Train to airport...
Random
Lewis Elementary main hall
Lewis Elementary main hall.
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This post was made with a trial version of BlogPlanet, a photo blog client for mobile phones. For more information visit www.blogplanet.net.
NYTimes Magazine: Remote Possibilities
No, today's phones are about having a cyborglike connection to every aspect of your network. It's like having an extra limb. Your phone collects your e-mail from work; it zaps tiny text messages to friends far or near. It captures exquisitely embarrassing pictures from drunken office parties. It feeds your cat. The mobile phone has become, in essence, a remote control for life. ''We call it 'the device formerly known as the cellphone,'''
Interesting article on the evolution of the cell phone. I'm finding my Nokia 3650 to be very useful. I can sync contacts and calendars from my laptop via Bluetooth. Also when in a pinch can use it as a modem to connect my laptop to the web. The image quality on the camera leaves a bit to be desired, but the ability to snap a picture and transfer it to the web, or send it by email is kind of fun.
Chicago: Hancock Building & The Water Tower
The RSS feed from Chicago Uncommon is one of the sites I visit often with my aggregator, NetNewsWire. Dawn Mikulich, the author of Chicago Uncommon, uses MoveableType to manage her weblog, posting new images from time to time. Inspired by her site, we have been cataloging images from Lewis Elementary School using MoveableType and incorporating images from this photoblog on our main web site. This is accomplished using a MoveableType plugin called Otherblog. This plugin allows you to incorporate posts from other blogs running under the same installation of MoveableType. We use this to incorporate other information in our main page (PTA, Music, Newsletter...) coming from other Lewis weblogs.
Amazon's Book Search
Wired News: The Great Library of Amazonia
An ingenious attempt to illuminate the dark region of books is under way at Amazon.com. Over the past spring and summer, the company created an unrivaled digital archive of more than 120,000 books. The goal is to quickly add most of Amazon's multimillion-title catalog. The entire collection, which went live Oct. 23, is searchable, and every page is viewable.
This month's Wired has an article about Amazon's book search database. Lot's of interesting possibilites, but I understand that cook book authors aren't too thrilled...
View From the Orange Line, Chicago
Google Halloween...
Lewis Elementary School, we are in the process of creating new landscaping around the entrance to the school. Through the efforts of many of our parent community this project is reaching a critical step... Today the concrete will be poured for the new sidewalk. This necessitated ordering some temporary fencing from the school distict to protect the new concrete. I was tasked with determining how much fencing to ordering. Looking around the school, I could not find a tape measure, but was able to round up a meter stick. (Very similar to a "Yard Stick" except it is a meter in length... :-) )
Using the meter stick, I was able to determine we needed 47 meters of fencing to protect the work area. I needed to convert meters to feet. Here comes the Google connection... Went to Google... Typed in the following..
"How many feet in 47 meters"
Google responded.... "47 meters = 154.199475 feet"
Other interesting Google tools can be found at Google Labs...
Interesting Book
Booknoise.net | The Flickering Mind The Flickering Mind The False Promise of Technology in the Classroom and How Learning Can Be Saved By Todd Oppenheimer
An interesting web site for an interesting looking book. For a flavor of what Oppenheimer thinks of some of the uses of technology in our classrooms, take a look at this excerpt...
I'm going to go pick up the book today. From reading the reviews and looking around the web site, I'm thinking I'm inclined to agree with him. The realy interesting uses of technology, where I believe it is relevant and useful is in the arts (photography, video, animation, writing...) but most of the folks I work with have latched on to computers as a glorified workbooks... And don't get me started on the insanity of PowerPoint...
What is Time Warner Thinking...
After the Cubs won tonight, I checked Sports Illustrated's site for the results of the Woman's World Cup game between USA and Germany. I found the link just fine. What bothered me was that the ads displayed along with the story were all about bimbos in bathing suits. Take a look at the screen grab... What the heck are they thinking???
Cubtoberfest
Cubs Win... There is joy in Mudville... wow...