Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Add the URL for your blog here!

Listen to this article
After you have created your blog, leave a comment here with your URL. This way the other students can subscribe.

For example, my URL is http://aasako.blogspot.com

14 comments:

Pat said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
KathyC said...

My url is http://kcraig89.blogspot.com.
Kathy Craig

Myra Librarian said...

http://libraryforu.blogspot.com/

Pat said...

Hi Everyone
http://backyardcomposting.blogspot.com/
Thanks for reading my blog -Pat

Debi said...

I have two blogs: one for this class and my "real" one. My real one is posted to another comment. The one for this class is http://lavidaweb2.blogspot.com/

Asha said...

http://web2exploring.blogspot.com

UncleVern said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Bruce Wolcott said...

Hi everyone,

The URL to my website is:
http://wolcottweb20class.blogspot.com/

Come on down!!

Bruce

Stephanie said...

Hi everyone. I use a blog at Cascadia to convey information to my distance learning faculty - mostly notes about meetings, workshops, trainings, etc. http://cascadiadl.blogspot.com/

A blog that may be useful to you is my blog on Copyright, called Copyright Matters. However, I have not updated it in a while. I hope to get moving with it again fall quarter. I'm a lawyer and a distance educator, so I have a special interest in this subject - http://copyrightnews.blogspot.com/

UncleVern said...

Heh, lets try it again!

http://uncleverns.blogspot.com/

Barbara Hack MSN, RN said...

hi

Barbara Hack MSN, RN said...

hi

Stephanie said...

Here is a short resources that I created for my faculty to explain the idea of RSS feeds - subscribing to material on the web - http://www.cascadia.edu/faculty/sdelaney/LSN/LSN3_RSS.htm

Bruce Wolcott said...

Topic: Should we have larger collective silos of shared information or smaller ones.



I think the key issue is finding a a way that all of the information "silos" can be accessed and filtered so that the very best resources rise to the top, like cream in the milk bottle. There will necessarily be some information redundancy, overlap, and some knowledgebase sites will be more valuable than others. With search and filtering technologies being what they are, the "wisdom of the crowds" will separate the wheat from the chaff.

My 2 cents...

Bruce