Retrouvez ici une liste d'outils de curation avec les explications en français...
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Le Top des Applications Web et Logiciels Gratuits
Sélection des meilleurs programmes et Webapps gratuits - Best free downloadable and web-based apps Curated by 173 Sud |
Rescooped by 173 Sud from Web information Specialist |
Retrouvez ici une liste d'outils de curation avec les explications en français...
Scooped by 173 Sud |
Dans le domaine de la curation et de l’animation de vos réseaux sociaux, TLDRify fait une partie de ce que d’autres outils du même type faisaient avant lui. Il permet de créer un lien court à partager depuis n’importe quelle page trouvée sur le net.
TLDRify va plus loin cependant et se singularise en créant un véritable outil de citation plus efficace et plus respectueux du droit d’auteur.
Plus efficace parce qu’il va permettre aux personnes qui suivront votre lien partagé de retrouver immédiatement dans une page Web l’extrait de texte que vous avez souhaité partager ou mettre en évidence.
Plus respectueux parce qu’il va vous permettre de renvoyer facilement à la source originale lorsque vous citez dans un article ou dans un mail une source extérieure.
TLDRify fonctionne très simplement à partir d’un bookmarklet à installer sur votre navigateur. Cela fonctionne aussi bien sur Chrome que sur Firefox. Une fois installé, c’est prêt à fonctionner. Pas besoin de vous inscrire, lorsque vous souhaitez partager un extrait de texte trouvé sur le web, vous n’avez qu’a surligner avec votre souris le passage. Aussitôt TLDRify vous propose une url raccourcie que vous pourrez partager immédiatement d’un clic supplémentaire par mail ou sur les réseaux sociaux Twitter, Facebook ou encore Google+. En suivant le lien, vos lecteurs arriveront sur la page ou le texte que vous avez sélectionné sera surligné en jaune et pourra ainsi être facilement retrouvé.
Lien: TLDRify
Scooped by 173 Sud |
Zimilate is an amazing free online service that lets you save practically any digital content for future reference. You can use Zimilate to save images, notes, links, simple files, and even entire webpages.
You can either simply drag and drop files from your computer to Zimilate’s web interface to save them, or use the Zimilate browser clipper extension to directly save entire web pages to your Zimilate account. You can save your content to different sections (called spheres), and add tags in order to manage and organize it better.
Zimilate lets you create as many spheres as you want, and you can even re-order them to create a hierarchical structure. All of the saved content in Zimilate is searchable, and can be made private or public (if you want to share it with others). You can even browse spheres created by other users to find something that you might like. Sounds pretty awesome, doesn’t it? Let’s find out more.
Zimilate is a pretty awesome service that lets you save a lot of stuff instantly, for future reference. Features like the ability to save notes, drag and drop upload of images and all other kinds of files are really nifty additions. And of course, there’s also the browser clipper extension, which makes saving entire webpages a breeze. Although there are services like Evernote that let you do the same, but hey, what’s so bad in trying something new? I suggest you give Zimilate a try, you’ll love it.
Check this review from I Love Free Software
Try it out now : Zimilate
Zimilate est une sorte de Pinterest like qui va vous permettre de sauvegarder seul ou a plusieurs des fichiers, des images, des pages web dans des tableaux blancs virtuels.
Zimilate a mi-chemin entre Pinterest et Evernote vous propose un outil simple pour organiser une curation numérique sur votre ordinateur ou sur votre portable, smartphone ou tablette. Face à ses géants de la curation, Zimilate ne manque pas d’arguments.
Il propose des outils simples pour collecter et sauvegarder, des fonctions avancées pour organiser et retrouver les éléments sauvegardés enfin Zimilate propose des fonctions avancées de partage et de curation collaborative.
Pour ce qui est des outils de collecte, Zimilate propose un dropplet à installer sur votre navigateur qui vous permettra de sauvegarder d’un clic n’importe quelle page Web au cour de votre navigation. Vous pouvez aussi utiliser une fonction de drag and drop pour sauvegarder des images ou des fichiers. Enfin, Zimilate vous fournit une adresse mail. En y adressant des contenus ou une url, Zimilate archivera automatiquement la page Web. Pratique.
Ce nouvel outil propose aussi un système très souple pour organiser le fruit de votre curation. Zimilate offre n système de tags et de collections pour classer à votre façon les éléments que vous avez conservés. Le nombre de dossiers, appelés sphères dans Zimilate, est illimité et vous pouvez bouger les éléments d’un dossier/sphère à un autre par simple glisser-déposer.
Scooped by 173 Sud |
Pocket est un outil de veille incontournable pour faire sa curation et mettre de côté des pages et des ressources trouvées sur le Web.
Pocket a su conquérir des centaines de milliers d’utilisateurs grâce à une interface agréable, des outils pour l’ordinateur mais aussi pour les mobiles bien pensés et des facilités de classement et de recherche permettant de retrouver l’aiguille au milieu de la botte de foin de votre veille.
A l’image d’Evernote, Pocket s’intègre a de centaines de services et d’applications pour vous permettre d’épingler des informations trouvées sur le net et de ne jamais les oublier.
Pocket fournit toute une série d’outils pour vous faciliter la curation, cela va de l’épingle manuelle que vous pouvez crée de toutes pièces à partir du bureau de votre ordinateur jusqu’au bookmarklet à installer sur votre navigateur qui d’un clic vous sauvegardera le lien qui mène vers la page que vous êtes en train de consulter.
La sauvegarde à la volée est enrichie de tags qui vous faciliteront ensuite la recherche parmi toutes les données sauvegardées. Pocket se distingue encore par des applications pour mobiles et tablettes épatantes qui permettent de consulter façon magazine l’ensemble des ressources que vous avez sauvegardées.
Pocket est gratuit et parfaitement opérationnel ainsi. Ses développeurs viennent cependant de lancer une version premium qui ajoute quelques fonctions avancées à l’outil pour quelques dizaines d’Euros par an. Dans la version Premium, le service conservera une copie permanente des articles et des pages Web que vous sauvegardez pour les rendre ainsi accessibles en toutes circonstances, même s’ils ne se trouvent plus sur le web. Ce service premium propose aussi un moteur de recherche intégré plus puissant et une optimisation de la gestion des tags.
Lien: Pocket
Rescooped by 173 Sud from Time to Learn |
Select and publish the most relevant content for your audience from your blogs, across social networks and around the web.
Pressly est une nouvelle application Web qui vous permet de créer un hub social (ou social hub), similaire à ce que vous pouvez faire avec RebelMouse ou Teint. Celui-ci vous permet de regrouper et organiser vos contenus préférés provenant des médias sociaux, de sites web ainsi que des publications de vos fans et amis .
L'application peut agréger des contenus provenant de Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Instagram, Pinterest, YouTube, SoundCloud, Vimeo et de n'importe quel flux RSS.
Scooped by 173 Sud |
Almost all the knowledge is available on the web, all you need is someone to guide you to it.
The web can be seen as essentially one giant educational resource, but for students looking to learn a particular subject, it can be difficult to know where to start. From the Netherlands, Gibbon is a new platform that enables experts to create learning flows, guiding newbies through subjects with weekly articles, links, videos and e-books.
Each Gibbon playlist gathers together a number of free resources that aim to collectively explain the subject at hand. Rather than sending users to external websites, where they can get lost in a trail of endless browser tabs and other distractions, Gibbon reposts the content internally, presented in its own clean design style. Each subject is split into chapters and readers can see how long each chapter will take to learn. The learning flows include articles, video, audio and other multimedia sourced from the web, as well as links to other resources that students can explore themselves once they’ve become acquainted with the subject. Gibbon currently features learning flows related to iOS development, becoming a better photographer, typography and even the history of art forgery.
Gibbon is a lot like Learnist — another platform we’ve previously written about that aims to filter the web’s vast resources into comprehensible information clusters. Are there other tools that can help users make sense of the web?
Website: www.gibbon.co
Rescooped by 173 Sud from Digital Presentations in Education |
digitaljournal.com :: Brickflow is a new hashtag-based visual storytelling platform for bloggers and journalists interested in creating curated social media slideshows quickly and effortlessly.
Do you know that the brain processes visual content 60,000 times faster than text? Pictures trigger better audience engagement that any other type of posts on social media. That is exactly the idea behind Brickflow, a new storytelling tool that launched in public beta last week.
Brickflow allows journalists and bloggers to quickly build slideshows or “flows” featuring content collected (“bricks”) from specific hashtags. The stories may also be built from scratch. Just click the “Create a New” / “+” picture in your admin panel, enter the keyword of your choice, and drag and drop items found on social media sites like Instagram, Twitter, Tumblr, and YouTube -- or specific URLs.
Each flow comes with an embed code and can be shared on social networks. Curators have the ability to edit their creations in a few seconds as well
Read more :
A review by The Ed Tech Roundup : http://goo.gl/nrbVsS
Looking for ways for students to log and curate worthwhile reading that they come across. This could be another useful platform to add to the mix, along with the likes of Flipboard and Scoopit
Scooped by 173 Sud |
« La curation de contenu (de l'anglais content curation ou data curation) est une pratique qui consiste à sélectionner, éditer et partager les contenus les plus pertinents du Web pour une requête ou un sujet donné. La curation est utilisée et revendiquée par des sites qui souhaitent donner une plus grande visibilité et une meilleure lisibilité à des contenus (textes, documents, images, vidéos, sons...) qu'ils jugent utiles aux internautes et dont le partage peut les aider ou les intéresser.
La curation de contenu s'inscrit dans la mouvance du Web sémantique, un écosystème plus organisé qui permettrait aux machines de traiter plus intelligemment les requêtes des internautes et d'afficher des pages de résultats plus pertinentes. »
Source : Définition proposée par Wikipédia
Ce document détaille l’utilisation que je fais de 4 plateformes de curation de contenu :
* Scoop.it
* Storify
* Paper.li
* Pearltrees
Favebucket est une belle application en ligne qui permet de sauvegarder, collecter et partager vos favoris en ligne.
Dans une interface rappelant Pinterest, Favebucket fonctionne à partir de 2 bookmarklets : l'un pour enregistrer ses favoris (pages web, images, vidéos, etc), l'autre pour accéder directement à son tableau de bord. Chaque fois que vous trouvez une page avec du contenu intéressant, un clic sur le bookmarklet "Favebucket" permet d'ouvrir un panneau sur le côté gauche à partir duquel vous pouvez ajouter des tags et une description pour la page que vous enregistrez.
Vous pouvez choisir de sauvegarder vos trouvailles en mode public ou privé (protégé par un mot de passe). Vous pouvez également partager votre contenu sauvegardé sur les réseaux sociaux (Twitter, Facebook, Twitter mais aussi Pinterest) ou par mail.
Favebucket : http://favebucket.com/
Favebucket est une belle application en ligne qui permet de sauvegarder, collecter et partager vos favoris en ligne
Scooped by 173 Sud |
Flipboard n’est plus désormais uniquement un service exclusif aux plateformes mobiles, mais il est désormais disponible via une interface web dédié à la gestion et la consultation des magazines.
Appelée Editor, cette interface permet de récupérer directement les contenus via un bouton de collecte, comme sur Pinterest, pour les organiser ensuite dans les magazines spécifiques. Les magazines peuvent bien évidemment être privés et donc ne sont pas consultables par le public. Les magazines publics sont quant à eux disponibles au partage et à la consultation.
Outre l’application mobile, l’utilisateur peut donc depuis son poste de travail rajouter des articles à ses magazines et les consulter ultérieurement, ou encore constituer une base qualifiée de ressources à partager avec une communauté de collaborateurs ou de lecteurs.
Cette nouvelle offre est un pas de plus vers une concurrence directe et rapprochée avec des services comme Scoopit et Paperli, sachant que Flipboard profite déjà d’un design qui a attiré plusieurs millions d’utilisateurs mobiles et qui pourront désormais retrouver la même expérience sur le web.
Accéder à Flipboard Editor : https://share.flipboard.com/
Harry McCracken :: Flipboard is built atop a simple premise: the stuff your friends and other citizens of the web create and collect is interesting and deserves to be presented in a beautiful, browsable form, with big photos and slick typography.
But what if the beautiful, browsable content consisted of items which youpicked by hand to share with the world?That’s the biggest new idea in Flipboard 2.0Flipboard update so far, it lets you create personalized sections — magazines-within-the-social-magazine — on any topic, populated with interesting items you can add on the fly as you come across them within Flipboard or in your browser.
Unless you mark a magazine as private, it’ll show up in other Flipboard users’ search results, letting them find and follow your creations. It allows everybody who uses Flipboard to help edit Flipboard.
The make-your-own-magazine capability couldn’t be much simpler. Every item in Flipboard now has a plus sign; tap it, and you can choose which one of your magazines you want to add the item to (or create a new magazine). On the web, you use a “Flip It” bookmarklet in your bookmark bar to accomplish the same thing.
Rescooped by 173 Sud from Content Curation World |
Robin Good: Chill, the video sharing and discovery site, has just introduced a new feature that allows anyone to clip and share, on a Pinterest-like thematic board, all of the video clips he finds on the web.
The new Chill bookmarklet works very much like the Pinterest one. When you click it, a page shows you all of the video clips found in that page and offers you to clip and "post" the one you want, with your comments.
It's as easy as that.
The generated "curated" Chill video boards are easy to scan and browse, though, in my view, a great boon would be the ability to check a few of those videos and to click a play button that plays them full screen back to back. This way I have the best of curated content, my own selection, and the final lay-back and watch gratification option.
Very promising.
Go try it out now: http://chill.com/bookmarklet ;
Scooped by 173 Sud |
By now you’ve likely heard of content curation, the process of collecting and cataloging the most useful or interesting things about a topic in order to share it for the common benefit. In part 1, Beth Kanter looked at 7 smart techniques for content curation (http://goo.gl/i7p3A). Today we’ll explore some of the best tools for doing so.
1. Scoop.it (http://www.scoop.it/) : Become an authority in your vertical
Scoop.it (tagline: “share ideas that matter”) ranks as one of the top content curation tools right now. The service, which has both free and premium versions, styles itself as a series of online magazines centered on niche topics. Pick a topic you feel knowledgeable or passionate about and start adding to your collection: articles, blog posts, Twitter lists, videos and so on.
2. Storify (http://storify.com/) : Curate your next event
Next time you’re covering a nonprofit conference or putting on an event, consider firing up a Storify account and then pick and choose the best images, tweets, blog posts, videos, etc., that others publish and tie them up with a nice ribbon — your overall take on the proceedings, of course. Storify is becoming a favorite of bloggers, journalists and Tweeps who like its curated take on current events.
3. Pearltrees (http://www.pearltrees.com/) : Cultivate your interests
My vow for the fall is to spend more time with Pearltrees, which recently did a reboot and looks to be one of the most advanced tools you can add to your curation toolkit. There’s a bit of a learning curve, but here’s how it works: Your browser app lets you “pearl” the page you’re visiting. Connect your Twitter and Facebook accounts, then start organizing interests into topic folders (“pearltrees”). Any other curator expert in your topic area might ask to team up with you (and vice versa) to make your tree branches richer.
4. Pinterest (http://pinterest.com/) : Share your favorite visuals
Pinterest entreats you to “organize and share the things you love,” but it’s really all about compelling visuals. And, by the way, here’s a Pinterest board on curation tools (http://goo.gl/5Uu4N).
5. Delicious (http://delicious.com/) : Find & bookmark cool stuff
Delicious, the first social bookmarking site, is arguably the granddaddy of the curation movement. Now that Yahoo! sold the service to YouTube co-founder Chad Hurley, there’s wind in its sails again. It’s pretty simple: Find a valuable story or post, bookmark it and share it with the community. Your tags can be used by you or anyone (if you select public rather than private).
6. Bundlr (http://bundlr.com/) : Bundle your multimedia
With Bundlr you can create topic pages with photos, videos, tweets and documents and then share them with everyone. I haven’t used the service but it looks to be influenced by the Pinterest craze.
7. BagTheWeb (http://bagtheweb.com/) : Add to a knowledge network
OK, now we’re getting a bit repetitive. BagTheWeb helps users curate Web content through a different metaphor: Create a “bag” to collect, publish and share any content from the Web. One interesting twist is that BagTheWeb enables users to build networks of bags so that topic areas can be linked together to provide rich datasets about any subject.
Scooped by 173 Sud |
Let’s face it, the infographics industry is exploding and now we’re seeing some new tools to help us easily create or generate simple infographics. Currently, infographics agencies charge between $2k and $5k to research, design and promote a fantastic infographic.
The following tools, which was compiled by Douglas Karr, will make development of your infographics a lot less costly, easier to design and publish, and some include reporting modules to see how well the infographics are distributed and promoted.
Easel.ly (http://goo.gl/f5bJf) – create and share visual ideas online. You may want to visit Visual.ly after creating your infographic to publish and share it with others.
Venngage (http://goo.gl/obMee) – Venngage helps you create and publish custom infographics, engage your viewers, and track your results. Venngage is the most powerful infographics publishing platform ever for marketers and publishers
Infogram (http://goo.gl/78dZK) – We work with marvelous designers to bring you the best components and themes for your infographics. Simply pick whatever you like to build your own.
Piktochart (http://goo.gl/vPUOP) – Piktochart is among the first online web applications to autonomize the creation of infographics. Its vision is to allow non-designers/programmers to create interactive infographics to promote their cause/brand and educate in a fun and engaging manner”
Via Committed Sardine
Scooped by 173 Sud |
Content curation is an art of compiling information from a variety of sources and presenting them in a creative manner in front on your audience. Content curators compile the already available information from a variety of resources scattered around the web and compile them together in an organized fashion before their audiences.
The curated content form a bunch of related content and satisfies specific user tastes. One may curate content on Cinema and gather the available content from the web together and all the cinema loving audiences might visit the content channel to find all the related information organized creatively in one place. This happens with the help of already available content curation tools.
Curating content is easy, we have several tools which help in compiling information from several resources and presents then before our audience in an interesting manner. You need to have links to various resources which you want to compile and then you may head forward to any of the listed content curation tools listed below.
50+ list of Content Curation Tools : http://goo.gl/0hwc4
Rescooped by 173 Sud from Social Media Content Curation |
Robin Good: Everytime I see a new post or article claiming to list the best content curation tools I know I am in for some disappointment.
Most of these lists just pick up names from other lists without even bothering to check, test or verify what these tools actually do, whether they are still available. Unfortunately the rush to put out "curated" list of tools and services has created more misinformation than useful lists.
But if you, like me, are on the lookout for new and effective tools to curate your own content or the one of your customers, I have created a comprehensive map of all the curation tools available online and I keep it fresh and updated almost on a daily basis.
The map presently lists over 250 content curation tools which you can navigate much more easily than it was possible on my earlier versions of this map.
On the right side of the map you will find all of the news and content curation tools available online today. On the left side, you can find bookmarking, link lists builders, clippers and lots of tools to operate with RSS feeds (which are still at the heart of a curator's job).
Full map: http://bit.ly/ContentCurationUniverse
Rescooped by 173 Sud from Time to Learn |
BagTheWeb vous propose de mettre votre veille sur un thème donnée en sacs ou containers. Un container ou un bag regroupe de manière ordonnée tous les contenus trouvés sur le web autour d’un thème donné. Chaque bag peut contenir des liens, des articles et des contenus multimédia. Il peut aussi et surtout être relié à d’autres bags contenant des ressources liées ou proches.
BagTheWeb permet de partager trés facilement votre curation sous forme de bags par mail, sur le web avec une url dédiée ou à travers les réseaux sociaux.Le service vous fournit un bookmarklet à installer sur votre navigateur pour rendre encore plus simple la curation de contenus sur le Web.Cet outil de curation assez semblable à ce que peut proposer un service comme Scoop.itpeut se prêter assez bien à une veille simple sur le web ainsi qu’à sa diffusion pour une petite ou moyenne organisation.
Pour essayer l’outil de curation BagTheWeb : http://bagtheweb.com/
Scooped by 173 Sud |
Curating, bookmarking and sharing web content is one of the skills every 21stcentury teacher should have. Internet has grown to be, if not the primamry then a great resource of information and knowledge. Students as well as educators are having a free unlimited access to this treasure trove whenever and wherever they are.
One of the things we need to pay heed to, howver, is the information load the net exposes us to. This information load if not handled carefully and wisely can have some severe reverse impacts on the way we benefirt from intenet educationally.This is why the need for for using bookmarking and content curating tools has become very important especially for us in the field of education.
The bookmarking and content curating tools below are very important in the sense that :
+ They allow you to collect, aggregate, curate and bookmark links to resources they can read later on
+ They let you share resources you have collected about a topic with colleagues and students
+ They help you gather and organize web content
+ They let you develop your personal learning network and introduce you to a community of like minded people
+ They allow you to create a community for sharing resources in your school or work environment
+ They help you grow professionally and expand your focused knowledge
+ They make learning a life-long experience
1- Evernote : http://evernote.com/
2- Livebinders : http://livebinders.com/
3- Pinterest : http://pinterest.com/
4-ScoopIt : http://www.scoop.it/
5-Delicious : http://delicious.com/
6- Diigo : http://www.diigo.com/
7- NetVibes : http://www.netvibes.com/en
8- MentorMob : http://www.mentormob.com/
9- Storify : http://storify.com/tour
10- Curate : http://www.curate.us/
Read more : http://goo.gl/705bM
Rescooped by 173 Sud from Content Curation World |
Robin Good: Sparkwise is a new, open-source free web service which allows you to assemble and curate beautiful looking data-dashboards containing the most relevant info and data about a person, a company or an issue. You choose.
How does it work.
You simply connect your social accounts to Sparkwise and then you start to drag and configure the widget buttons representing different data types onto your page. For example you can drag a Twitter Fan Count widget and specify for which Twitter account you want that widget to display the data. There are widgets for just about anything from Twitter, Facebook, YouTube and Google Analytics statistical counters to any data, image or video coming from other sources. You can even type in your own data.
You can create as many dashboard/pages as you like, and publish only the one you want, while keeping control of which widhets and data everyone gets to see.
If you want to create visual engaging story-pages with lots of data to support your focus, this is really a great tool to explore.
Recommended.
Try it out now: http://sparkwi.se/ ;
Rescooped by 173 Sud from Social Media Content Curation |
Robin Good: SeeSaw is a new web app which allows you to easily monitor social media news streams on any topic and in real-time.
You can pick and select which news stories to find by using hashtags, or specific search keywords. Once Seesaw starts visualizing the live social stream on that topic you can begin to save, pull together into collections and/or share them on your social media channels.
Each search you make can be saved and labelled and reloaded and updated in real-time with one click.
Very useful for monitoring specific topics and finding relevant stories to collect, share or post.
Free to use. Login with Twitter.
Read more: http://sees.aw/about-us/
Try it out now: http://sees.aw
Seesaw is a useful content curation and monitoringtool. Check it out.
Scooped by 173 Sud |
Shelfster est une sorte de carnet de notes en ligne. Il va vous permettre de capturer à la volée texte, images, urls des sites ou blogs que vous visitez. Ces notes pourront être ensuite intégrées et mises en page dans un traitement de texte en ligne avant d’être diffusées.
L’originalité de Shelfster réside dans l’outil en ligne fournit qui permet de mettre en forme cette veille ou ces prises de notes. Shelfster offre en effet un traitement de texte en ligne, avec lequel vous allez pouvoir intégrer de manière simple toutes vos notes. Un outil de mise en page simple mais complet qui fonctionne par glisser déposer et qui va vous permettre de créer des documents professionnels.Votre document peut ensuite être imprimé, téléchargé au format pdf ou ouvert dans Google Docs. Il peut aussi être partagée directement depuis Shelfster par mail.
Shelfster : http://shelfster.com/
Rescooped by 173 Sud from Futurism, Ideas, Leadership in Business |
It’s tempting to compare Clipboard, a new service that’s launching today, to Pinterest. Actually, it’s irresistible: Clipboard, like Pinterest, lets you collect interesting tidbits from all over the web, then share them in “boards” which piece together all the tidbits on one page. And Clipboard, unlike Pinterest, lets you share web content of all sorts: images, videos, text and more, preserving the original layout and formatting.
But Clipboard isn’t just a Pinterest variant. It’s also a way to save parts of the web for later reference without ever sharing them with anyone else — something I’ve been doing lately with Evernote — and therefore a useful research tool as much as an exercise in social networking.
Read more : http://goo.gl/U9L26
Rescooped by 173 Sud from Content Curation World |
Robin Good: NotesCloud is a new curation service which allows you to collect, organize, and share any type of content you have into beautiful magazine-like layouts.
“Imagine a tool that is always at hand when you stumble upon or dream up something interesting,”
NotesCloud uses the metaphor of a multi-section notebook to organize snippets and notes. People can create their own hierarchies of notebooks, sections, and pages as they curate their topics.
Unlike Pinterest or Evernote, NotesCloud’s structured storage metaphor encourages some organization, so it’s not just a “shoebox” full of random clippings."
(Source: Venturebeat)
Notescloud is equipped with a set of browser-based clipping tools for Chrome, Safari, and Firefox, that make it possible to easily grab and save any content you’re looking at online with just two clicks.
The content curated and organized with NotesCloud can be accessed from tablets and smartphones as well as desktop browsers.
Free to use.
Check this video: http://www.notescloud.com/LaunchVideo
More info: http://www.notescloud.com/
Rescooped by 173 Sud from Curation-Corner |
By Chris McConnell - http://bit.ly/z68ide
@DailyTekk
There's so much information online just begging to be curated: news, social media, images, video, websites... the list goes on.
Just a few years ago, tools used for reading and consuming content were Google Reader, StumbleUpon, Digg, Delicious… you know all the big names.
Here are some great new tools to read and share your favorite content.
Whether you are a business or person who just likes to stay on top of the latest news, a blogger who needs a way to organize the vast amount of information that comes my way or a person who just enjoys sharing what they find with others you’ll love this list.
Tech-savvy readers may know of some of these tools already but I’m guessing there’s plenty of new sites and services here for you to discover.
Rescooped by 173 Sud from Content Curation World |
Robin Good: Similar to Paper.li, NewsMix.me allows anyone to easily create one or more news channels which automatically aggregate news and posts by your selected sources on Twitter (including "lists"), and Facebook.
You simply add the Twitter and FB accounts that you want to aggregate in a channel and your news channel is immediately created.
The look and feel of the final output is made up of a series of vertical blocks that showcase the tweet or FB content of each post and its related image.
P.S.: Unfortunately, rarely a Twitter stream or FB page is ever posting constantly on the same topic, making the aggregated result not as useful as it could be by allowing any source to be filtered for specific keywords.
Interesting. 7/10
Try it out: http://newsmix.me/
Rescooped by 173 Sud from Digital Curation for Teachers |
If you are looking for a deeper look into curating, it can be found. I want to build a curation tool, so I am working my way though my backlog of pinboard links about curation. Here I have a list of all the tools I can find that would be considered curation tools.
Consumer / Personal Tools
Stellar : http://stellar.io/
Storify : http://storify.com/
Bundlr : http://gobundlr.com/
Scoop It : http://www.scoop.it/
Curated By : http://www.curated.by/
Thoora : http://thoora.com/
Postpost : http://postpo.st/
Snipi : http://www.snipi.com/
trap!t : http://trap.it/
scrible : http://www.scrible.com/
faveous : http://www.faveous.com/
memonic : http://www.memonic.com/home
Bag The Web : http://bagtheweb.com/
And more at Rumproarious : http://goo.gl/TxQSn