “the Yack” if they just made the message retrieval and response system function and interface like e-mail currently does, rather than create an entirely new system. It takes a good chunk of time to learn the voice recording side of it as it is – so leave something in there that is familiar at least.

I’ve also seen tools that create online voice-based discussion boards. I’ve discussed this concept on Moodle discussion boards in the past. Martin Dougiamas, the creator of Moodle, had a great point. If all of your discussion is in a voice recording, you can’t quote someone and respond to that particular chunk. You also can’t search through the voice messages to even find a specific quote. You have to listen to the whole thing all over again. It’s just a much slower, time consuming way of doing asynchronous discussion.

I think another good reason that text-based e-mail and discussion will continue to dominate voice-based alternatives is the silence factor. You can type e-mail without having to close the office door for privacy. That can’t happen with YackPack.

Google Talk is probably more of the step in the right direction – messages recorded and sent to an email address still show up as an e-mail, but you can play the voice recording straight from the e-mail (built-in player is included, if the recipient has Gmail). It would be nice for them to give the options of then responding to the message in voice or text, but for now the only option is text. Also the built-in player in Gmail is Flash-based, so it should be easy to send that player to non-Gmail addresses, too – but so far you can’t.

The possibilities are there, and the ideas are in motion… so it will be interesting to see how these pan out.

SlideShare: Share Your PowerPoints Online

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What is my deal with PowerPoint recently? I guess I have really been looking for ways to do PowerPoints online. I love Google’s efforts to put Office-like applications online. But they are missing the whole PowerPoint deal. I think that online PowerPoints would have great online educational purposes. For example, take the ZohoShow that I wrote about earlier. Record an audio lecture to go along with that online using something like Odeo, and embed the audio player underneath the Slideshow. You will then have an online lecture that appeals to audio, visual, and kinesthetic learners (they have to manually click to go the next slide).

One tool that I found interesting as I searched for an online PowerPoint solution was SlideShare. SlideShare is a tool that works like YouTube, but for PowerPoint presentations. In fact, the layout and functionality are pretty much the same. The difference with ZohoShow is that with Zoho, you can create and edit the PowerPoints online. SlideShare just allows you to upload and display completed PowerPoints. But it still works nice. And, it’s free.

ZohoShow and SlideShare both do not support animations or slide transition effects. The animations part is important to point out because, if you have something that appears in order on a slide – say, a series of pictures – that effect will be lost once you upload the presentation to either site. Especially those that like to bulleted list items appear one at a time. The way to get around this is to create one slide for each effect that you want to add (using PowerPoints copy and paste slide feature) and then upload it. Here is the same PowerPoint from my earlier post uploaded into SlideShare:

Second Life Does Have Educational Potential

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Second Life Logo

CNN has a great article today about schools that use Second Life for educational purposes:

Growing number of educators explore ‘Second Life’ online

The most important quote is this one, from Rebecca Nesson, who teaches a class that is offered online through Harvard and uses Second Life:

“Students interact with each other and there’s a regular sense of classroom interaction. It feels like a college campus”

So there is a growing number of people that are using Second Life for virtual online education. Think of it this way. I was in Second Life once for a conference on a product called Sloodle. I’ll have to blog on Sloodle later. I was chatting with someone else in there. I could see his avatar, and could tell a lot about his personality by the way he was typing. Then he mentioned that he was actually in London at that time. So, there I was – having an online conversation, for free with someone in London. And there are companies out there that are working on audio integration tools for Second Life. I guess Holodecks are coming soon, huh?

You Need To Get a (Second) Life

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Okay – so there are about a ba-zillion blogs out there that start off with that title. But Second Life is an interested development in the education and business world. It’s been around for a while, but after some people started making some real money in this virtual world – the real world started to take notice.

It seems like there are some that have negative opinions of it, and some that love it, and a lot that just don’t care. There also seems to be many people that just complain about it being full of porn and gambling. Well, so is the web – but they don’t complain about that. I’ve never run into anything like that in Second Life, but then again – I don’t look for it. Hmmm…. interesting concept. You don’t find junk if you don’t go looking for it.

Any way, Second Life is an online world that looks like a lot of the 3-D immersion games that exist online. The only deal is – it’s not a game. There is no point, no levels, no prizes to win. You just meet people, buy stuff, go places that interest you, learn stuff, and – well – just generally exist there.

My colleagues and partners in crime over at UT Dallas got me hooked on SL. My wife says I really smile when I am on there. Which doesn’t happen that much because Matt Man needs a newer faster computer at home. Mine is already two whole years old! Geez – that’s, like, ancient in the computer world! And I call myself a techie….

Anyway – i have been exploring it for educational purposes. There is neat stuff in there. I have attended in world presentations with people from around the world. There are simulations of everything from molecules to the solar system, from real life buildings to active ecosystems. Historical re-enactments, plays, concerts, art galleries, and even a Godzilla wreaking havoc all exist in world. Pretty crazy. Oh – and your in world avatar can fly and stay underwater indefinitely.

Anyway, I have been keeping a photo journal of my few in-world travels. As soon as I get a chance, I will get the Flickr feed up here in this blog.

Also, you can see one of the UTD crew’s exploration of SL at her blog. Great pictures there.