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copyrightfriendly - home Hushmail Wildlife & Nature Videos | Clips | Photos | Programmes - itvWILD Slideshow at Slideroll - Flash Slideshow Creator, Photo Slideshows for Facebook, MySpace, YouTube, and Everywhere! Slideroll™ is a photo slideshow maker that you can use to create slide shows with your photos. Publish your slideshows on the internet, put them on Facebook, MySpace or YouTube, and e-mail them to friends. Try the Slideshow Creator Demo » Create Cool Slideshows from Your Photos Upload photos from your computer into our interactive drag-and-drop slide show creator. Publish and Share on the Web You can publish your slideshow on this site, or get code to embed the slide show on your own site. Publish to Video for DVD or YouTube With Slideroll Video Creator, you can turn your slideshows into video that you can use for your DVDs, or upload to YouTube.

45 SEO and Social Media Tools #SESLondon I really lucked out after moderating the morning session at SES London on Social Media Tools by joining the SEO Tools of the Trade session that followed. Both sessions had great speakers and I’ve decided to combine my notes for both into one post about social media automation tools and SEO tools. The sources for the SEO tool recommendations include: Richard Baxter of SEOGadget, Dave Naylor from Bronco, and Neil Walker from Just Search. The social media tool recommendations came from Andrew Girdwood from bigmouthmedia, Paul Madden from Automica and Marcus Tober from SearchMetrics. Before I get into the list of tools, I feel compelled to share a quote that I’ve often used to give people context for tool use, since it’s so important to use them for scale, efficiency and to gain a competitive advantage: “Tools are only as effective as the expertise of the person using them.” Ok, let’s start off with SEO Tools: Social Media Automation Tools (Some are a bit Grayhat SEO) There you go.

The 35 Best Web 2.0 Classroom Tools Chosen By You 100 Web 2.0 Tools Every Teacher Should Know About 44.24K Views 0 Likes We're always trying to figure out the best tools for teachers, trends in the education technology industry, and generally doing our darnedest to bring you new and exciting ways to enhance the classroom. But I wanted t... 20 Free and Fun Ways To Curate Web Content 23.98K Views 0 Likes What's the best way to organize it all into at least some reasonable manner? It’s Time To Crowdsource Your School’s Social Media Policy 12.53K Views 0 Likes Every school has a different policy when it comes to social media. Google Image Slideshow - Online Slideshows from Search Results Hack Yourself A Super Secret LCD Monitor Say you have some paint thinner, a pair of sunglasses, a box cutter and and old LCD computer monitor. Quick, what do you do? I'll tell you what. You go all MacGyver and make a super secret privacy monitor that makes your secret agent computer sleuthing invisible to the naked eye. PHOTOS: Hacker's Playbook: Common Tactics That's right, no need to take your obsolete monitors to the Salvation Army just yet. The monitor is made of two layers of film — polarized and anti-glare. Next, get your paint thinner, or any other solvent, to soften the adhesive that remains on the glass. BLOG: Anonymous Spokesman Flees Over Safety Concerns Now take your sunglasses — or any other frames for that matter — and pop out the lenses. The polarized film is normally used to to filter backlight from what's visible onscreen. [Via GizMag] Credit: Instructables user, dimovi

Rememble Critical Gaming Project | Play. Critique. Teach. A game studies collaborative at the University of Washington. by Theresa Horstman and Edmond Chang Thanks to those who joined us for our most recent Gaming Keywords session, CLOSE/DISTANT on April 4, 2013. The games and readings represented multiple interpretations of our fifth keyword for this year, and as usual, the conversation ran the gamut: reading, playing, research methods, intimacy and space. Close playing is to video games what can be interpreted as the equivalent of close reading in literature. As one of the readings defined, “Close playing, like close reading, requires careful and critical attention to how the game is played (or not played), to what kind of game it is, to what the game looks like or sounds like, to what the game world is like, to what choices are offered (or not offered) to the player, to what the goals of the game are, to how the game interacts with and addresses the player, to how the game fits into the real world, and so on. All in all, the session was thoughtful and insightful.

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