A look inside
friendfeed.
I've used friendfeed some, as much to keep all of my stuff "together" as anything else. There are things I like and dislike about the service, but
this interview with the founder of Friendfeed by my favorite web guru, Jeremiah pretty much summarizes the service.
It really does a pretty good job of aggregating
all of the stuff I do.
I've wondered if with all of the youtube channels, rss feeds, etc. what it would be like to set up a "studentfeed" of sorts. I wish I could compartmentalize it and remove it from the other things. I think this format is very easy and if the students put their feeds together for the teachers it would make it a bit easier.
I wouldn't want it to be publicly available, though. A big obstacle to more teachers using Web 2 is still the RSS reader that many teachers cannot get their arms around. It seems geeky and they don't get it until a great professional developer walks them through
igoogle or
netvibes set up. Still, some don't really understand how to add to their pages.
Part of why I am able to innovate in the classroom is that I do "play" with a lot of tools -- sort of a personal R&D. I always believe that we must play before we produce.
This is one of those services I'm kind of tinkering with a little. Not ready to get hyper and excited yet, but it is kind of cool.
tag: friendfeed,
Jeremiah Owyang,
Bret Taylor,
technology,
education,
rss
0 comments:
Post a Comment