Twenty-Two Interesting Ways* to use Twitter in the Classroom

April 27th, 2009

This slide show could be of interest Twenty-Two Interesting Ways* to use Twitter in the Classroom to many of you.

Podcasts from April 24, 2009 Meeting

April 24th, 2009

Anna Lechter on University Credit Card Policy

AnnaBelle Leiserson on Web Analytics using Google Analytics

Lucy Tite on Vanderbilt Web Community on NING

public domain music

December 9th, 2008


Question: Is anyone aware of a source for recorded public domain music on campus that we can use for a project?

 

Answers:

 

*Here is what Vanderbilt is offering students:
Free Music Deal with Ruckus Near — Vanderbilt has a letter of intent on a deal with Ruckus and we’re in final negotiations to offer free music to students. This offer is planned as an addition to the current offering of VUmix at Vanderbilt. 

* Note that tunes acquired through Ruckus do not have public performance rights.

 

*You might check the various Creative Commons sites to see if they have anything that is appropriately licensed. There are quite a few of these popping up.

 

* If you run a search on “podsafe music” you’ll find sites that provide music offered under the Creative Commons license.  This kind of music is often used in podcasts, thus the term “podsafe.”

 

 

* It’s not on-campus, but there’s a lot of public domain stuff here: 

 

http://www.archive.org/search.php?query=%2Fmetadata%2Flicenseurl%3Ahttp*publicdomain*

 

 

*I’m not sure what you want when you request “public domain music?”  Even if the copyright has expired on a composition, there still can be performance rights to a piece. 

 

There are a multitude of services that will sell, for a nominal fee, music for use in web, audio or video productions.  I think this is what you might be looking for.

 

Do a Google search on “Buy out music” or “Needle drop music” for a listing of royalty free music vendors. 

 

 

*Music at Magnatune.com and music.podshow.com may be used royalty free if the use is in a podcast (which might be loosely defined). Check the conditions of use at both sites. Another source is garageband.com :)


 

Post at Snacks4theBrain! about November Meeting

December 8th, 2008

Welcome to Episode 76, reporting out the November meeting of the Vanderbilt Web Spiders. There’s so much going on at Vanderbilt that I wonder if we’ll ever run out of topics for S4theB? Could that ever happen? I doubt it, Monty!

for full post go to: http://blogs.vanderbilt.edu/s4theb/

Notes and podcast of Nov. 21 meeting

November 21st, 2008


From Gill Murrey:

 

Hi all,
We talked about Drupal this morning at the Spiders meeting, and I wanted to pass along some Drupal resources to the group.

Vanderbilt Drupal Resources
VU Drupal Users Group
http://web.mc.vanderbilt.edu/?q=content/drupal

VU Drupal Listserv
To join, email <Majordomo@list.vanderbilt.edu> with the following command in the body of your email message:
subscribe drupal

Nashville Drupal Resources
http://groups.drupal.org/nashville-tennessee

Acquia Drupal
http://acquia.com/
Acquia Drupal is a commercially supported Drupal distribution that provides an advanced starting point for building Drupal websites. Their “Getting Started Guide” is wonderful, and you can download their install of Drupal onto your desktop computer – and get started learning Drupal. Introductory pricing on single server subscriptions ends December 31, 2008.

Lynda.com
Great introductory video course on Drupal
http://movielibrary.lynda.com/html/modPage.asp?ID=620

- Gill

Listen to a podcast of the Nov. 21 meeting.

 

Crisis Communications: The Virginia Tech Response

November 19th, 2008

This forty-minute podcast features a session recorded at the EDUCAUSE 2008 Annual Conference. The speech, “Crisis Communications: The Virginia Tech Response,” is by Larry Hincker, Associate Vice President for University Relations at Virginia Tech.

http://connect.educause.edu/blog/gbayne/e08podcastcrisiscommunica/47761

Internet Explorer CSS quirks

November 13th, 2008

Question: 


I am in the process of making a new Web site for my student organization. I have run into some CSS troubles on one page. The page has valid CSS 2.1 and looks fine on any standards-compliant browser, but the layout gets mangled in Internet Explorer 7. The top/bottom margins in the main area are narrower than expected, and some of the photos are not lined up with the others.  This has been quite frustrating to me, and I would really appreciate if anyone can help me with the CSS.

Answers:

  • IE handles margins and padding differently. One of the keys to using CSS successfully is understanding the CSS Box Model and making your site look the same in all browsers.

    This article explains how IE renders things differently:

    http://www.456bereastreet.com/archive/200612/internet_explorer_and_the_c

    ss_box_model/

    You can also just google CSS Box Model, CSS quirks, CSS IE … there’s a lot of information out there on ways to work with the browser differences.  (I prefer having a separate stylesheet for IE and call it using a conditional statement – #3 on the link above explains how to do this – instead of putting hacks inside my stylesheets).


  • IE is an abomination. I’m sure the next version of Windows will fix everything, but until then..

    I tend to start with a css sheet that “resets” the margins and whatnot in the various browsers. Eric Meyer has a good one:

    http://meyerweb.com/eric/thoughts/2008/01/15/resetting-again/

    I’m also a fan of css frameworks like the 960 Grid System:

    http://960.gs/


  • I fixed the issue. It turns out that I had a comment above the DOCTYPE declaration, which kicked IE7 from standards mode into quirks mode and thus giving me the layout problems.

Getting Accounts for Credit Cards – Thanks Anna Letcher

November 5th, 2008

Sorry for a lengthy message, but this information may be useful those of you who support or may need to support payment processing:

Areas accepting payments for goods or services should be aware that authorization to establish a banking arrangement (including accepting payment methods such as credit cards and other third party payment acceptance methods) can only be authorized by the Vice Chancellor for Administration and Chief Financial Officer (Lauren Brisky) or the Vice Chancellor for Investments (Matthew Wright) or their designee.  This specific authority is granted by the Board of Trust (see the Vanderbilt University Authorization for the Signing of Contracts and Other Documents; http://www.vanderbilt.edu/compliance/authority_signing.pdf).  PayPal (and similar methods) is not an authorized payment acceptance mechanism for any Vanderbilt department, clinic, or operating area.

If an area needs to accept credit cards, a request to apply to be a merchant should be directed to either Merchant Accounts Management (university central departments contact Anna Letcher) or the Department of Finance (medical center departments contact Dana Walker.)  Once a valid business need has been established, the application for a merchant account will be forwarded to Vanderbilt’s credit card processor.

There are no centrally-supported payment processing solutions at this time.

All credit card processing (including internet-based payments) must comply with the Payment Card Industry Data Security Standards (PCI DSS). Additionally, payment applications which store, transmit, or process credit card information are subject to the Payment Application Data Security Standards (PA DSS).  These are industry standards and require all credit card merchants to comply with data security standards to protect cardholder account information.  All inquiries regarding PCI Compliance should be directed to Anna Letcher.

Please feel free to share this information with others in your area.  I am happy to try to assist with any questions regarding credit card merchant accounts or PCI DSS/PA DSS.

Podcast from Jared Degnan, OwenBloggers

October 31st, 2008

Learn the secrets of blogging success in this engaging podcast from Jared Degnan, the current leader of the wildly popular OwenBloggers. Thank you, Jared!

Oct. 27 Podcasting seminar with Scott Merrick

October 31st, 2008

View slides of the Oct. 27 podcasting seminar with Vanderbilt and the University School’s Scott Merrick. Thanks for teaching, Scott!