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Archive for March, 2007

Academic use of free web 2.0 services Posted by Ayman Moghniehin Web 2.0 at 5:20 pm

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Academic use of free web 2.0 services

With the rise of the Web 2.0, the usage of services has been migrating toward a personalized and decentralized or web-based framework. Such process has also catalyzed the emergence of specialized web 2.0 services found useful by different classes of professionals. We choose to shed a bit of light on the services used by academics and researchers and argue about the framework they constitute.

Nowadays academics are using blogs to share ideas and discuss them among themselves. Commenting and notification services associated with blogs help in keeping academics involved in their blogging networks. Posts and their subsequent comments are found to be highly effective in online knowledge constructivism. This paradigm is different from that of the famous wikipedia where convergence toward common grounds is mandatory and historical evolution of thoughts is not visible.

A quick survey of web-based media sharing tools such as flickr for images and youtube for video reveals that academics do rely on their services both to share media among themselves and to publish media elements for public feedback. Other services used include appointment management tools that facilitate the setting of meetings and conferences by synthesising the preferences of all participants. We also cite collaborative environments for document processing and statistical analysis such as those offered by google document.

Academics also benefit from a web 2.0 toolbox designed for them explicitly. One type of such tools is a special category of social bookmarking services devoted to academic references and citations such as citeulike.com. Connotea.org is another example of such services that allow academics to keep track of online references. It tries to mix both citeulike.com with del.icio.us, a commonly used social bookmarking site that relies on folksonomies to cluster bookmarks collected by users.

The focus on the academic usage of web 2.0 services aims to clarify how free license services form a distributed and personalized framework where academic societies can interactively share and procreate new knowledge. The success of these services puts forward a question about the utility of developing unified locally-hosted frameworks and opens the possibility to contemplate the potential of an integrated online framework that encompasses these services in a personalized fashion.

Add comment March 23rd, 2007

Web 2.0 … The Machine is Us/ing Us Posted by George Bekiaridisin Web 2.0 at 10:33 am

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Web 2.0 … The Machine is Us/ing Us

A very good video for web 2.0

click here to watch video in youtube.com

p.s. I couldn’t find how to embed video in this post so I added a link to youtube.com

Add comment March 12th, 2007

Sounds of the Bazaar 10 Posted by Graham Attwellin Podcast, Bazaar at 1:23 am

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Sounds of the Bazaar 10

The Sounds of the Bazaar March edition has some great features.

‘e-Portfolios in action - the issues’ is based on the work of the European Commission funded MOSEP project.
It features interviews with staff from Wolsingham School in the UK. Wolsingham has developed an e-Portfolio - called an EME - for for Careers development by students.

News from the Bazaar features the forthcoming Bazaar Seminar on Personal Learning Environments in Athens.

Helen Keegan This months Bazaar interview is with Helen Keegan from the University of Salford in UK.
Helen is researching the potential of Second Life for learning (although it sounds as if she is also having a lot of fun). And Blog of the month features Helen’s Second Life Blog - called Troubleandslife. Helen says “it’s for fun rather than research (although as times go on the lines will no doubt become increasingly blurred). Pay it a visit - its a great read.

A short quote of Helen’s Blog:

“… MY BUM WAS STUCK!

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“Oh the shame… I quickly exited the ride and detached the Zebra avatar, which unfortunately led me back to freaky avatar part 1. At this point I decided to call it a night …”

All the jingles in this issue are produced by Dirk Stieglitz.

Listen Now:


icon for podpress  Full edition [41:34m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (791)
icon for podpress  Introduction [1:40m]: | Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (705)
icon for podpress  e-Portfolios in action - the issues [12:08m]: | Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (563)
icon for podpress  Events: Bazaar Seminar in Athen [3:30m]: | Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (539)
icon for podpress  Interview with Helen Keegan on Second Life [16:53m]: | Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (1016)
icon for podpress  Blogsite of the month [3:16m]: | Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (563)
icon for podpress  Epilogue [0:28m]: | Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (689)
icon for podpress  Credits [0:26m]: | Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (548)

7 comments March 7th, 2007