Wednesday, March 4, 2009

Web 2.0 Week 4 - Flickr and Mashups

Flickr
Flickr is a web service that allows users to store photos and videos and share them with other users. If you aren't into PhotoShop and advanced photo editing, it is a nice way to keep your personal photos organized and off your hard drive. It is a way of easily sharing them with others.

I see the educational value of Flickr because it is a repository for all sorts of photos and videos. Students would be able to use Flickr to search for graphics that enhance their multimedia projects. I worry about appropriateness and quality, however.

I would want students to find only things that they need. For example, if I have a student designing a multimedia project on Mexico, he needs photos that relate to the country, its customs, etc. and not tacky photos of half-drunken gringos from New Jersey who happened to visit Cancún last summer. ¿Verdad?

For elementary students, I would suggest that the teacher locates and downloads a bank of images from which the students may select images for their projects. It is more time-consuming for the teacher, but it can help avoid unpleasant situations where students find inappropriate, but not necessarily explicit images.

Mashups
A mashup is a hybrid web application. One web application utilizes data from another source and creates a new application or service from combining the two. To really understand mashups, you have to know what an API is.

APIs are "application programming interfaces." Webopedia has a good definition for lay people, “a set of routines, protocols, and tools for building software applications. A good API makes it easier to develop a program by providing all the building blocks. A programmer then puts the blocks together.”

So, a mashup uses APIs and data from other places to make something new. It doesn't require the user to do a bunch of fancy programming in order to take the data and make something new out of it.

2 comments:

  1. Once again,
    Your explanation help me to understand this class. By the way, thank you for the file cabinet analogy to understand flickr.

    Have a great afternoon.

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  2. Thanks for the wonderful explanations. You are a real asset to the class. I love your comments on how these resources could be used in the classroom. You bring up some very good points. Because the tagging process is so individual, a search might bring up inappropriate pictures. The option of pre-selecting pictures, while time consuming, is probably an excellent idea.

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