Al,

this is all so true. I have this issue in educational media publishers as they 
all want everything on the web but i still get constant feedback from teachers 
that they like to have a cdrom in their hand to base their curriculum on rather 
than a web site. Why? Because websites with content, even those subscription 
based ones from publishers tend to go poof fast. Even publishers tend to start 
ignoring titles after just a few years. If teachers want to base curriculums on 
certain content they want it there for many years to pay off the investment and 
not have to be continually changing things. High bandwidth or any bandwidth at 
all is also an issue in many schools still. Hypermedia works so much better for 
this delivery than browser based approaches. Unfortunately though publisher 
just think this direction is dead and distributors as well so almost impossible 
to go down that route anymore. But the issue of web based materials getting 
quickly forgotten and breaking in new browser revs or
  just disappearing still goes on.

This also goes for kids producing their own media projects. Hypermedia like 
livecode work so much better at letting the kids do their own thing both in 
versatility and also in teaching more basic programming logic and content 
layout than doing web pages. While some assignments worked well in the 
classroom lab environment (I taught multimedia for a year in my old high school 
to fill in) and is a useful skill, only a small subset of the overall 
curriculum assignments that we adapted to doing with multimedia approach worked 
well with web sites. Even traditional page layout was well suited for some 
assignments as it got the kids thinking into how to present the standard 
assignment content in a different manner and really think thru the content not 
just spit it back. But hypermedia was the king for really getting the kids 
involved in larger projects and team efforts.

cheers

jeff



On Apr 17, 2014, at 6:00 AM, [email protected] wrote:

> Recently, I was consulting EBSCO database:
> 
> http://search.ebscohost.com/
> 
> for articles and publications about
> Hypermedia.
> 
> Surprisingly, most of these articles have been
> written from 1988 to 1995 and uses the Macintosh
> and HyperCard as their role model for hypermedia
> explanations and implementation.

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