Dodgers Game
Originally uploaded by timlauer.
Playing around the Photoshop Elements. With its Create Photomerge feature, its about the easiest way to create panoramic shots...
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Dodgers Game
Originally uploaded by timlauer.
Playing around the Photoshop Elements. With its Create Photomerge feature, its about the easiest way to create panoramic shots...
WNYC - News - Flushing School Serves Immigrant Students
There are more immigrants living in New York City than at any time since the 1920s. Thirty six percent of all New Yorkers were born outside the United States, according to the 2000 Census. The immigration boom has changed the face of the city's public schools. About two out of five city students live in households that speak a language other than English. New schools are opening to meet their needs. WNYC's Beth Fertig visited one of them, which is called the Flushing International School.
The link above is to a report from WNYC radio about Joe Luft's school in New York. Joe is the principal of Flushing International High School in Queens. Joe worked at Brooklyn International High School before becoming a principal. There are several of us hoping he finds some time to post to his weblog about his work at his new school.
Podcast support in next version of iTunes:
Over at O'Reilly Radar, Tim O'Reilly details a presentation by Apple's Steve Jobs at the Wall Street Journal's D Conference where Jobs discusses ipodder like features coming to iTunes. I especially liked his Wayne's World comment. The aspect of podcasting that interests me is the time shifting of content I already listen to.
I'm currently using NetNewsWire to subscribe to podcasts from shows such as Science Friday and Tech Nation. NetNewsWire 2.0 does a very nice job with enclosures and I can scan the RSS feed of a particular show and choose to download podcasts as I'm browsing my feeds, and they are automatically entered into my iTunes library. Will be interesting to see how Apple rolls this functionality into iTunes.
60 second story The 60 Second Story web site takes submissions of 60 seconds or less. They are works of fiction "1 minute and 1 second or less in duration told in low-bandwith video clips. They're easy and and fun to make, and make the web one story richer."
Google's search page art honors National Teacher Day.
Blogs Will Change Your BusinessBusinessWeek discusses weblogs and business and also starts its own business related weblog called Blogspotting... A nice overview that can be used when you try to explain all of this to your mother...
Chicago Transit Authority map on Google Maps
Adrian Holovaty has come up with a very cool Greasemonkey script for Firefox which allows him to combine the Chicago Transit Authority map with Google Maps. The script adds an additional option to Google Maps which allows you to view your search results overlaid on the CTA map.
This is pretty interesting for organizations, such as school districts, which have maps that provide boundary information and such.
Today the Internation Reading Association publishes, Innovative Approaches to Literacy Education: Using the Internet to Support New Literacies. This book is a collection of chapters written by teachers and administrators highlighting the use of the Internet in classrooms. I contributed a chapter dealing with my work at Buckman Elementary as a teacher and my work at Lewis using weblogs as a vehicle for school communication. A sample chapter is available.
Now Google Maps also displays satellite imagery along with their maps.
Cross Posted at eSchoolNews... Greasemonkey is an extension for the Firefox web browser that lets you add scripts to any webpage to change it's behavior when displayed in your browser. As stated on the Greasemonkey page, you can think of it as being similar to using CSS to control a pages style. User scripts let you control any aspect of a webpage's design or interaction.
For example you could write a script that would insert a link to your local library from any page on Amazon.com. Say you are searching for a book title on Amazon. The search pulls up the page with the Amazon content, but it also places on the page a link for that particular title at your local public library. (There are already a couple of examples of this particular use... I'm going to try to create one that will pull content from our local Multnomah County Library...) For a better explanation of Greasemonkey and what it means to the user experience, take a look at Simon Willison's post, Greasemonkey as a lightweight intermediary.
A few that I have been playing with include...
The New York Times Single Page script. It changes the article link from the New York Times page to point to the Single Page Format, rather than the default multipage view.
The Flickr: Photo Page Enhancer inserts a link to the original size jpg on every photo page, and an easy copy/paste textarea with html code for creation of a thumbnail link.
My favorite is the BoingBoing Butler. It displays the BoingBoing.net page with all the sidebar content stripped away.
These and others can be found at Jeremy Dunck's GreaseMonkey User Scripts Wiki
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The Photon plugin for iPhoto allows you to easily upload images from iPhoto to Moveable Type weblogs...
Douglas Bowman of Stopdesign has a very good write up of how he utilizes this in his photo galleries.
The New York Times: Need Talent to Exhibit in Museums? Not This Prankster
Over the last two weeks, a shadowy British graffiti artist who calls himself Banksy has hung his own humorous artworks in four New York institutions.
How much does a Banksy cost? His web site has a list of his current exhibits...
Slide Show from the New York Times...
Vibrant Cities Find One Thing Missing: Children: "As cities are remodeled to match the tastes of people living well, they are struggling to hold on to enough children."
(Via New York Times.)
Today's New York Times has an article that strikes home. It details the decrease in enrollment in Portland schools while at the same time the city thrives with new construction and gentrified neighborhoods. Through a series of demographic and budget issues, Portland will be cutting over 300 teaching positions. While the demographic issues discussed in the article are a contributing factor, the main problem is the level of funding for schools in Oregon stays flat or decreases. In addition a 5 year local operating levy expires this year, and the school board has decided not to ask for an extension at this time. The result is school closures and staffing cuts... Lewis Elementary will have to deal with a cut of roughly one and a quarter teachers...
Chris Lehmann of Beacon School in New York talks about their annual poetry festival, I Sing America, and how it is just one of the things that makes Beacon a special community. This sounds like a wonderful event. It would be fun to try something like this next year at Lewis.
if:book: hyperlinks in printifBook discusses David Foster Wallace's cover story about talk radio in the April issue of The Atlantic Monthly. The print version utilizes an interesting approach to footnotes and endnotes by including them along side the text. A screengrab of what this looks like in the print version is available on the if:Book web site. The online version at The Atlantic utilizes traditional hyperlinks. The full article is only available to subscribers, but if you follow the comments in the ifBook post you might find a link to the whole article in PDF...
Holy smokes, SOMEBODY out there is bad at keeping secrets!! Yes! We can finally confirm that Yahoo has made a definitive agreement to acquire Flickr and us, Ludicorp. Smack the tattlers and pop the champagne corks!
Well, guess we'll see if this turn out to be a good thing or a bad thing soon enough... Am wondering how they have hooked it into Yahoo! 360....
"LiveJournaler rinku has some simple but effective advice on how to get your space in order. Make a big pile of stuff that isn't where it belongs, and then tackle it.From that pile, everything that you don't need and will likely never use in the next 4 years or so, throw or give away. This includes valuable things, sentimental objects, cobwebs, and so forth. The bits about putting things where they contextually make sense - pen near paper, a clock where it's visible - may seem obvious, but the huge difference it makes when you grab a pad and need a pen is not.the best way to organize your room [rinku's LiveJournal]
"
(Via Lifehacker.)
Ok, I'll give this one a try...
Sy Wexler, an award-winning documentary filmmaker whose educational movies - from "Squeak the Squirrel" to "Teeth Are for Life" - flickered for decades in darkened classrooms around the world, died on Thursday in Los Angeles. He was 88 and lived in Hollywood.
As a member of the Edison Elementary School AV club, I bet I showed a few of Mr. Wexler's films while in elementary school... The AV club was responsible for showing movies in classrooms. Teachers would request a film and then one of the AV Club students would be sent with the film and projector to set up and show the film. It was a great way to get out of class...
Libraries are an essential service, too | csmonitor.comWilliam Ecenbarger writes in The Christian Science Monitor about libraries and their essential place in our society.
But in fact, libraries are essential. Reading is still the most basic survival skill in today's information-driven society. Moreover, the gap between rich and poor is widening, and the libraries level the playing field.
Portland is very fortunate to have the Multnomah County Library as a resource for our families and students. They offer a wide variety of online and face to face services including book groups, story times, access to periodicals and encyclopedias, and homework help.
At Lewis Elementary we have shared with our families resources such as Jon Udell’s Library Lookup Tool. The Lookup Tool is a bookmarklet written in JavaScript code that extracts the ISBN number from the URL on a bookseller's page, then goes to a library catalog (in our case, the Multnomah County Library) and searches by ISBN. If the library owns the book, the record pops up. It allows our staff to point parents to our local library to find copies of popular books that are being shared in class.