The idea for the Internet was born from the launch of the Russian
Sputnik satellite in 1957. The US government was worried that the then
Soviet Union possessed superior technological capability and could
potentially strike the US with a nuclear missile. So it began to prepare
for the consequence. The Internet essentially began as way to
communicate if part of the country was destroyed.
In
1969 the technology was advanced enough to begin testing it at
universities and the first successful test was completed between the
UCLA and Stamford campuses in California.
It wasn't until around 1991 that the Internet was introduced for individual and commercial purposes.
Today
we see more an more users clustered around the same sites. Facebook,
Google, Apple and Amazon collectively consume most of our attention and
that's sad because there is so much more to it.
For this post I want you to visit this site: https://www.reddit.com/r/InternetIsBeautiful/ or https://www.reddit.com/r/coolguides/ and
as part of our exploration of Digital Literacy, find a link to something that you think would help
you learn in one of your classes or help you be a better student in general. Explore the link and
write a brief description of how you think it will benefit you and your
classmates. Please also copy and paste a link to the source in your comment.
Example: I found a map that might help me learn Geography and Social Studies. https://worldmap.harvard.edu/maps/5565.
This map helps me identify ancient civilizations in a more precise way
than the maps in our book. You can also overlay other options on the
map by checking the boxes on the left hand sidebar.
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ReplyDeleteI found a site that compares the accuracy of a movie compared to the real life events it's based on. https://informationisbeautiful.net/visualizations/based-on-a-true-true-story/. It could help in a class like history where you might recall a movie with the events you're talking about, but you're not sure how accurate it really is. It could also help in English when you aren't sure how similar the movie is to the book you're reading. You can click one movie title for more details, and then go through a scene by scene comparison.
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