Voicenotes for Social Syllabus
This week John Kuiphoff and I worked to create a prototype of an audio collaboration tool for the Social Syllabus project. As you may or may not know, educational applications of technology are a major passion of mine, and for a long time John and I have been working to explore ways in which rich media can be integrated into online frameworks that are designed to support instruction.
Our newest project, code named “Voicenotes” (working title), is an “audio markup” tool that gives anyone the ability to easily add their own voice to an image on the Internet. Using a simple drag-and-drop interface, visitors can record an audio note simply by placing a virtual pin on top of a picture and speaking into their computer’s microphone.
A major criterion that I apply to almost all of my work is that the end product be web-deliverable, and Voicenotes is no exception. Using a Flash-based client interface and a connection to a back-end Flash Media Server, this project is completely web-accessible from any computer that has an attached microphone and an active connection to the Internet.
John and I will be refining Voicenotes over the next few weeks in an effort to fold its functionality into the larger Social Syllabus initiative. Stay tuned!
To play around with Voicenotes feel free to visit http://socialsyllabus.com/voicenotes/
Tags: audio recording, Educational Technology, FMS, social syllabus


December 25th, 2009 at 1:16 pm
[...] few months ago I blogged about the “voice notes” tool that John Kuiphoff and I had developed. This tool was designed to allow visitors from [...]