Archive for September, 2008

Why pay for Microsoft Office when Star Office is free?

Tuesday, September 23rd, 2008

It is a common myth that the more expensive an item or service is the better it is. In the software world most expensive programs has a free counter part.

Free alternatives to Adobe Photoshop
“At the point this article was created, Adobe Photoshop CS3 still cost about USD $649 per copy. I think it’s safe to say that not everyone will afford to get a copy or willing to get a copy if all one need to do is just basic image editing stuff. That’s probably one of the main reason why there’s still a fairly large crowd out there actively looking for free alternatives to Photoshop to help them in their daily basic design jobs. If you are not going into advance image editing, you should know that there’s always free software out there capable to perform what Photoshop can.” More

Keynote is a free note taking program ideal for students and teachers
“KeyNote is used by screenwriters to draft screenplays, by medical doctors to keep patient databases, by developers to store source code snippets – and to everyone it serves as a place to put all the random pieces of information that have no particular structure of relationship to other data, and do not fit easily in task-specific applications such as word-processors, databases or spreadsheets. As you use KeyNote, it will tend to grow on you and every day you will discover more ways to use it.”
This page lists its features while you can download it from here
.

Free Star Office
Word processing, spreadsheet, presentation, and more. Very similar to MS Office. Download it from here.

Free video editors
Read this and this review of free video editors.

You can’t afford Dreamweaver?
No problem! Many free alternative exist. ”KompoZer is a free complete web authoring system that combines web file management and easy-to-use WYSIWYG web page editing. KompoZer is designed to be extremely easy to use, making it ideal for non-technical computer users who want to create an attractive, professional-looking web site without needing to know HTML or web coding.”

You find Adobe Reader to be too slow?
Try Foxit Reader for Windows.

Don’t let school stop you

Thursday, September 18th, 2008

I’ve never let my school interfere with my education.
Mark Twain

A school can only offer a limited amount of subjects and topics within the subjects. But don’t let that stop you! If you want to learn php programming or swahili, most likely there is a free Internet course for you.

Hewlett Packard just opened their free online courses to run 24 hours a day all year long. 

HP offers a variety of free, online classes for both the Home & Home office and Business customers. Enjoy the self-paced lessons, expert instructors and active message boards. 

The W3Schools is ideal for anyone interested in learning programming in any web shape or form.

Full Web Building References
Our references cover all Web-building technologies, including W3C standards like HTML, XHTML, CSS, XML and other technologies like JavaScript, PHP, ASP, SQL and much more.

Try-It-Yourself On-Line Examples
At W3schools you will find thousands of cut-and-paste examples. With our on-line HTML editor you can edit the examples and experiment with the code on-line.

Sharing online documents

Wednesday, September 17th, 2008

Google and Zoho both offer free online sharing of documents, spreadsheets, and more. Read here how a principal uses Google Docs.

I have just created a Google Doc for teachers to book the two ICT labs. It can be viewed here. All teachers at GIS will shortly receive an invitation so they can book online.

Intelligent Life at YouTube

Monday, September 15th, 2008

70 Educational Video Collections

Smart video collections keep appearing on YouTube. But rather antithetical to the ethos of its parent company (Google), YouTube unfortunately makes these collections difficult to find. So we’ve decided to do the job for them. These enriching/educational videos come from media outlets, cultural institutions, universities and non-profits. There are about 70 collections in total, and the list will grow over time.

Suggested by Chris Stokes.

Pick your browser

Friday, September 12th, 2008

Google just released their browser Google Chrome. It seems to have all the features I like about Mozilla Firefox, and then some. For instance: when you open a new tab you see the pages you search the most, you Google search directly in the address box, it is easy to search for text in a web page, the downloading of files is better organised. Of course, Mozilla may have more plugins now, but that may soon change if the open source browser from Google takes off. Rumours have it that it has already more users than Opera.

I have really come to hate Internet Explorer. Simply because it breaks so many of the recommendations set out by W3C. Its latest version is IE7.

Update September 23: IE8 beta 2 is actually the latest version of Internet Explorer.