Replied to David Gilmour on Twitter (Twitter)
“Education in Times of Crisis and Beyond: Maximizing Copyright Flexibilities - https://t.co/nia86x1tS3 @johnjohnston @TheoKL”

Open education is not a short-term fix to a passing problem—it is a long-term solution to ensuring equitable, inclusive access to effective educational resources and learning opportunities.

In the same way open science is better science (the world is sharing COVID-19 research to create a vaccine), open education is better education.

So good, thanks David. Also, IMO, as much as possible should be accessible by the simplest tech.

Replied to Malcolm Wilson on Twitter (Twitter)
“Handy for teachers wanting to make sure their messages to their class stand out and are catchy in amongst posts in their class @MicrosoftTeams #GlowScot https://t.co/bIYgERCtTZ”

Sticky posts would be great for this. My announcements get wheeched away up the screen by pesky pupils posting;-) Is there a way to do that?

Replied to a tweet by ds106 Daily Create (Twitter)

#tdc2997 #ds106 Shuffle and Share https://daily.ds106.us/tdc2997/ pic.twitter.com/nJvWvAg2GE

#tdc2997 #ds106 Shuffle and Share
She is Always Dancing – Neil Young with Crazy Horse
Moussolou – Oumou Sangaré
A Simple Twist of Fate – Joan Baez
Soon After Midnight – Bob Dylan
Music By Numbers – Penguin Cafe Orchestra

Replied to https://boffosocko.com/2020/03/19/55769385/ by Chris AldrichChris Aldrich (boffosocko.com)
I’ve been looking closer at wikis, online commonplace books, and similar personal/work/lab/research notebooks recently and have come across TiddlyWiki as a useful, simple, but very flexible possibility. While most of its ecosystem revolves around methods for running the program locally (and often ...

Chris,
I’ve a couple of small tiddlywikis that I am dipping my toes into.
One on raspberry pi using node that I use on home network. The other stored in OneDrive and accessed at home and school using desktop app. The second is simpler.