geostorychasing

Page history last edited by Wesley Fryer 1 mo ago

If you are interested in booking me (Wesley Fryer) for a presentation or workshop (either face-to-face or over video) please visit my Speaking page on www.speedofcreativity.org/speaking.

 

Update 18 January 2010:

In 2010 I am transitioning to the website wiki.wesfryer.com for my handout and presentation/workshop links. I'm not taking content here on PBworks offline, but I will be adding this "update header" to all my pages as well as adding direct links to more updated versions of these pages as I mirror them / create them on wiki.wesfryer.com. There are 146 pages here on teachdigital.wesfryer.com - You can browse these in page view in addition to using the four category links provided on the homepage.

 

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Geo-StoryChasing

 

Lots of stories are connected to places. Sometimes we can recount and share a story better when we are in a specific location, on-site. This session presents tools and projects focused on creating and sharing digital stories connected to specific places. Most of these can be used with cell phones and are ideal for student field trips or other travel opportunities.

 

View the updated version of this curriculum / resource page on wiki.wesfryer.com/Home/geo

 

Mobile Tools

  1. Audio
    1. GeoGraffiti (works with any cell phone, iPhone app available)
    2. AudioBoo (iPhone only, can geo-tag)
    3. GabCast (any phone, commercial not free)
    4. Gcast (any phone, commercial not free)
  2. Video
    1. Qik (webcast free with certain cell phones, records automatically, can geotag your location)
    2. Ustream Mobile (webcast free with certain cell phones, can record too)
  3. Photos
    1. Loopt (post geo-located photos via Twitter, share your location with friends, requires that you have friends' mobile number to see their location)
    2. TwitPic (share geo-located photos via Twitter)
    3. Mobile Flickr (upload photos to Flickr via email, if your cell phone/smart phone geo-tags images, that geo-tag info should transfer to Flickr as part of the included meta info with your pix)

 

Post-Production Tools

These are websites or tools which can be used after a trip to create a geo-tagged, sharable record of the experience.

  1. Google Maps
  2. Google Earth

 

Examples

  1. AudioBoos from the Zoo
  2. Qik Interviews in Portland

 

Projects

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