The desktop sharing built into Squeak is very nice, but it still needs an IP address to be handed around, which is tricky in a classroom full of kids.
It seems to me that for a classroom situation, a Bonjour- or similar- based sharing system, that let the kids just turn on sharing and see anyone else who was sharing on the same subnet, would be *fantastic*.
Is anything like that available or in the works, or is there some alternative I'm not aware of?
Guyren Howe a écrit :
The desktop sharing built into Squeak is very nice, but it still needs an IP address to be handed around, which is tricky in a classroom full of kids.
It seems to me that for a classroom situation, a Bonjour- or similar- based sharing system, that let the kids just turn on sharing and see anyone else who was sharing on the same subnet, would be *fantastic*.
Is anything like that available or in the works, or is there some alternative I'm not aware of?
Maybe, you could try the UbiquiTalk platform :
http://csl.ensm-douai.fr/UbiquiTalk
-- oooo Dr. Serge Stinckwich OOOOOOOO Université de Caen>CNRS UMR 6072>GREYC>MAD OOESUGOO http://purl.org/net/SergeStinckwich oooooo Smalltalkers do: [:it | All with: Class, (And love: it)] \ / ##
Hi,
Is anything like that available or in the works, or is there some alternative I'm not aware of?
Maybe, you could try the UbiquiTalk platform :
You could also try Discovery framework. http://map.squeak.org/package/6a54b2cc-ea9b-4622-a0cb-fd7222c22892
It is used in SuperSwiki2 for detecting local SuperSwiki2 servers in LAN. http://swikis.ddo.jp/SuperSwiki2/3
Cheers,
Hi,
Oops, I forgot to mention NetMorph.
NetMorph can detect other peers automatically. So, users can share their e-Toy projects without concerning IPs.
For details: http://swikis.ddo.jp/NetMorph/22
Combining SuperSwiki2 and NetMorph, you can provide a settings-free environment in classroom.
2006/11/29, Masashi UMEZAWA masashi.umezawa@gmail.com:
Hi,
Is anything like that available or in the works, or is there some alternative I'm not aware of?
Maybe, you could try the UbiquiTalk platform :
You could also try Discovery framework. http://map.squeak.org/package/6a54b2cc-ea9b-4622-a0cb-fd7222c22892
It is used in SuperSwiki2 for detecting local SuperSwiki2 servers in LAN. http://swikis.ddo.jp/SuperSwiki2/3
squeakland@lists.squeakfoundation.org