Websites I Tagged Recently (weekly)
By Paul McMahon on May 3, 2009 in Ideas for Great Lessons
-
Fliggo – Create Your Own Video Site
Build a video blog, the next YouTube or just a private place to share videos.
-
Alternatives to Windows, Mac, Linux and online applications | AlternativeTo.net
AlternativeTo is a new approach to finding good software. Tell us what application you want to replace and we give you suggestions on great alternatives! Instead of listing thousands of more or less crappy applications in a category, we make each application into a category. Think of it like forever evolving blog posts about good alternatives to the software that you’re not satisfied with. And the “blog posts” are generated by you through suggestions, comments and votes.
-
OpenProj | Serena Open Source and Hosted Project Management Software
OpenProj is a free, open source project management solution
-
Day 1 of SMART Notebook training at CSD » Moving at the Speed of Creativity
-
Teachers Love SMART Boards: SMART Boards and Music to my Ears
Here’s a fun collection of interactive websites related to Music that work great on your SMART Board Interactive Whiteboard. Please use the comment section to share your favorites.
-
Intel Software Network Blogs » Moodle Community, Another Example of Moore’s Law
Great promotion of the Moodle Course Management System by Intel. Nice to see a guy from my Alma Mater and a real nice guy to have lunch with, make it big!
-
This has to be one of the best and easiest ways to try to get a group of folks to meet together.
-
BBC – GCSE Bitesize – Games – You’ll never get anywhere without maths
You’ll Never Get Anywhere Without Math is an engaging game to reinforce some basic math skills. It’s combined with some entertaining storytelling
-
Welcome to the Tricki | Tricki
Welcome to a brand new Wiki-style site that is intended to develop into a large store of useful mathematical problem-solving techniques. Some of these techniques will be very general, while others will concern particular subareas of mathematics. All of them will be techniques that are used regularly by mathematical problem-solvers, at every level of experience. We hope you will enjoy using the site and that many people will contribute to it. If you are new to the Tricki, then we have a page with information on it about what the Tricki is, what its aims are, what we hope it will develop into, how to read, write, find, edit, or comment on articles, and more:
Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.


