Drumbeat/Hackasaurus: Difference between revisions

From MozillaWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 71: Line 71:
* Toronto Maker Faire -- May 6 - 8
* Toronto Maker Faire -- May 6 - 8
* Brussels -- June -- details to come
* Brussels -- June -- details to come
*[http://etherpad.mozilla.com:9000/Hackasaurus-NYSCI June-July Hacking Citizen Science at NYSCI]
* Chicago-- tentatively May 26, 2011 at YouMedia
*[http://etherpad.mozilla.com:9000/Hackasaurus-Emoticon 6/4 Emoticon, NYC]
*[http://etherpad.mozilla.com:9000/Hackasaurus-Emoticon 6/4 Emoticon, NYC]


Line 85: Line 85:
*3/25 @ 3:30pm, New York Public Library, Battery Park City (Manhattan)
*3/25 @ 3:30pm, New York Public Library, Battery Park City (Manhattan)
*[http://etherpad.mozilla.com:9000/Hackasaurus-Q2L 4/13 Quest to Learn] public school, NYC (Manhattan)  
*[http://etherpad.mozilla.com:9000/Hackasaurus-Q2L 4/13 Quest to Learn] public school, NYC (Manhattan)  
*[http://etherpad.mozilla.com:9000/Hackasaurus-NYSCI June-July Hacking Citizen Science at NYSCI]
<br>
<br>



Revision as of 21:28, 26 April 2011

Hackasaur.jpg Hackasaurus Project Page
Owner: Atul Varma, Jessica Klein Updated: 2011-04-26
Hackasaurus helps kids hack.

Project Tools


Get involved now

  1. Attend an upcoming hack jam. Or organize a hack jam in your community. We're looking to spread to new cities beyond New York and Chicago. Get in touch through our mailing list.
  2. Start hacking with Hackasaurus tools like X-Ray Gogglesor HTML Pad.
  3. Share your own ideas, tools and resources. Through our mailing list or on twitter.
  4. Become a Hackasaurs partner. We're looking for learning centers, libraries, media centers and other partners to help design, develop and host Hackasaurus. Get in touch through our mailing list.
  5. Help develop the Hackasaurus tool set. Through our issue tracker and Github.

About this project

  • The project in 5 sentences:
    • Hackasaurus helps teens hack. Through tools that makes it easy for youth to explore, remix and redesign the web.
    • Plus local events or "hack jams" that make hacking and digital literacy easy, social and fun.
    • We're designing around the way kids learn technology, based on Mizuko Ito's concepts of hanging out, messing around and geeking out.
    • Tools in development so far include HTML Pad and X-Ray Goggles, with more on the way.
    • You can get involved by test-driving Hackasarus tools right now. Or attend an upcoming hack jam, organize your own event, help develop the Hackasaurus tool kit, or share your own ideas and tools.

Hackasaurus Events

  • Hackasaurus "Hack Jams" are one-day and weekend events that allow kids to test and help design Hackasaurus.
  • They're run through the New Youth City Learning Network in collaboration with Mozilla.
  • Hackasaurus jams are designed to be modular and self-organizing. So that any teen, parent or organization can organize their own.
  • Event curriculum and an organizing kit are under development.

Upcoming Hack Jams:



Previous Hack Jams:


Hackasaurus Curriculum

Hackasaurus Tools

These tools are still evolving and have rough edges, but their basic functionality is available now. They're also actively being used at jams.

Hack Goggles

"Hack Goggles" allow anyone to easily “see through the surface” of any Web page, and obtain an intuitive understanding of how pages are composed. They can be used anywhere on the Web one hangs out, and casual use of the tool enables one to gain a rudimentary grasp of HTML, CSS, and the Document Object Model.

You can try the prototype now at secure.toolness.com/webxray/.

HTMLPad (aka "Magic Ink)

htmlpad.org is a simple website that allows anyone to easily create a Web page, collaborate on it in real-time with friends, and share it with the rest of the world.

More background for HTMLPad can be found in Atul's blog post entitled Prelude To Barcelona.

Similar Tools

Other comparable tools to HTML Pad

HTML composition

Tools that many kids are already using to make web sites:

Tutorials and reference materials:

Team