It is a great time for Lady Gaga to release her vid for Beautiful Dirty Rich. Yes, Gaga burns and eats money in the midst of an economic crisis. Great visuals, unique song - “Honey, but we got no money”.
The beauty of this list is that no server side coding is needed.
6. Display Del.icio.us feeds with the aptly titled Del.icio.us Feeds Displayer.
5. Display RSS and ATOM feeds with jFeed.
4. Display an image gallery/slideshow with Galleria.
3. Add formatted tooltips to any link with clueTip.
2. Help visualise tabular data, by transforming the data to graph with graphTable.
1. Embed all types of multimedia files with jQuery Media.
Via geekhero - this is an absolute gem from CSI New York. Now really, TV shows need to actually have a Programmer as a technical consultant. Hire me, Hire me!!!
I’m feeling passionate about "disruptive" technologies tonight, so I thought I’d share some GreaseMonkey scripts that could be used within a Learning Management System.
5. Check links with Link Checker
Link Checker crawls links on a page and uses color codes to indicate whether a link is valid or invalid.
4. Print the full path of links with Annotate Links
Adds a print stylesheet that annotates links and displays the full path at the bottom of the printed page.
3. Search Wikipedia or a dictionary with LookItUp2.
Inline search and results display within any LMS page.
Great for Chemistry courses.
1. Social Network Analysis Tool for Blackboard and Vista (WebCT)
Infers social structure from forum posts in a discussion forum and outputs to the NetDraw .vna format for further analysis and visualisation. In total non-biased fashion, I list my own script at No 1.
Edusprouts is a blog that showcases educational widgets, known as Sprouts built with Sproutbuilder. Sprouts are interactive flash movies that can be embedded just about anywhere (including the LMS) and can contains the familiar YouTube “share” button. Widgets make better Learning Objects!
I am going to use “The Presentation Randomizer“. It is not what you think! It is similar to the Hamish and Andy “2 become 1″ idea, where at the sound of a buzzer they have to complete each others sentences while doing a gotcha call. Now to convince my co-presenter…….
I’m pretty impressed by Glogster - I’d describe it as a multimedia mashup tool with an artistic twist. You know, if I think about it, Glogster encompasses everything an eportfolio system needs - to not portray the student as bland, boring and average. ….So I’m off to plot my glogster page so that I can totally express myself.
The fact that most of the sites I find useful have no substantial revenue model, really really scares me. Especially in these times of finacial uncertainty, when Venture Capital is obviously going to run out. How much longer can these sites survive without returning a profit?