I love to share funny stuf with friends, but whenever i offer a funny video to them, they tell me to stfu. So now im PASSING THE SAVINGS ONTO YOOOOUUUUU! I did not make most of the pictures or videos below. If I do not specify that an image or video was made by me, assume that it was made by someone else.
Dog
Wednesday, February 16, 2011
Images being sold/stolen
I believe that if you post a photo on the internet without copywiting it, it is for anyone's taking or use. Images become free for anyone's use when it goes on the internet, just like anything else on the internet. If you have not copywrited it, then why cant someone else use it? The entire point of puting something on the internet is to share it, and not with just select people, but the entire world. If you put an image on the internet without a copywrite, but dont want it to be used in any way others would like to use it, then thats a big mistake on your part. The internet is free reign, and is only restricted by legal agreements, whether its a copywrite, or a user agreement with facebook regarding your images. The only difference between puting an image on the internet and puting it on a giant blimp to fly through the sky is that its easyer to obtain that image on the internet.
Monday, February 7, 2011
Doodling
http://www.alistapart.com/articles/the-miseducation-of-the-doodle/
This article brings up an interesting point about the helpfulness of doodling when it coems to learning. Doodling is something that I have never really thought of, but to use it to better depict things that you are trying to learn seems like a brilliant way to learn something if purely visualizing it is difficult. People have always had a hard time registering or accepting something that they cannot for a fact see, which is why doodling can help, because it helps put into perspective what seems so cryptic or complicated. Doodling seems like a great way to learn for kids who are having trouble visualizing or accepting what they are being tought, and I think it should be a practice that is more commonly encouraged in schools as a technique to help students out.
This article brings up an interesting point about the helpfulness of doodling when it coems to learning. Doodling is something that I have never really thought of, but to use it to better depict things that you are trying to learn seems like a brilliant way to learn something if purely visualizing it is difficult. People have always had a hard time registering or accepting something that they cannot for a fact see, which is why doodling can help, because it helps put into perspective what seems so cryptic or complicated. Doodling seems like a great way to learn for kids who are having trouble visualizing or accepting what they are being tought, and I think it should be a practice that is more commonly encouraged in schools as a technique to help students out.
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