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What is RSS and why is it important?
What is an aggregator, and why should I use one?
What are blogs and how do they work?
- newspaper, newsletter, journal, public forum, external brain, etc.
- dated entries, archived content, and commenting
- easily publish a sophisticated site with search, archives, formatting. auto-syndication with RSS. images, audio, video.
Social bookmarking, del.icio.us
RSS and research collaboration and professional development
- staying up-to-date in a fast-moving field (reading journals is just TOO slow)
- getting beyond your institution
Technologies related to blogs and rss
- Podcasting, Screencasting
What are wikis and how do they work? Ex. Wikipedia, wikiquote
- Video: Wikis in Plain English
- A wiki is a piece of server-based software that enables the user to edit a web page via the web browser. There are many variations in terms of types of wikis. A common feature is the easy creation of new wiki “pages” by combining words to form a web link to a new document. Most wikis include a basic shorthand so that users can create web documents without needing to know HTML.
- The most well-known and largest example of a wiki is probably Wikipedia—a vast web-based encyclopedia. Wikipedia is being developed and managed by a large group of vigilant contributors from around the globe. There are many other types of wikis.
Extra Resources
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