Difference between revisions of "User talk:Slomp"

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User talk:Slomp
 
User talk:Slomp
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== Free educational software - dynamic table ==
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Free educational software - dynamic table
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One might think that drawing up a table with information about free educational programs is not a novelty: You can find on the Internet dozens of lists and tables with this content, but in general the tables are static, without interactivity, and are sorted by areas of knowledge, providing a short description of each program. Some of these tables record the official web page of the programs. More rarely, the table presents the possibility of reorganizing the data so that the user can easily combine the most interesting information.
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For example:
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- Can the software be used in elementary school, high school, university?
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- The program has versions for different operating systems such as GNU/Linux, Windows and Mac?
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- In which web page can I download these versions?
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- What kind of free software license (GNU-GPL, Apache, MIT, BSD, etc.)?
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- In which web page can I download the source code?
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- The program interface is translated into the students native language of the my classroom?
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- Is there a page about the program on Wikipedia?
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The dynamic table free educational software - https://libreplanet.org/wiki/Dynamic_Table_Free_Educational_Software - answer these questions. In addition, through a few clicks, intuitively, the user can reorder the information in succession, keeping the previous order. That is, the user,  to reorder the table to display the programs that can be used for high school, for example, can then reorder by clicking the first line of the GNU-Linux column, without breaking the previous order.
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In addition to the technical features, the wiki format allows collective work, through the interaction between users. The bidirectionality
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between the table and the users brings the  possibility to add new content and correct errors and inaccuracies directly, without requesting
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permission from authors. You can contribute even anonymously.
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In quantitative terms, the table features more than 320 educational programs for areas such as Biology, Physics, Geography, Mathematics and
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Chemistry, among others. Each area is different from the others by colors, for easier viewing of the set.
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The free educational software dynamic table is the result of a collective work. Several generous people contributed to the initial translation to 6 languages and, after publication, several other people have contributed voluntarily. A lot of people contributed disclosing the table through blogs, microblogs, social networks, mailing lists and websites. Sites of governmental institutions in the education area and associations dedicated to the defense and promotion of free software also disclosed the table. Thanks  to all.
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One way we found to return this people support was to publish the table with the Creative Commons BY-SA license. We believe that a collective
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work should not have private ownership. In this type of license it is allowed republishing, remixing and even commercial use. In the CC-BY-SA
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it is not allowed to abandon those freedoms.
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In addition to the native language of the initial authors, Brazilian Portuguese, there are versions in English, Spanish, French, Italian,
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German and European Portuguese.

Latest revision as of 15:22, 24 April 2015

User talk:Slomp

Free educational software - dynamic table

Free educational software - dynamic table

One might think that drawing up a table with information about free educational programs is not a novelty: You can find on the Internet dozens of lists and tables with this content, but in general the tables are static, without interactivity, and are sorted by areas of knowledge, providing a short description of each program. Some of these tables record the official web page of the programs. More rarely, the table presents the possibility of reorganizing the data so that the user can easily combine the most interesting information.

For example:

- Can the software be used in elementary school, high school, university?

- The program has versions for different operating systems such as GNU/Linux, Windows and Mac?

- In which web page can I download these versions?

- What kind of free software license (GNU-GPL, Apache, MIT, BSD, etc.)?

- In which web page can I download the source code?

- The program interface is translated into the students native language of the my classroom?

- Is there a page about the program on Wikipedia?

The dynamic table free educational software - https://libreplanet.org/wiki/Dynamic_Table_Free_Educational_Software - answer these questions. In addition, through a few clicks, intuitively, the user can reorder the information in succession, keeping the previous order. That is, the user, to reorder the table to display the programs that can be used for high school, for example, can then reorder by clicking the first line of the GNU-Linux column, without breaking the previous order.

In addition to the technical features, the wiki format allows collective work, through the interaction between users. The bidirectionality between the table and the users brings the possibility to add new content and correct errors and inaccuracies directly, without requesting permission from authors. You can contribute even anonymously.

In quantitative terms, the table features more than 320 educational programs for areas such as Biology, Physics, Geography, Mathematics and Chemistry, among others. Each area is different from the others by colors, for easier viewing of the set.

The free educational software dynamic table is the result of a collective work. Several generous people contributed to the initial translation to 6 languages and, after publication, several other people have contributed voluntarily. A lot of people contributed disclosing the table through blogs, microblogs, social networks, mailing lists and websites. Sites of governmental institutions in the education area and associations dedicated to the defense and promotion of free software also disclosed the table. Thanks to all.

One way we found to return this people support was to publish the table with the Creative Commons BY-SA license. We believe that a collective work should not have private ownership. In this type of license it is allowed republishing, remixing and even commercial use. In the CC-BY-SA it is not allowed to abandon those freedoms.

In addition to the native language of the initial authors, Brazilian Portuguese, there are versions in English, Spanish, French, Italian, German and European Portuguese.



Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included in the page “GNU Free Documentation License”.

The copyright and license notices on this page only apply to the text on this page. Any software or copyright-licenses or other similar notices described in this text has its own copyright notice and license, which can usually be found in the distribution or license text itself.