NYSCATE Presentation: Open Source Web 2.0 Applications

On Tuesday, November 25, I presented Open Source Web 2.0 Applications at the New York State Association for Computers and Technology in Education (NYSCATE). I was very excited to share some of what I have learned in the past year regarding web based applications such as WordPress, Elgg, Pligg, Posh, Gallery, and many others.

I was concerned about the timeslot–the last session on the last day of the conference. I was delighted to find the conference room nearly full when I began to present. I was also pleased to see a few people that attended my presentation last year.

You can hear the presentation Open Source Web 2.0.

Click through the presentation as you listen. (It will toggle between the first two slides until it has loaded. It’s a large file, so give it a minute.)

Related Posts

Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,

  1. Matt Leifer’s avatar

    Nice talk. I hadn’t heard of Posh or RNews before and I think I’m going to take a look at them.

    Reply

  2. Steve’s avatar

    Thank you. Sorry I had the sound file that didn’t cut the pre-session crowd noise uploaded. The correct one is on there now.

    I think some of these more obscure efforts deserve a bit more attention!

    Reply

  3. Jason’s avatar

    Thanks for for recording your session and sharing it here on your blog. Great stuff! I hadn’t heard of several of the tools you mentioned and I look forward to exploring them in greater detail. I’m especially interested in the use of BuddyPress for a blog-centric social networking experience for my students.

    Reply

  4. Steve’s avatar

    Thanks for taking the time to listen and commenting. I’m never sure if things like this reach anyone.

    BuddyPress is intriguing. I am concerned about it being and extension of an extension in that WordPressMU was cobbled out of WordPress. In turn BuddyPress is cobbled from WordPressMU.

    An advantage is that BuddyPress will bring the the consistent support of a larger community and of the Automattic folks.

    While Elgg is built from the ground up as a social networking tool, it lacks the broad support resources.

    Reply

  5. Don Watkins’s avatar

    Thanks for your presentation. I got a lot out of it this year too. You made a comment in the presentation that there is legislation that requires schools teach students about social networks. What is the legislation? Is it more than I-Safe?

    Reply

  6. Steve’s avatar

    It is Senate Bill 1492 on Broadband. It is in Section 215 near the bottom of the document:

    ‘(iii) as part of its Internet safety policy is educating minors about appropriate online behavior, including interacting with other individuals on social networking websites and in chat rooms and cyberbullying awareness and response.’.

    http://www.govtrack.us/congress/billtext.xpd?bill=s110-1492

    Reply