Showing posts with label social network. Show all posts
Showing posts with label social network. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Celly Launches New Service and Android App for Building Mobile Social Networks




Celly is a free service that offers group text messaging and polling. You can have open group chats, one-way alerts or even moderated chats. It is set up as a "cell" with a unique name so that you can invite the people you want to join. It is free to use (standard text messaging rates apply though) and anyone with a mobile phone or access to the web can use it. There is a full web console to control and monitor things and you can either create a Celly login or login with Facebook or Twitter.

It is secure and private, there are no limits to the number of people on a cell, and you can use it for polls.

There are also many more features such as media links, notes and more.

Celly is a great way for schools and teachers to communicate with each other, parents and students.


Today, Celly is announcing a new service. The new service allows users to build instant mobile social networks, called "cells" using text messages, QR Codes, email, web or the new Android App. Anybody with a mobile phone can join a cell in seconds and instantly share secure group messages, polls, reminders, notes, and topic alerts. This means that students and teachers can easily and quickly create their own networks for classes, projects, discussions and more. These cells could also be used at professional development and conferences for back channeling and discussions.



The Full Press Release is Below. Check it out.



Celly Launches New Service and Android App for Building Mobile Social Networks

Celly Powers Over 20,000 Mobile Social Networking “Cells” in Schools, Homes, Communities, Local Governments, Businesses, and The Occupy Movement Via Text, Web, Email, and Now Android App

Portland, OR – September 18, 2012 – Celly today announced availability of its service for building mobile social networks. The new service enables real world groups to instantly self-organize into mobile social networks, called “cells”, using text messaging, QR code, email, or web. The speed, simplicity, and flexibility of the Celly platform has led to the creation of more than 20,000 cells across all 50 states for friends, families, schools, communities, local governments, businesses, and the Occupy Movement. The company also announced today availability of the Celly Android App for free download on Google Play.

“We collaborated directly with educators, students, parents, city leaders, community associations, and political movements to develop Celly – and we learned why social networks like Facebook, Twitter, and Google+ don’t work for spontaneous sharing in real world scenarios,” said Russell Okamoto, co-founder and CEO of Celly. “Celly overcomes lack of privacy, on-boarding friction, oversharing threats, and expensive device requirements that are showstoppers with existing social networks.”

Celly streamlines the social networking process through the power, ubiquity, and convenience of mobile phones. Anybody with a mobile phone can join a cell in seconds and instantly share secure group messages, polls, reminders, notes, and topic alerts.

With the relentless barrage of emails, websites, Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr, and Google+ notifications we all receive on a daily basis, a simple, short, and concise text message cuts through all the noise of our digital lifestyles,” said Shawn Carrié, member of the Occupy Wall Street’s Tech Ops Working Group. “What I love so much about Celly is that anyone can set up a cell in literally a minute, anytime, anyplace, easily tell people how to get on it, they sign up in ten seconds, and it's done you're linked. It's a beautifully simple, lightweight system that works intuitively and effectively.”

Cells are “social building blocks” that work for any group, event, place, or activity. Cells can operate stand-alone or be linked together into networks to match the size and shape of any organization. “Our goal is to build the smallest communication tool that can have the biggest impact on the most scenarios in the shortest amount of time,” said Greg Passmore, co-founder and CTO of Celly.

Celly supports the private, mobile social networking needs of a wide range of users and applications:

       Families – everyday communication and scheduling for family members, connecting with relatives, weddings, reunions
       Friends – cliques and social chat
       K-12 and universities – in-class feedback and polling, homework reminders, school alerts, study groups, parent communication, field trips
       Local governments – departmental communication, cross-bureau workflow, community outreach
       Neighborhoods – watch groups, foot patrols, lost and found, community sales, event planning
       Faith-based organizations – prayer groups, helplines, event fundraising
       Teams, clubs, choirs – game and practice alerts, ridesharing and travel planning
       Businesses – staff coordination, field service communication, real-time coupons, customer loyalty campaigns
       Political movements – 100+ Occupy Movement sites, election campaigns and fundraising

“Celly is changing the face of education! While Twitter, Google+, and other social media websites are blocked at my school, I can freely use Celly to communicate with my students and their parents in a safe and supportive environment,” said Melissa Seideman, history teacher at Haldane High School in Cold Spring, New York. “I use Celly to send text messages to students with reminders, announcements, polls, and questions. Students can text me a specific question such as ‘what is on the test tomorrow?’ or ‘what did I miss in class?’ if they were out sick. With Celly, cell phones have the potential to bridge the gap between the home, school, and social media world.”

Celly’s features can be accessed, managed, and fully synchronized using text, web, email, and now an Android app available for download on Google Play. Feature advantages include:

       Privacy and Sharing Controls – Celly users communicate freely without identifying individual phone numbers. Group communications can be moderated by one or more “curators” for relevancy, abuse, and redundancy.

       Ubiquitous Access – On-boarding is instant, simple, and works from any device, addressing the “digital divide” between those with a smartphone or tablet and those who just have an SMS-enabled mobile phone.

       Unlimited, Opt-In Membership – Cells have no limit on membership. Plus, all members choose to opt-in, or out, of each mobile social network.

       Real-time Discovery – Cells can track RSS feeds and other social networks for topics of interest. When a cell discovers a search hit, matching messages are automatically imported by the cell and members are instantly notified.

       Multi-Cell Networks – Multiple cells can link together forming complex networks for collaboration where messages with specific hashtags route from one cell to another.

“The use of Celly enables street gang outreach workers managed through our office to virtually be two places at once,” said Tom Peavey, policy manager of the Office of Youth Violence Prevention, City of Portland. “We use Celly to connect available public safety resources from the City and county with private non-profit service organizations and community groups across the City, dramatically speeding up the ability to inform as well as apply needed service. The use of Celly is an essential messaging component to intervention and prevention efforts provided through our office.”

“Celly helps us provide the public with immediate, real-time construction and accident updates so our commuters can make informed driving decisions,” said Andy Rittler, corporate affairs director, LBJ Express Project. “When it comes to accident response times, our crews are often first on the scene, thanks to the integration of Dallas Fire and Rescue’s Twitter feed directly into our Celly mobile network. We also like having the ability to pre-schedule outbound messages and are potentially adding mobile coupons to help drive traffic to local businesses near construction areas. We are constantly finding new ways to leverage the versatility of Celly as a mobile social network and communications tool.” 

Founded by former cloud computing architects from VMware, Celly is partnered with Portland’s Upstart Labs Accelerator Program and was recently recognized in the American Association of School Librarians (AASL) 2012 Top 25 Best Websites for Teaching and Learning.

Pricing and Availability
Celly is available today as a free service via SMS, the Celly website, or the new Android App available on Google Play.  iPhone App, Developer API, and premium plans for organizations and advanced users are coming soon.

About Celly
Celly instantly connects people and topics in everyday life using the power, ubiquity, and convenience of mobile phones. From a text message, Android App, the web, QR code or email, individuals and organizations can spontaneously create private, mobile social networks to communicate, collaborate, and share information using group messages, polls, reminders, voice alerts, notes and real-time feed tracking. The free Celly service powers over 20,000 “cells” in schools, homes, local governments, community groups and neighborhood associations, event planners, teams and clubs, businesses, and the national and local Occupy Movements. Get started with Celly at cel.ly, or follow us on Twitter, Facebook and our blog.




Thursday, July 26, 2012

Social Media Guide and Resources for Educators



Social Media is an incredible resource for education. Educators can learn, share, connect and more with educators from around the world. They can collaborate and communicate with students, parents, and colleagues. There are many different social media networks, and lots of ways to use them. Here are some great resources for learning more about social media in education:

Social Media in Education - connect, share, learn, communicate and more

Social Media Cheat Sheets - free tips and more for social media sites

Monday, June 18, 2012

#EdStuff - a new twitter hash tag for Education



Twitter is a great resource for education. Educators can learn, share, collaborate, find help and have some great discussions. It is my go-to source when looking for help, advice, tips, tools, and resources for education.

A hash tag is a way of sorting and searching Tweets based on topic. There are tons of great educational hash tags, including #edchat, #edtech, #scichat, and more. Many of these hash tags relate to a scheduled conversation, such as #edchat being every Tuesday at 12 noon and 7pm ET, and are also used as a way to find educational resources.

William Chamberlain, author of "At the Teacher's Desk" blog, has posted that he has created a new educational hash tag, #EdStuff: "I have created the #EdStuff tag for people that want to post ed stuff, but don't want to tag it with the the chat based tags such as #edchat or #fifthchat. Feel free to use it as you will, for it is good for all ed stuff!"

This is another great way to use Twitter to find, share, collaborate, and learn.



Related:

Twitter for Education - great resource and some hashtags
Twitter, Facebook, RSS feeds, Email, Google+ - why/when I use each one 

Social Media in Education - connect, share, learn, communicate and more







Tuesday, May 22, 2012

100 Ways You Should Be Using Facebook in Your Classroom



Social Media is a great way to connect, share, learn and communicate with other educators and with students and parents. Teachers can hold online study sessions, discussions, post assignments and resources, and communicate with students and parents about class issues and information. Schools can use social media to connect with parents and the community and communicate with staff and students.


Facebook is one social network that schools and teachers use with their students, when it isn't blocked by the school filtering software! Our school district has a Facebook page, but blocks Facebook on the school network.

There are a lot of great ways to use Facebook in the classroom and here are 100 Ways Teachers Can Use Facebook in the Classroom. There are some great ideas here.




Related:

Social Media in Education - connect, share, learn, communicate and more

Twitter, Google Plus, Facebook - a nice comparison

Edmodo - excellent, free, social network and educational system

5 Great course management resources for educators

Google Groups - connect, share, communicate, discuss - great for education

Which Social Network should you use? Infographic on which to use when

Twitter - A great resource for Education

Google+ - more reasons it's great for educators

Twitter, Facebook, RSS feeds, Email, Google+ - why/when I use each one






Update and full review on So.cl - I'm in and using it now



Yesterday I wrote about So.cl, Microsoft's new social network that they launched with very little fanfare. I was unable to login or create an account because it put me on a waiting list. I received my email invite this morning and am now on it and using it.

Something interesting happened yesterday though that annoyed me. I went to share my blog article about So.cl onto Facebook. I've done this a million times with articles and it always posts the link to my site. When I shared this article, So.cl took over and posted a direct link to their site. This has never happened before and I was not happy about it. So far, a big negative against So.cl. The other thing I don't like is that it automatically is using my Facebook profile picture here.

As you login using a Facebook or Windows Live account, you are given the following message:

So.cl is an experiment in open search. That means your searches on So.cl are viewable by other So.cl users and will also be available to third parties.
So.cl does not automatically post your searches, comments, or likes to your Facebook stream unless you choose this option. Also, we don’t contact your Facebook friends unless you invite them.


In other words, if you are on So.cl and doing an internet search, be careful what you search for as all other So.cl users will see it, along with "third parties" whomever that is.



Once you sign in, So.cl suggests some things to you. First, it shows you some topics you can follow that you are interested in, like music, travel, food, etc., then shows some of the popular people on So.cl to follow (none loaded on my screen), and then asks you to invite your Facebook friends to join So.cl.


I skipped this part and went right to the main page. Here you can explore topics, look at your feed (everyone, following, conversations, your own posts), post something, join a video party and check your profile. According to the main page, I have 10 invitations to use for people to join. If you are interested in one, let me know in the comments below.



The layout is nice and uncluttered, which is the biggest thing I hate about Facebook - the page is cluttered with "noise". Most of the posts were actually just "so and so searched for" or "so and so joined this video party". There weren't a lot of comment posts or "this is what I'm doing" posts.

The next thing I tried out was the "Explore" feature. I clicked on "Science" and it takes you to feed page that lists posts and searches about science. It also gives you a suggestion for the most popular ones and allows you to "follow" this topic. It was interesting and a different way to find some new resources and information. According to the site, there are 5569 users following "Science".





It seems the difference between So.cl and other social networks is that it is all about sharing internet searches and exploring topics of interest. It's interesting and worth a look, but I'm not sure how it will do competing against well established networks like Facebook, Twitter, and Google+. In addition, there are tons of educational systems, like Edmodo and others that allow teachers and students to set up private networks.

It's new and has some interesting features to check out.

If you are interested in another social network, check out So.cl here: http://www.so.cl




Related:
Social Media in Education - connect, share, learn, communicate and more

Twitter, Google Plus, Facebook - a nice comparison



Monday, May 21, 2012

Microsoft Launches, quietly, new social network - So.cl



Twitter, Facebook, Google+ and now So.cl. Microsoft has quietly launched a new social network, So.cl, pronounced "social" that was originally an academic resource for students. It is now available to everyone through either a Facebook or Windows Live account. With So.cl, you can aggregate multimedia content into one post to share with others. You can re-share and comment on posts, and there is also a video chat feature.



I'm curious to see how this does considering Twitter and Facebook seem to rule the social networking space, with Google+ doing good, but not great yet.

I wanted to try it out myself, but after trying to sign in with Facebook, I got a message saying that I am on a waiting list. We'll see if So.cl survives or not soon.

It could be useful as another way to connect and share with others without all of the "noise" the more popular networks have.

Microsoft So.cl  http://www.so.cl/



Related:

Social Media in Education - connect, share, learn, communicate and more


Which Social Network should you use? Infographic on which to use when




Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Google Groups - connect, share, communicate, discuss - great for education


Google Groups

Google Groups has been around for a while, but sometimes gets overshadowed by things like Twitter, Facebook, Edmodo, and other social/learning networks. Google Groups is free, very easy to use and a great way to connect with people, access information and communicate. Teachers can set up a group for each of their classes, schools can have a whole school group, student groups, parents, faculty, and even groups by department.

Google Groups Tour

You can create a group just by picking a name for it and inviting members. That's it. Share information, have discussions, share files, and much more. Groups can be made private so only members can see. A teacher could set up a group for their class and share files, links, and information and have the class hold discussions on the group site. Discussions can be held online or through email - your choice.

Another nice feature is the ability to get a digest email of activity on a group. It makes it easy to keep up with what's going on in multiple groups.

You can also search and browse for information in public groups.



I've used it with classes and I belong to a few groups, including the DEN LC, Blogger Users, CR-48 Chromebook users, and the Google for Educators groups.

Google Groups is a great, easy way to participate in an online group, or create your own.

Get started using Google Groups here: http://groups.google.com/googlegroups/overview.html



Related:

Google Resources for Education - apps, tips, lessons, help, and much more.

Twitter, Facebook, RSS feeds, Email, Google+ - why/when use each one

Twiducate - free social networking for schools

Social Media in Education - connect, share, learn, communicate and more

5 Great course management resources for educators







Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Powerful Learning Practice - Day in the Life of Connected Educator



Powerful Learning Practice is a site that provides professional development and resources for teachers to implement new technologies and pedagogy to create "21st Century Classrooms." There are some good resources on the site.

They have an article entitled "A Day in the Life of a Connected Educator – Using social media in 21st century classrooms" that looks at how teachers use social media and other Web 2.0 tools to improve teaching and learning.

The infographic is interesting and has ideas for using social media in the classroom. It follows a teacher through her day as she uses social media sites and Web 2.0 resources throughout her day as an educator. Teachers can get some great ideas from this for their own use.

It can be found at their site:
http://plpnetwork.com/2012/05/07/a-day-in-the-life-of-a-connected-educator-using-social-media-throughout-your-day/



Related:

Social Media in Education - connect, share, learn, communicate and more
Twitter, Google Plus, and Facebook - a nice comparison
Which Social Network should you use? Infographic on which to use when.

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

edWeb - social network for educators - great resource


edWeb.net - A professional social network for the education community

edWeb is a social network for educators. It's free to join, and allows educators to connect with other educators and create a professional learning community. There are resources, tips, forums, lesson ideas, research and much more available. It's another great resource to add to your network.

Sample Member Homepage








Monday, April 23, 2012

The Many forms of Socializing Online - social networks organized graphically




The Many Forms of Socializing Online is a nice graphic that has different social networks organized by type/functions, such as photo-sharing, blogging, music, documents, videos, etc.

It was originally posted on Visual.ly (a site for creating and finding great infographics) over a year ago at http://visual.ly/many-forms-socializing-online.

It is missing Google+, but is still a great resource for educators and students looking to find new ways to socialize, learn, share, and connect online.



Lots more resources on Social Networking in Education:

Which Social Network should you use? Infographic on which to use when.

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Which Social Network should you use? Infographic on which to use when.



Social Networks are a great resource for businesses, keeping in touch with friends, and education. Social Networks help educators and students learn, stay in contact, connect, share and more. But which Social Network is best for what?

Twitter, Facebook, Google Plus, the many systems made for education (Twiducate, Edmodo, etc). Which do you use? Many schools and teachers like to use systems like Edmodo and Twiducate because they can keep things private and see who is accessing the information. Many schools use Google+ and set up Circles to keep things private and organized. Others just use Twitter and Facebook. It all depends on your needs, policies, and what you are trying to do with the system.

Here are some articles on different social networks and what they are useful for, as well as some course management systems that include social networking features. Below them, there is a great infographic from business consultant network Zintro on social networks and when they are best used for what purpose.

Related:


Twitter, Google Plus, and Facebook - a nice comparison

Social Media in Education - connect, share, learn, communicate and more





Thursday, April 12, 2012

Twiducate - free social networking for schools



Twiducate is a social network platform for education. It is free and easy to use. It allows you to do the same things you could do with other social networks, like Twitter, Facebook, and Google Plus, but in a safe and secure setting.

Teachers can use Twiducate to connect with other teachers and students, share ideas, resources, and ideas, hold discussions, and much more. You can even embed images, videos, documents and links to share. It is also available for mobile. Teachers can create an online classroom using it as a course management system. You can also use it to communicate with parents.


It's a great way to be able to connect with your students and other teachers in a secure, private setting.

Here's an infographic about Twiducate:




Related:

Twitter, Google Plus, and Facebook - a nice comparison

Social Media in Education - connect, share, learn, communicate and more
EDU 2.0 Free Course Management System for Schools

5 Great course management resources for educators


it's learning Course Management System

OpenClass - Pearson and Google combine to make free LMS

Learnboost online planner/gradebook announces new admin features






Monday, February 27, 2012

Curriki - social network and resources for educators


Curriki logo

Curriki is a social network and resource site for educators. It is a free platform where educators can share resources and teaching ideas. There are over 250,000 members (free to sign up) and over 40,000 learning resources available. 

You can connect with other educators to collaborate and share feedback on teaching practices, curricula, lesson ideas, and more. 

Resources are searchable by subject, search term, and standards. Resources include links, lesson plans, animations, activities, and much more. 

It's another great free resource for educators. 


Thursday, January 26, 2012

Twitter, Google Plus, Facebook - a nice comparison




There are a variety of social networks out there that we can use as teachers to expand our learning through a PLN, connect with students and parents, and communicate with colleagues. The three major ones are Twitter, Google Plus, and Facebook. They all have different features, functions, and uses.

I use Twitter and Google Plus for real time updates from websites and news and to connect with educators across the globe in my Personal Learning Network to share resources and communicate. I use Facebook to connect with friends and family and keep in touch with former students. You can read more about how and why I use these different services here.

Info.it has a great infographic comparing some of the major features of each of these, from relationships, to sharing, to content.





Which do you use and how / why?



Related:

Google+ - more reasons it's great for educators

Google+ and Google+ Pages - great for educators and schools

Twitter, Facebook, RSS feeds, Email, Google+ - why/when I use each one

Infographic comparing Facebook and Google+ security





Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Storify - create engaging social stories


 

Storify is a service that allows you to create a story or collect resources from social media sources. Using the Storify editor you can search social media networks to gather elements, including status updates, photos, or videos, to create a story. You can even add narrative to it. You can then embed and share your story across the web.

This is a great way to gather information from across the web and turn it into a cohesive story. Teachers could use it for lessons and students could use it to create reports and projects on different topics.


Monday, December 19, 2011

Kloosion - soon to launch private sharing & communication service


Kloosion logo

Kloosion is a soon-to-be-launched beta service that promises "a secure and private way to share and communicate". There isn't much more than that available yet, but you can sign up to be notified when the beta is available at their site.

The site is supposedly going to allow you to work, study, and communicate with others with a simple, secure tool.

It sounds like it might be a mini-social network or the like with more security and privacy than most of the current ones.

As soon as it launches, I'll try it out and share more information.


Monday, June 6, 2011

Diipo - Education 2.0 social network for classes


Diipo is a new free service (in beta) that describes itself as "Education 2.0 Social Network for your Class". Diipo allows the teacher to communicate with their students and vice versa and also allows the teacher to connect to other educators and connect classes to each other. It is easy to use and the user-interface (UI) is similar to Facebook and Twitter.

Some of the features include:

  • collaborative workspaces for students to work with each other and get help from the teacher
  • direct messaging 
  • student blogs and micro-blogging
  • upload and share files
  • student project notebooks
  • class roster
  • an educator community
It only takes a minute to sign up and it is easy to use. There are "@mentions", direct messages, full search, getting started tips and videos, and an Educator lounge. 

Here's a shot of the main screen when you create a new account:



This is a great way for teachers and schools to create their own social network system for students that is access controlled.. It allows communication and collaboration and is easy to use. 





Thursday, March 31, 2011

Differences between Twitter, Facebook, email, and RSS feeds

There are a variety of tools that I use to stay informed and connected online. They each have their own benefits and shortcomings and I have different reasons for using each one.

Twitter

Twitter - Twitter is an excellent resource for educators. I connect with other educators from around the world and share resources and discuss educational topics. I also get breaking news, updates from companies I like, and more. I don't use it as a purely social entity though. It is more for my professional use. The one problem with Twitter is that you can easily miss things as your feed moves along. You can search for users and topics, but it is very easy to miss things. It's strength is instant communication and connecting with people around the world. (however, the 140 character limit can make it challenging sometimes).




Facebook - I use Facebook to connect with friends and keep up with social events. I do follow a couple of business and education pages, but my main use is for keeping with with my friends. There are plenty of educational uses for it, but I haven't gone to far with that yet.


Email -  email is a great method of communicating with people. You can write any length, attach files, and the responses don't disappear in a feed of messages like on Twitter. I have an email account for business use (like banks, etc), my school email account, and a gmail account for Google accounts and communicating. I do not believe that email is dead, or even dying, like many people have suggested.


RSS Feeds - I've read different articles about how RSS feeds are dying too. I don't believe that. I use RSS feeds to subscribe to web sites to get notified when there is a new article. The feed doesn't disappear into a long line of messages like on Twitter. It will be there until I read it or delete it. I can also favorite an article to read later, or even share them with others. It is an extremely useful tool.


Each of these tools is useful in different ways and has different reasons I use them. I don't think that any one could replace the other because they are so different.

How do you use each one?

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Homework Social Network Site


Dweeber is a social network site for homework. Students can join for free and then have virtual study groups. They can use the white board to work out problems and collaborate on homework.

It has some nice features that can help students learn about their own learning styles and improve their performance in school.

For more information, see the article at Tech&Learning magazine.

 

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