Showing posts with label web. Show all posts
Showing posts with label web. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 12, 2019

Schools : Happy Birthday WWW ! Let's talk about Tim Berners-Lee !







Sir Tim Berners-Lee

It is a great honour and a source of pride for CERN to host an event to mark the 30th anniversary of Tim Berners-Lee’s proposal for what would become the World Wide Web, and I am delighted that Sir Tim will be with us on the day,

Fabiola Gianotti, CERN Director-General

Sir Tim Berners-Lee is one of the UK’s most famous and lauded computer scientists, credited for the invention of the World Wide Web. It was Berners-Lee’s system which allows us to view the web today.

He holds honorary doctorates from the following universities: Essex (1998), Open (2000), Lancaster (2004), Manchester (2008), UP de Madrid (2009), Vrije Amsterdam (2009), Harvard (2011), St Andrews (2013) and Yale (2014).

  • Google Doodle:

Google celebrates the 30th anniversary of the World Wide Web with a interactive Doodle. It's its own way to celebrate the great inventor Tim Berners-Lee.






30th Anniversary of the World Wide Web

A Proposal submitted on this day, 12 March 1989, when the inventor of the World Wide Web was a 33-year-old software engineer. Initially, Berners-Lee envisioned "a large hypertext database with typed links, "named  “Mesh,” to help his colleagues at CERN (a large European Nuclear Physics Laboratory in Switzerland) share information amongst multiple computers.





While working at CERN, Sir Tim Berners-Lee invented the World Wide Web
 credits: CERN

Thirty years ago, a young computer expert working at CERN combined ideas about accessing information with a desire for broad connectivity and openness. 
His proposal became the World Wide Web. CERN is celebrating the 30th anniversary of this revolutionary invention with a special day.
In March 1989, while working at CERN, Sir Tim Berners-Lee wrote his first proposal for an internet-based hypertext system to link and access information across different computers. 


In 1990, I coded up the foundational technologies for the World Wide Web.



credits: CERN
In November 1990, this “web of information nodes in which the user can browse at will” was formalized as a proposal, WorldWideWeb: Proposal for a HyperText Project, by Berners-Lee, together with a CERN colleague, Robert Cailliau. 
By Christmas that year, Berners-Lee had implemented key components, namely HTML, HTTP and URL, and created the first Web server, browser and editor WorldWideWeb.
On 30 April 1993, CERN released the latest version of the WWW software into the public domain and made it freely available for anyone to use and improve. 
The World Wide Web has been central to the development of the Information Age and is the primary tool billions of people use to interact on the Internet.

  • What is the WWW? A brief history:


The Web would soon revolutionize life as we know it, ushering in the information ageToday, there are more than 2 billion websites online. 

"Whether you use it for email, homework, gaming, or checking out videos of cute puppies, chances are you can’t imagine life without the Web."





An Opte Project visualization of routing paths 
through a portion of the Internet

Not to be confused with the internet, which had been evolving since the 1960s, the World Wide Web is an online application built upon innovations like HTML language, URL “addresses,” and hypertext transfer protocol, or HTTP. 






The Web has also become a decentralized community, founded on principles of universality, consensus, and bottom-up design.

"The web has become a public square, a library, a doctor’s office, a shop, a school, a design studio, an office, a cinema, a bank, and so much more. Of course with every new feature, every new website, the divide between those who are online and those who are not increases, making it all the more imperative to make the web available for everyone."

World Wide Web Foundation





via Google Images


Education:

“The Web has been an incredible and powerful tool to reach out to the whole world, to break down barriers, to bring education and information to all and thus to reduce inequalities,” 

Fabiola Gianotti, CERN Director General, 12 March 2019


Coding was added to the UK's National Curriculum in 2014, Portugal's National Curriculum in 2015 (primary schools) and we are increasingly seeing kids using new words and skills that they are learning. 



"Computer programming is being heralded as the new literacy, yet it is still widely perceived as a skill that can only mastered with a computer science degree. 

With the wider availability of internet connectivity and freely available, easy to use technologies, this is no longer the case."




credits: unknown
via We are Teachers

There’s a growing talent gap in programming and traditional education started to offer students a new curriculum: computer programming. Young people is starting to create apps, games, and computer programming activities.

So, will computer programming languages like PHP, Ruby and JavaScript soon be as commonplace in classrooms as languages, history chemistry? *


Sure! Some countries have already computer programming classes and other as my country, Portugal are including new computer programming in school curriculum.







Coding - known as computer science - is a huge part of the present education. Computer science education and its constituent fields like back-end development and front-end web design should be available in all schools. We the teachers agree.


Teachers:

Not a computer scientist or new to coding? That's Ok! Learn how to introduce coding with your students using Minecraft: Education Edition in just a few minutes.





Invite your students to have fun building things about code. Are they ready to share their passion? Young students are so creative. Let's them explore all the funny coding games with their imagination.*

And remember! On the World Wide Web’s 30th birthday, the founder and web inventor Sir Tim Berners-Lee reflects on how the web has changed our world and what we must do to build a better web that serves all of humanity."

Please share using #Web30 #ForTheWeb.


“There are very few innovations that have truly changed everything,” (...) “The Web is the most impactful innovation of our time.”

 Jeff Jaffe, CEO of the World Wide Web Consortium

* So now 2023, kids from 2019 are inventing with the help of IA, ChatGPTChatGPT is a sibling model to InstructGPT, which is trained to follow an instruction in a prompt and provide a detailed response.



via Google Images

"We’ve trained a model called ChatGPT which interacts in a conversational way. The dialogue format makes it possible for ChatGPT to answer followup questions, admit its mistakes, challenge incorrect premises, and reject inappropriate requests."

Invite your students to try ChatGPT

Wow! As I said, they are so creative! 


G-Souto

12.03.2019
update 12.03.2023

Copyright © 2019G-Souto'sBlog, gsouto-digitalteacher.blogspot.com®


Creative Commons License
Schools : Happy Birthday WWW ! Let's talk about Berners-Lee ! bG-Souto is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License

Monday, March 14, 2016

Schools : Let's Play Music on Google Chrome !






Google Chrome MusicLab

"Music expresses that which cannot be said and on which it is impossible to be silent."

Victor Hugo


Google put the Lab together for Music in Our Schools Month, because the company "wanted to make learning music a bit more accessible." I agree. Music is for everyone. Please read my post Talking about Music in Public Schools.

"So this year for Music in our schools, we wanted to make learning music a bit more accessible to everyone by using technology that’s open to everyone: the web."

Do you know a better inclusive resource than the web? So you and your students can play with all its experiments right on the browser without having to download extensions or add-ons. 

The best thing about Music Lab, though, is that you don't have to know how to read notes or play an instrument to enjoy it: just go to its website and poke around to have some fun.





Google Chrome MusicLab

Chrome Music Lab is a collection of experiments that let anyone, at any age, explore how music works. 

They're collaborations between musicians and coders, all built with the freely available Web Audio API. 

These experiments are just a start. Check out each experiment to find open-source code you can use to build your own.



Google Chrome MusicLab

Those words are a kind of presentation of Google Chrome Experiments.
 
WebGL is a web technology that brings hardware-accelerated 3D graphics to the browser without installing additional software.

The experience should appeal to adults and kids alike: It’s like a Web-based Exploratorium for sound. 

  • Education:
Don't you think this is the best new for schools, to include into music and science curricula, but specially for Music teachers. Such a creative digital resource that allows students experiment different kind of musical experiences?




Arcade Fire The Wilderness Downtown

Thus, I remember you another interesting Google project with the rock band Arcade FireGoogle joined the Canadian rock band Arcade Fire to conceptualize an interactive video that shows some of the potentialities of the new "markup" language.


The Wilderness Downtown is an interactive interpretation of Arcade Fire's song "We Used To Wait" and was built entirely with the latest open web technologies, including HTML5 video, audio, and canvas. 


Another Google Chrome experiment that demanded an interaction using Google Maps and Street View. Students loved it.



Google Chrome MusicLab

Exploring music can help spark curiosity in all kinds of ways.  These experiments will inspire teachers and students. They give a new perspective on music, make students more curious about math and science. Teachers will have new ways to teach or code.

If you teach Music and your students love to play with musical instrument apps, they might find Chrome Music Lab awesome. 


Characteristics:

Students can play with sound, rhythm, melody, and more. Chrome Music Lab is all built for the web, so students can start playing instantly, whether they're on a tablet, phone, or laptop. Oh ! They will love it. For sure.


Just like Clara Rockmore doodle, (remember the 9th March 2016?), "the experiments are all built with the Web Audio API, a freely-accessible, open web standard that lets developers create and manipulate sound right in the browser".
Exploring music can help spark curiosity in all kinds of ways. We hope these experiments inspire you – whether they give you a new perspective on music, make you more curious about math and science, or even make you think of new ways to teach or code.

It doesn't have straightforward virtual pianosguitars or saxophones. It's more of a collection of experiments (some familiar, some odd) to explore sounds, rhythms and melodies. 

One of them plays notes and tunes based on what students draw, for instance, while another remixes their voice. There's also one experiment that works like a stripped down rhythm game if you're not quite up for a round of Arcade Fire .








Exploring music can help spark curiosity in all kinds of ways. I We hope these experiments inspire you – whether they give you a new perspective on music, make you more curious about math and science, or even make you think of new ways to teach or code.

I amused myself to explore a little bit chords (I play the piano) and I enjoyed very much.


  • Music & Coding?


Yes, Google is also providing open-source code so that students can build new experiments based on what they’ve started. They're collaborations between musicians and coders, all built with the freely available Web Audio API. These experiments are just a start. 
Check out each experiment to find open-source code students can use to build their own.





Google Chrome MusicLab

Google has architected the experiments with enough depth to allow kids and adults alike to spend a few minutes with each one, exploring the variations there in. 

It’s a rare mixture of art and science, and one that does the Web as a medium proud. 


"Music is for everyone. Play with these simple experiments to explore how music works. We’re also providing open-source code so that others can build new experiments based on what we’ve started. Start playing!"

Google Chrome MusicLab

G-Souto 

14.03.2016

update 16.01.2024
Copyright © 2016G-Souto'sBlog, gsouto-digitalteacher.blogspot.com®

Creative Commons License

Schools : Let's Play Music on Google Chrome ! How pleasant and educative ! bG-Souto is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.