Random

Google and University Libraries...

Google Library (Google Weblog) Much of the discussion around this endeavor has focused on its effect for the largely-affluent and privileged children who go to the major universities from which the books are taken. Will they stop going to the library? Will they miss the smell of dead trees? Will they be able to do research more efficiently? With all due respect, this is the wrong group to think about. The real beneficiaries of this scanning should be the less fortunate people around the world who barely have access to a library, let alone a world-class one. Let us scan these books for them.

This post from Aaron Swartz at the Google Weblog explains some of the particulars of the agreement between Google and 5 major university libraries to digitize their entire library collections. He points out the projected timelines and at the end makes a very good point about why this matters. We have a lot of issues with copyright to deal with, but in the end what Google and the universities in the agreement are doing is making their collections available to the world. This is really pretty amazing... Combine this with initiatives such as Google Print and if you weren’t' already doing so, you really have to start to think differently about how we teach kids to access information...

Googling Libraries

Technology > Google Is Adding Major Libraries to Its Database" href="http://www.nytimes.com/2004/12/14/technology/14google.html?hp&ex=1103086800&en=9d5c79b92752adff&ei=5094&partner=homepage">The New York Times > Technology > Google Is Adding Major Libraries to Its Database Google, the operator of the world's most popular Internet search service, plans to announce an agreement today with some of the nation's leading research libraries and Oxford University to begin converting their holdings into digital files that would be freely searchable over the Web...

The goal is to expand the Web beyond its current valuable, if eclectic, body of material and create a digital card catalog and searchable library for the world's books, scholarly papers and special collections...

This is pretty interesting...

O'Reilly Emerging Technology Conference

Remixing Wikis for Elementary School Classrooms: Instiki, Wifi, and RendezvousTom Hoffman, Manager, SchoolTool Tim Lauer, Principal, Lewis Elementary School

Tom Hoffman and I will have the opportunity to present at the O'Reilly Emerging Technology Conference 2005 in March in San Diego. I have had the opportunity to attend this conference twice in the past and have found it to be one of the best conference experiences I have ever had. You learn as much in the hallways as you do in the sessions.

Our session will highlight how some of the teachers at my school, Lewis Elementary, are using the Instiki wiki as a student writing environment, and how we utilize Rendezvous on OS X to make it very easy for students to find their work. In addition, since Instiki is installed on the teacher's laptop, we will also talk about how this has facilitated their adoption of the technology.

Necessity: A computer, a data projector and a file cabinet...

My good friend Andy is one of the best teachers I have ever met. That being said, he does have a tendency to drop his laptop from time to time. This morning he came to work and discovered after another drop that his Powerbook screen would not come to life. I find his approach to solving this problem both novel and frightening. Thanks to Melissa for the image...

New Book From O'Reilly... Wireless Hacks..

oreilly.com -- Online Catalog: Wireless Hacking Just a few of the things you'll learn from this book...

* Use existing Ethernet cables to provide low-voltage power to Access Points with no additional source of electricity. * Install Linux and FreeBSD on low-cost (under $150) Soekris single-board computers. * Modify the firmware of your Linksys WRT54g. * Construct Solar Powered Access Points and Repeaters for your Wi-Fi network. * WarDrive for wireless access points with tools like Kismet and NetStumbler. * Install an antenna without killing yourself or changing the earth's orbit. * Expand your Wi-Fi network beyond one box and 50 users with MESH network topology.

I'm really interested in learning how to do the first one...

OS X Home/Classroom Library Catalog Tool

OS X Home/Classroom Library Catalog Tool: "Delicious Library (note: the name has nothing to do with del.icio.us the social bookmarks manager.) is an Macintosh OS X application that allows for the cataloging of a home or classroom library collection, a visual card-catalog of your books, movies, music and video games. You can import your information by hand by title or author, or if you have an..."

Over at the eSchoolNews weblog I have posted about Delicious Library. A very interesting home/classroom library cataloging tool with a confusing name. It allows you to cataglog books, music CD's, video's, and video games. The information can be entered manually, or you can use an iSight video camera as a scanner and scan in the bar codes of your items. It then searches Amazon for the information and returns it for cataloging. I am planning to help a few teachers at Lewis Elementary set this up for check out of their classroom library books.