Monday, 23 May 2011

Blog Exercise 19– comment on your teachers blog

Hi poppy
I left you a quick comment on your post about internet security
See you in class

Blog Exercise 18– commenting on other blogs

i've just left a comment on to the author of the MinhDatMonMonitorPoppy blog commenting on his embeded nacy pearl video as well as commenting on sherly's blog post on the changes she has made to her blogs design 

Blog Exercise 17– inviting people to be authors on your blog

so i've just invited three classmates to join my bloging effort i hope they like it

Blog Exercise 16– changing the arrangement of your blog

I extended the width a little to better fit the posts titles

every little bit helps

Blog Exercise 15 changing the colour of your blog

I've tried a couple of diffrent style an colours but in my opinion my blog looks great just the way it is
but when i was just seting it up it was nessary to tweak the font colours just a bit to make it more readable

Blog Exercise 13– Images

what do you think? good filing system?

Exercise 12 - CURRENT AWARENESS POST

In this culture of iphones nothing is more powerful or more useless then the app  

Rise of the App: How Smart phones and Tablet Computers Will Impact How Young Adults Find Information by Karen Meulen. Discusses the effect that this seeming endless amount of choice that now confront the average person with an iphone or smart phone 
consider the numbing effect of never again having to ask anyone directions or really talk directly to any one at all at some time it apart that people may have two brains one that is storied in their head and the other that is surgically attached to there hand or store in their pockets (sorry about the brave new world imagery) and your only as smart as the app you have

but have we become to reliant on this new technology it the systems would crash is their a teenager or young adult who would reliably be able to find their way around? And where exactly is this sudden dependence on these systems leading us? 

These are the questions posed by Karen Meulen read if you dare