D'Arcy Norman, PhD

Recent Posts

The Textbook is Audio

Thanks to Doug Kaye for the link to David Sturges' blended learning course: MANA 3333: Digital Media for Management and Marketing (forgive the overly dramatic intro audio...) - the textbook is audio - a series of MP3 files for download to an iPod or whatnot.

It would be cool if David provided an RSS feed with enclosures, so students could just subscribe to that with iPodderX and have the audio pulled down when it's released, instead of having to keep visiting a page to see if there is new audio...

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Apple Service Rocks!

Late last week, I went to the Apple Support website to send a question about a repair for my iPod remote (the cord that goes from the remote to the iPod was pulling out of its plug, and I wanted to fix it). I was expecting them to reply with something like "We have a repair program, and for $X for the part and $Y for shipping, we can fix it for you.". Instead, I came into the office today and found an unexpected package from Apple - it was a replacement part, free of charge.

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Podcasting for Education

I just wanted to capture some possible compelling uses for podcasting in an educational setting.

  • Lectures. Imagine students being able to subscribe to an RSS feed, and have recordings of every lecture automatically stored on their hard drive or iPod or whatnot for review. This would remove the need for the dozens of recorders at the front of a large lecture hall, all getting crappy and redundant audio. Why not produce a single quality feed, and let everyone use it? (on a related note - why not share a single high quality set of notes, rather than making lectures a speed-writing test...)
  • Interviews with external resources - an instructor could interview a scientist, or someone practicing whatever the subject is, and add that recording to the RSS feed for the class - making it available to all students. Something like a Campus iTunes Music Store could do something similar, but everyone would have to go to it and grab the files, rather than have them quasi-pushed out to them.
  • Lots of other things I haven't come up with...

It's the second point I'm hoping to play around with - documenting some of the thinking and developments by some of the folks in the learning technology field - hopefully I'd be able to do something like an ITConversations for educational technology stuff. If it works, and doesn't completely suck, I'd use that as an example for faculty who are interested in the concept. If it doesn't work, or completely sucks, well - that's a valid data point as well... The shared lecture audio is a no brainer, in my mind...

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Simple Podcasting Setup

I was just messing around with some of the various options for recording a podcast, and think this solution will work quite nicely: Snapz Pro X 2.0. It is usually intended to be used as a screen recorder, but also does an excellent job of recording both system sound and microphone input. I set it to record a 1x1 screen capture movie, and discard the video track when saving. Then, the .mov file is brought into iTunes, where I convert it to MP3. (set the encoding options properly, and the Advanced menu contains a "Convert selection to MP3" option.

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Podcasting coming to Wordpress!

There are some hacks to get RSS enclosures into Wordpress 1.2, but I just came across this on the Wordpress support forums: TextDrive Community Forum / Request for enclosure_type and enclosure_size fields

It's already baked into Wordpress 1.3-alpha-4, and so will be available in the next version. I'm not quite ready to start messing with alpha software (well, not someone else's alpha software...), but am looking forward to this... If I give podcasting a shot, I may just bite the bullet and upgrade to 1.3-alpha... Or, I may just try this mod for Wordpress 1.2.

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Podcasting

I've been listening to non-commercial programming on my iPod for a few months now, being totally hooked on ITConversations. It's extremely refreshing to have compelling, intelligent content that isn't full of ads and BE THE 9TH CALLER AND GET TICKETS TO AVRIL LAVINE!!! and mindless DJ drivel crap.

Over the weekend, I played around with iPodderX - an RSS aggregator for these "podcasts" - holy crap, there is some awesome stuff out there! iPodderX checks a bunch of feeds, and automagically downloads the audio linked to each - sort of an on-demand radio station aggregator, without all the suck.

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Keynote Web Viewer Plugin

King has been at it again.... Keynote Web Viewer Plugin

It's a plugin for Keynote that provides a WebKit-powered web browser component (the same one used in Safari and OmniWeb) for use in Keynote slides. Very slick. It has some limitations at the moment, but it's pretty amazing.

Playing quickly with the first release, and watching the demo movie he made, I had an irrational flashback to Cyberdog...

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When was the last time you wrote a letter?

It's been so long since I have written (and mailed) an actual ink-on-paper lick-a-stamp kind of letter, that I almost forgot how to do it. It's been years. I pay all of my bills online (and have, the better part of a decade). Cards etc. are delivered personally. Correspondence is via email or iChatAV or RSS.

I just had to send a letter as part of a travel claim, and it took me a while to remember how to do it. I remember waaay back to my high school days, where they teach you about the format of letters, and how you put salutations etc... I wound up falling back on MS Word's letter wizard. Thanks, clippy (you evil sack of bits!)

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Feed on Feeds

I've been experimenting with directed server side aggregators to present the concept to a potential client. The basic goal is to provide something like EduRSS or the new EDUCAUSE blog aggregations for members of a department or faculty (or combinations thereof).

Feed on Feeds looks like a pretty lightweight and functional option. I'm running a test of it now, with a few of the Learning Commons weblogs (and those of the other Amigos so there's something for the aggregator to chew on).

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