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Duncan Edwards Jones wrote: us IFTT to post updates to Twitter
I think you *might* have missed the line about them being mostly computer illiterate.
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Its an existing recipe on www.IFTTT.com
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Sounds like a description of Facebook to me.
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OK, I have no experience with facebook. So how could something like that be set up ? Do I have to create a page ?
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You can create something called a Group, this can either require permission from the Group admin to add users or not. IMHO Groups work very well on Facebook I belong to several "closed" groups where only members can see messages Photos, videos and other files.
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Display Name Taken wrote: I belong to several "closed" groups where only members can see messages Photos, videos and other files.
Zuckenburg et al know what you are posting.
Once you lose your pride the rest is easy.
In the end, only three things matter: how much you loved, how gently you lived, and how gracefully you let go of things not meant for you. – Buddha
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He is welcome, but I don't think even he is sad enough to spy on my R/C related activities.
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Whatsapp ought to do the trick.
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Thanks Jörgen, this definitely looks like a good solution.
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Whatsapp Group would be the easiest option. You can send pic in two clicks. Not at all complicated. Give it a try.
Programmer : A machine that converts coffee into code !
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Thanks, I'll give it a look at home (blocked here).
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Forward thinking schools these days have a website where teachers are required to post homework. If you are in a district that has these resources, maybe they already have such a thing.
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I'm a big fan of Microsoft's OneNote. https://www.onenote.com/[^]
I use it to share information between work, home, and my cellphone.
At work, I have a notebook that gets shared with the team members to document systems and procedures.
I got hooked on it during a time I was heavily medicated from a medical condition and found that I could clip fragments of webpages into research folders instead of bookmarking the entire pages. The pasted fragments would automatically have a link to the source page inserted if I needed to go back and look at whatever I didn't clip out at the time.
It was great for collecting research for projects when my mind was not fully functional.
Being able to point multiple machines to the notebooks let me share the research on my multiple home computers and remote computers as well.
Before OneDrive, I used to paste files into it as well, so I could access them remotely.
Psychosis at 10
Film at 11
Those who do not remember the past, are doomed to repeat it.
Those who do not remember the past, cannot build upon it.
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Around here, most of the teachers have a web page where they post the assignments. Maybe you could get your child's teachers to do the same. I think some of the teachers are using an outside vendor (i.e. not the school) for the page.
We can program with only 1's, but if all you've got are zeros, you've got nothing.
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My first thought was DropBox.
Available just about everywhere, and auto-syncs.
My second thought is... This may potentially violate some of the rules about cheating.
So be careful there.
My final thought is that the teachers need to get with the program. Our daughter had
blackboard running that kept track of the assignments all on-line (assignment, due date, status, etc)
but the teachers were leveraging it.
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Shouldn't your school provide this?
Talk to the IT staff and Teachers, VP, Principal, PTA.
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I am the (hobbyist) IT staff
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So you don't yet have any of the typical solutions (Moodle, Blackboard, etc)?
Time for a bake sale
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Does anyone have good advice for a shopping cart solution, preferably ... free ... and php ?
I am involved in an association of parents, which (among other things) buys stocks of pens, booklets, well any kind of stuff our children need at school during the year. We resell them to the parents with a bit of a profit, and buy some stuff for the school (video projector, books, bicycles, etc...) or pay for the christmas or end of year show with the earned money.
Until today, buying the school material for the oncoming year has been handled "by hand", with printed out excel lists distributed to all the children, filled out by the parents, and collected back, typed in by hand back in excel(!), and somehow (!!) aggregated to place a huge order (we had 2 tons of material last year, 350+ excel from the parents).
I would like to move to an on-line "shopping" possibility. This has not to be very complicated, since customers are known and no "real" customers. Payment would not be online, only the placed orders, to simplify the handling afterwards.
I am open for any advice. Thanks !
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Thanks, this looks very good !
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There's a shopping cart sticking out of a ditch just round the corner. I'd be happy for you to take it away anytime!
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