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Create and Publish Digital Tablet-Ready Versions of Your Print Magazine with PadCMS

Create and Publish Digital Tablet-Ready Versions of Your Print Magazine with PadCMS | ciberpocket | Scoop.it
Fulvio Colasanto's curator insight, December 17, 2012 3:02 PM

PadCMS è uno strumento "open-source" per la creazione e pubblicazione di riviste digitali (iOS e Android) partendo dai tuoi documenti esistenti: HTML, PDF, JPG o video.

PadCMS permette di formattare i tuoi file originali usando una vasta gamma di template già pronti e disponibili.

 

Per saperne di più vai al sito di PadCMS
 

Leggi la guida all'uso

Fulvio Colasanto's curator insight, December 21, 2012 11:33 AM

PadCMS è uno strumento "open-source" per la creazione e pubblicazione di riviste digitali (iOS e Android) partendo dai tuoi documenti esistenti: HTML, PDF, JPG o video.

PadCMS permette di formattare i tuoi file originali usando una vasta gamma di template già pronti e disponibili.

 

Per saperne di più vai al sito di PadCMS
 

Leggi la guida all'uso

Idees's curator insight, January 9, 4:35 AM

 

PadCMS is a fully "open-source" solution for publishing tablet-ready magazines (iOS and Android) and publications starting from your existing content documents.

 

No matter if your originals are in HTML, PDF, or in image or video formats, PadCMS makes it easy to import it and to format it according to one of the ready-made templates available.

 

How it works: http://padcms.com/#block-how-it-works

 

User guide: http://dev.padcms.net/projects/padcms/wiki/Guide

 

Download: http://padcms.com/#block-downloads

 

Find out more: http://padcms.com/

 

(Suggested by Giovanni Sighele)

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‘Artists in the Archives,’ at Greenburgh Public Library in Elmsford

‘Artists in the Archives,’ at Greenburgh Public Library in Elmsford | ciberpocket | Scoop.it
On a recent afternoon, Carla Rae Johnson riffled through an array of cards in one of the narrow wooden drawers of a card catalog at the Greenburgh Public Library. But she wasn’t doing research, and the cards she was examining had nothing to do with books. She was inspecting her installation, the “Alternet,” a 50-drawer card catalog that she repurposed to hold more than 15,000 three-by-five-inch works of original visual art.
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Sony A4-sized digital paper notepad is light, durable and responsive #DigInfo

Sony 13.3" A4-sized digital paper notepad is light, durable and responsive
(http://www.diginfo.tv/v/13-0036-r-en.php)
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How Much Does It Really Cost To Professionally Self-Publish Your Own Print Book

How Much Does It Really Cost To Professionally Self-Publish Your Own Print Book | ciberpocket | Scoop.it
Robin Good's curator insight, May 18, 5:00 AM



How much does it really cost to publish your own book? Miral Sattar, on PBS Mediashift, provides a very useful article outlining eight main expenditure areas and providing some indication of what the cost of doing these activities may be for an independent self-publisher.


From formatting to getting reviews, the article properly identifies all of the work steps needed to professionally publish a book without going to partner with a traditional book publisher.


I found this resource to be very useful, not so much for the precise cost ranges listed, but more for outlining so clearly to new would-be self-published book authors, how much work and how many people have been traditionally involved in this process.


While I firmly believe that today it is not necessary at all to involve all the professionals listed in this article, it is also true that for most people it is really a must to have someone checking his writing style, editing work and helping out with formatting and graphics before even considering to distribute a new book.


It should be kept in mind though that there are certainly also new alternatives for proofreading, editing and vetting your content, as well as for getting beautifully designed covers that can get those more inclined to learn to save quite a bit of money and time.



Useful. Informative. 7/10


Full article: http://www.pbs.org/mediashift/2013/05/the-real-costs-of-self-publishing-book



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Adult Learners' Week 2013 Supplement

Adult Learners' Week 2013 Supplement | ciberpocket | Scoop.it

Adults return to education for a variety of reasons.

 

Some want to change career and some want to progress in the one they’ve got.

 

Some are looking for a way out of unemployment or a chance to put right what went wrong at school, while some just want to explore different sides of their personalities and broaden their horizons.

 

Adult Learners’ Week is a chance to honour and showcase the achievements of these learners.

 

This supplement, produced by FE Week, is a celebration of all of those achievements and opportunities, but, amid the celebrations, it is also a good time to reflect on what the future of adult education might look like.

 

David Hughes, chief executive of the National Institute of Adult Continuing Education (NIACE) applauds the way adult education “helps people transform their lives”, but admits he feels some “trepidation” looking ahead to the cuts expected in the looming spending review (page 3).

 

But it’s not just learners whose achievements should be recognised, as Christine Bullock, chief executive of awarding body apt awards, points out (page 3), tutors are often “performing miracles” to help their students.

 

Download your free copy of the FE Week 16 page special Adult Learners’ Week 2013 supplement, sponsored by apt awards (PDF 17mb) ☛ http://www.lsect.co.uk/ALW-Supplement-2013.pdf

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The 3 Secrets of Highly Successful Graduates

Today's graduates don't feel ready for the new world of work. I share three things that successful professionals eventually figure out about their careers. http

Via Ana Cristina Pratas
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New research method aims to unlock academia's biggest problem

New research method aims to unlock academia's biggest problem | ciberpocket | Scoop.it
Scientists at Keele University have found a solution to one of life's great mysteries: Why people often fail to see the answer to a problem when the solution is right in front of them.
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Great Lives: Series 30: Salvador Dali

Great Lives: Series 30: Salvador Dali | ciberpocket | Scoop.it
John Cooper Clarke nominates Salvador Dali for great life status, melting clocks and all.
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Scientists Clone Human Embryos To Make Stem Cells : NPR

Scientists Clone Human Embryos To Make Stem Cells : NPR | ciberpocket | Scoop.it
The achievement is a long-sought step toward harnessing the potential power of such cells to treat diseases. But the discovery raises ethical concerns because it brings researchers closer to cloning humans.
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Simulations show early farming might have caught on due to development of property rights

Simulations show early farming might have caught on due to development of property rights | ciberpocket | Scoop.it
Samuel Bowles of the Santa Fe Institute and Jung-Kyoo Choib of Kyungpook National University have published a paper in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences theorizing that farming developed along with property rights. They suggest that the development of property rights caused early humans to farm during a time when it was less productive than hunting and gathering.
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Enjoy a city break at Porto and Northern Portugal

There are thousand charms and corners that are worth discovering in Porto, capital of the North. Porto is one of the oldest cities of the country, and, as such, its path is sinuous and picturesque. It is a unique experience to stroll through its streets and feel the pulse of the city. Learn more http://visitportoandnorth.travel/articles/artigo-porto#.UZJD17Xqkb1

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Google Drive triples free storage to 15GB

Google Drive triples free storage to 15GB | ciberpocket | Scoop.it
An announcement that free storage on Google Drive is leaping from 5GB to 15GB, just ahead of this year's Google I/O developers conference -- but why? Read this article by Seth Rosenblatt on CNET News.
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Hannah M. Cotton, "From Hellenism to Islam: Cultural and Linguistic Change in the Roman Near East"

The eight hundred years between the first Roman conquests and the conquest of Islam saw a rich, constantly shifting blend of languages and writing systems, legal structures, religious practices and beliefs in the Near East. While the different ethnic groups and cultural forms often clashed with each other, adaptation was as much a characteristic of the region as conflict. This 2009 volume, emphasizing the inscriptions in many languages from the Near East, brings together mutually informative studies by scholars in diverse fields. Together, they reveal how the different languages, peoples and cultures interacted, competed with, tried to ignore or were influenced by each other, and how their relationships evolved over time. It will be of great value to those interested in Greek and Roman history, Jewish history and Near Eastern studies.

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What exactly is one second? - James May's Q&A (Ep 2) - Head Squeeze

James May discusses what exactly a seconds is. He also delves into how time as we know it could have been totally different. This is because the second had many 'rivals' over the years that never got their way.

Outtakes from this video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kLpGHt...

James May's Q&A:
With his own unique spin, James May asks and answers the oddball questions that we've all wondered about from 'What exactly is one second?' to 'Is invisibility possible?'

http://www.youtube.com/user/Headsquee...
http://www.youtube.com/subscription_c...
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97% Owned - Economic Truth documentary - Queuepolitely cut

97% Owned is a new documentary that reveals how money is at the root of our current social and economic crisis. Featuring frank interviews and commentary from economists, campaigners and former bankers, it exposes the privatised, debt-based monetary system that gives banks the power to create money, shape the economy, cause crises and push house prices out of reach.


Fact-based and clearly explained, in just 60 minutes it shows how the power to create money is the piece of the puzzle that economists were missing when they failed to predict the crisis.

 

Produced by Queuepolitely and featuring Ben Dyson of Positive Money, Josh Ryan-Collins of The New Economics Foundation, Ann Pettifor, the “HBOS Whistleblower” Paul Moore, Simon Dixon of Bank to the Future and Sargon Nissan and Nick Dearden from the Jubliee Debt Campaign, this is the first documentary to tackle this issue from a UK-perspective, and can be watched online now.

 

Donate to Positive Money http://www.positivemoney.org/donate/

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Lightspeed Magazine | Science Fiction & Fantasy

Lightspeed Magazine | Science Fiction & Fantasy | ciberpocket | Scoop.it

✏ SCIENCE FICTION STORIES

 

✎ The Traditional by Maria Dahvana Headley

 

✎ The Missing Metatarsals by Sean Williams

 

✎ Water Finds Its Level by M. Bennardo

 

✎ Interview: On Any Given Day by Maureen F. McHugh

 

✏ FANTASY STORIES

 

✎ The Man Who Carved Skulls by Richard Parks

 

✎ Always, They Whisper by Damien Walters Grintalis

 

✎ The Aarne-Thompson Classification Revue by Holly Black

 

✎ Leaving the Dead by Dennis Danvers

 

✏ NONFICTION

 

✎ Editorial, May 2013

 

✎ Artist Showcase: Giuliano Brocani

 

✎ Interview: Karen Russell by The Geek’s Guide to the Galaxy

 

✎ Interview: Gregory Maguire by The Geek’s Guide to the Galaxy (available on 5/28)

 

✏ EXCLUSIVE EBOOK CONTENT

 

✎ The Garden by Eleanor Arnason

 

✎ Author Spotlight: Eleanor Arnason by Moshe Siegel

 

✎ The 5th Wave (excerpt) by Rick Yancey


Via Mariusz Leś
Mariusz Leś's curator insight, May 18, 5:56 AM

Lightspeed magazine, May 2013, Issue 36

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The lessons of tweeting; learning from social media - learningworld

http://www.euronews.com/ Social media is extremely popular, especially with young people. As a result the education world is exploring how that success can be used in the classroom.

 

But while students might think it is a good idea, some parents wonder if having fun on Facebook really can teach their children anything useful.

 

We check out the whole subject in this edition of Learning world.

 

*Inside a future school*

 

Singapore is an economic leader in South East Asia and one of the world's top 10 competitive economies. Government policy is that education is vital to maintaining that position.

 

To that end, the government is looking at how social media can be used for teaching and learning purposes and it has invested heavily in overhauling and upgrading its education system, including using the latest technology.

 

We visited a maths class at Singapore's Ngee Ann Secondary School. The teacher sets a question and then instructs pupils to use Twitter to quickly send her their answers.

 

Twitter is one of several types of social media that has been widely being used at the school since 2009 and it is popular:

 

One student, Lucia, told euronews: "Social networking is better, because people are sometimes shy about asking questions or voicing their opinions about certain topics, and using social media will be less awkward around each other."

 

Ngee Ann is what the Singapore government calls a 'Future School' - that is a state run school with well-equipped labs and classrooms, where new technologies are tested to see how they could be used at other schools in the country.

 

It is also been named by Microsoft as a 'Pathfinder School' for the way it uses

technology.

 

The school's principal, Adrian Lim, explained: "We want to see how we can then bring that technology in to enhance learning, because those are the tools that are used by the students and I know that if we use them well with good teaching methods, you will cause a fundamental shift in how teaching and learning is delivered in a classroom."

 

Teachers now use Facebook in their classes to send web links to pupils. Students use Twitter during English lessons to summarise literary passages.

 

In home economics and art classes, teachers and students use picture sharing and infographics sites so everyone can see the same images.

 

Muneira Daud, the Head of English at Ngee Ann, says it is a useful tool: "We're talking about using social media as and when necessary. So teachers have to learn to be strategic in when they apply social media and it should be done at a point where we can capture the students' attention the most."

 

Teachers constantly monitor and share feedback on the use of social media and other technology in the classroom to fine tune teaching methods.

 

They say students' grades for project work have improved since the experiment began and the teachers acknowledge that they too are learning all the time from their pupils.

 

*Meet the 'tra-digital' professor*

 

The questions remains, do teachers really have to use Facebook and Twitter? What are the advantages and why do some people think it is so important to get technology into the classroom? We put those questions to Sreenath Sreenivasan, a technology journalist and Professor of Professional Practice at Columbia University in New York.

 

Professor Sreenivasan, who has the title of chief digital officer at Columbia University, says there have not really been many big leaps and innovations in education in the last 200 years: "You could say maybe the dry erase marker and powerpoint are the two latest innovations in education... which is kind of crazy... to think that education should be the only form of human activity that hasn't innovated."

 

He says the big innovation is going on right now - and it is called Social Media. It is more powerful than the cell phone, but as unpredictable as any innovation.

 

For example - in 1996 nobody really knew what to do with emails. Now there is a similar problem with social media, both out in the world and in schools.

 

"Teachers need to be taught about social media, just like they needed to be taught about using the web and email and it's not a generational thing, as much as it is an attitude thing. Some of the best people I know in social media are in their 70s. And then I know people in their 20s who know nothing about social media. They think they know, but they just go on Facebook and post a photo," says Professor Sreenivasan.

 

 

Find us on:

Youtube http://bit.ly/zr3upY

Facebook http://www.facebook.com/euronews.fans

Twitter http://twitter.com/euronews

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"Junie Moon Rising" by June Collins [Kindle Edition] for FREE

This sequel to Goodbye Junie Moon begins where she left off in Washington, after escaping death threats by army sergeants in Vietnam, and then testifying in Senate Hearings about those that sought to silence her. She had sacrificed her business, and put herself at risk, by succumbing to her conscience and becoming a whistle-blower.

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How Stem Cell Cloning Works (Infographic)

How Stem Cell Cloning Works (Infographic) | ciberpocket | Scoop.it
Cloning can produce unspecialized stem cells that can be induced to grow into various types of body cells.
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Google Play for Education: Official Launch at Google I/O 2013

google play for education http://www.mobilegeeks.com Google Apps for Education offers solution for teachers that can quickly push apps to tablets and devices directly from Google Play
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Twitter and Facebook are not where kids are heading. Meet Kik and Oink.

Twitter and Facebook are not where kids are heading. Meet Kik and Oink. | ciberpocket | Scoop.it
There is a myth, perpetuated for little more reason than it’s sellable-fallacy, that kids are gravitating to Twitter and Facebook. From this point, numerous arguments have been made in the sub-culture Alan Lavine brilliantly described as “Edlandia” – a sharp and humurous hat-tip to Portlandia the TV show (relates to MOOCS).
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A Team Approach to Get Students College Ready

A Team Approach to Get Students College Ready | ciberpocket | Scoop.it
“The biggest open secret in American education is that we are shoveling kids off to higher education without preparing them to succeed,” Ehrmann said. Indeed, three quarters of students attending the City University of New York in 2011 required remedial instruction in reading, writing or math. That translates into a lot of dreams deferred
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This Is Water: Some Thoughts, Delivered on a Significant Occasion, about Living a Compassionate Life

 

In 2005, author David Foster Wallace was asked to give the commencement address to the 2005 graduating class of Kenyon College. However, the resulting speech didn't become widely known until 3 years later, after his tragic death. It is, without a doubt, some of the best life advice we've ever come across, and perhaps the most simple and elegant explanation of the real value of education.
We made this video, built around an abridged version of the original audio recording, with the hopes that the core message of the speech could reach a wider audience who might not have otherwise been interested. However, we encourage everyone to seek out the full speech (because, in this case, the book is definitely better than the movie).
-The Glossary

 

Listen to the full speech here: http://www.brainpickings.org/index.php/2012/09/12/this-is-water-david-foster-wallace/

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You can play Atari Breakout on Google Image Search and it's awesome

You can play Atari Breakout on Google Image Search and it's awesome | ciberpocket | Scoop.it

Google is famous for the Easter eggs buried in its products. This might be one of the most entertaining we've seen in while.


Via Luca Baptista
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The Quest for the Historical Jesus | From Jesus To Christ - The First Christians | FRONTLINE | PBS

The Quest for the Historical Jesus | From Jesus To Christ - The First Christians | FRONTLINE | PBS | ciberpocket | Scoop.it

"From Jesus to Christ: The First Christians" tells the epic story of the rise of Christianity. The four hours explore the life and death of Jesus, and the men and women whose belief, conviction, and martyrdom created the religion we now know as Christianity.

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Benjamin Franklin’s Phonetic Alphabet

Benjamin Franklin’s Phonetic Alphabet | ciberpocket | Scoop.it
Franklin developed his phonetic alphabet in 1768 but it wasn’t published until 1789, when Noah Webster, intrigued by Franklin’s proposal, included its description in his book Dissertations on the English Language. However, because, Webster lacked the type blocks to illustrate Franklin’s changes, the alphabet wouldn’t be seen until Franklin had new blocks cast to print the alphabet for his 1779 collection of writings, Political, Miscellaneous, and Philosophical Pieces. It was the ultimate test of Franklin’s scholarship and polymathy, a phonetic alphabet designed to have a “more natural Order,” than the existing system.
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