Types of Computers. Thursday, Oct 18 2007 

There are many types of computers, all of which are currently on the market today. The two main competitors are Mac and PC (as it has been for many years), and within each company, there are many different types of computers. The most commonly commercialized computers are desktops and laptops; but there are a myriad of other forms of computers. Desktops are obviously not meant to be mobile, and their system units and either positionned vertically or horizantally next to the computer. Desktop systems are fairly easy to summarize, the necessary components are: the motherboard, graphics card, a memory unit, CD and DVD rom drives, and various harddrives. Laptops are very similar to desktops, but they are lighter than just the tower of a desktop. The screen and keyboard are part of the unit, which is designed to allow each part to fit without air resistance.  With these changes laptops take up less space, are mobile, produce less heat and save power in comparison to a desktop.

 The next most accessible towards the public are PDA’s (Personal Digital Assistant; handhelds) and Palm Pilots which are one of the smallest forms of microcomputers. The most obvious difference between these two, is that Palm Pilots tend to resemble a mini-laptop than a cellphone. They both have the same functions but perform them in extremely distinctive ways. PDA’s allow interaction between the unit you use and desktops, other PDA’s; Palm Pilots have programs avaidible for download like Windows CE (Windows Consumer) and other programs. Workstations are computers that everyone who is not technologically savvy will never come into contact with. The next rank up are mini-computers,  and the main difference between these and mainframes is the cost. Mini-Computers can set you back a mere 100,000 dollars while a Mainframe is a whopping 1,000,000. Supercomputers are the highest form of computers, and are used for major military and scientific maneuvers.

Test SlideShare Powerpoint Link Wednesday, Oct 10 2007 

Digg It Thursday, Oct 4 2007 

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Much like Technorati, Digg.com allows you to find useful websites and information, which would usually take awhile to find and then save. The main difference between Technorati and Digg.com is the fact that on Digg you can have a profile and connect with friends to have access to their websites. With Technorati you can simply have access to information from around the web , but without the social aspect that Digg.com has. Digg allows you to get the social aspect of the ‘World Live Web’ and all the information you would be getting at Technorati. Users also have the option to rate what appears on Digg, which is very different from Technorati where you are simply able to view the information and see other websites. Digg also hasnt experienced the recent backlash that Technorati has with tech problems on the site. Digg seems to appeal to the younger generation by allowing you to make friends and share your interests with them.

Technorati.com Wednesday, Oct 3 2007 

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Technorati is basically a blog tracker that tracks blogs through their links and tags, and is just a complation of almost 110 million blogs, for all different subjects. It promotes itself as a social sytem also, because it allows its members to upload videos, photos, and quizzes as well. Constant uploads allow most of the information on the site to be accurate every moment of everyday, so you are getting a well-rounded update whenever you log on. The bloggers on Technorati make links to other sites and sources constantly, allowing you to have access to all this information in one source. Technorati uses these links to organize and convey the information, comments and photos from to your personal account. You aren’t constantly clicking on links and typing in new web addresses, because you can have them organized on Technorati. Part of the ‘World Live Web’ Technorati has on average 175, 000 blog updates alone everyday, and 18 posts per second. So it’s basically a huge chat room that allows you to see and access information that you might not normally find.

 It’s not as popular as it was at it’s launch because of issues with it’s former CEO and Technorati founder, Dave Sifry, and apparent technical problems within the site.  Issues with spam,  experimental features, and its lack of subscribers, which breaks down the whole system.  Despire this, it still has many loyal users who check it daily and use it as their main source of information.

Google Email For ACI Wednesday, Oct 3 2007 

As part of Student Council’s plan for the year, we have school assigned emails through Google.  It’s pretty much a gmail account except you have to go through a different address to get to it. Plus it has the school logo on the side, and a calendar for school related events. This will help whenever there are big school events that you must attend, for SATS, clubs, sports, or whatever else is going on at school. The start page for this email has the calendar as one of the features and you can’t remove it, you are permantly in tune with school. You can also add special personalized features like games, weather, CNN updates, People.com updates; whatever interests you. This is better than a School Webpage because it allows you to instantly have contact with everyone in the school. The only weird incident I’ve had with this is that the website takes a very long time to log on and sends you to a Documents page.

The website you have to go through to log into your account is: http://partnerpage.google.com/students.aci.k12.tr
and your email is your name with a period seperating your given name and your surname.

Tagging Monday, Oct 1 2007 

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 A tag is basically a category name, something that you file a myriad of things under. For example, the above picture has Web 2.0 as the main resource for this tag cloud. The more relavant subjects, websites to Web 2.0 are coloured, bolded and they have a bigger font that the others. Convergence, Participation, Remixability, Standarzidation, Design, Economy and Usability are all in orange and bolded so that things like CSS Design and Wikis are the next step down. This allows you to find not only the components of Web 2.0 (or any subject you are searching for) but those that are most relavant to Web 2.0 first so that you know exactly what you are searching for. As well as social networking you can use Del.ici.ous to tag websites to your account so that they are all there,  but again they are all related to one subject. You can also use ZoomCloud to make a tag cloud (the example above) that allows you to see all the components of your search.