Difference between revisions of "Talk:Courses/Hybrid publishing"

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(Created page with "It might be interesting to use the opportunity to ask: * how teachers see electronic publishing in arts education context * can it function a learning tool/incentive, while al...")
 
 
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It might be interesting to use the opportunity to ask:
==emails to participants==
* how teachers see electronic publishing in arts education context
===software===
* can it function a learning tool/incentive, while also serving to communicate the work developed by students and tutors?
<source lang="email">
Dear participants,
We are happy you'll be partaking in the Professional Development Publishing Workshop next Tuesday 8 March.


* how do they see the epub format
In order to make the workshop run smoothly we kindly ask you to install on you laptop the given software.
* does it have any advantage over web?
* should it exist only as the off line version of a website, or there other reasons for its existence?
* is it an interesting format for publishing?


* where are the difficulties in adopting (electronic) publishing?
* Calibre - http://calibre-ebook.com/ (Calibre a desktop ebook reader, converter, library manager and epub editor)
* Pandoc - https://github.com/jgm/pandoc/releases/tag/1.16.0.2  the file pandoc-1.16.0.2-osx.pkg (for Mac OsX). (Pandoc is a Markup (file) converter. It does not have a graphical interface, instead runs on you computer's terminal.
Due of this, once you install Pandoc you wont see its icon in the Application menu. To confirm it is installed you can type "which pandoc"  in your computer terminal and press enter; if installed it will reply something like "/bin/pandoc")
* A plain-text editor (either one of these, or another of your preference):
    *
    * Gedit https://wiki.gnome.org/Apps/Gedit
    * (Note: MS Office, LibreOffice, OpenOffice, etc are NOT Plain-text editors, but text processors that add style to the text. Plain text editors are often used by programmers, who need text to be plain text, without formatting).
 
If you don't have a laptop, around 10 Mac desktop computers are available in the room where the workshop will that place.
 
See you next week
</source>

Latest revision as of 14:26, 7 March 2016

emails to participants

software

Dear participants,
We are happy you'll be partaking in the Professional Development Publishing Workshop next Tuesday 8 March.

In order to make the workshop run smoothly we kindly ask you to install on you laptop the given software.

* Calibre - http://calibre-ebook.com/ (Calibre a desktop ebook reader, converter, library manager and epub editor)
* Pandoc - https://github.com/jgm/pandoc/releases/tag/1.16.0.2  the file pandoc-1.16.0.2-osx.pkg (for Mac OsX). (Pandoc is a Markup (file) converter. It does not have a graphical interface, instead runs on you computer's terminal. 
Due of this, once you install Pandoc you wont see its icon in the Application menu. To confirm it is installed you can type "which pandoc"  in your computer terminal and press enter; if installed it will reply something like "/bin/pandoc")
* A plain-text editor (either one of these, or another of your preference):
    *
    * Gedit https://wiki.gnome.org/Apps/Gedit
    * (Note: MS Office, LibreOffice, OpenOffice, etc are NOT Plain-text editors, but text processors that add style to the text. Plain text editors are often used by programmers, who need text to be plain text, without formatting).

If you don't have a laptop, around 10 Mac desktop computers are available in the room where the workshop will that place.

See you next week