Free education blogs - edublogs.org

Well, finally the completely obvious thing to do dawned on me.

WPMU + edublogs.org = Free education blogs for anyone who darn well wants them.

And that’s about it really.

WPMU at edublogs.org provides anyone who wants it with a free version of the latest (checkout 1.6!) version of WordPress.

First up you’ll get the domain http://yourdomain.edublogs.org

Then you’ll get 10MB (initially) of completely free upload space… plus unlimited MySQL (i.e. posts) space.

And with the new version of WPMU you also get to choose any one of a number of bloody great WordPress Themes (just contact me if you want a particular one pre-installed). In a few weeks you’ll be able to edit them too!

Until the time that some philanthropic educational organisation comes and takes this over (that’s an invitation BTW!) this will be entirely supported by incsub and donations. No ads, no fees, no business model…. ahhh makes me smile :o)

So if you know any teachers, students, researchers, writers or ANYONE interested in education… let them know that they can start their edublog at edublogs.org.

This is gonna be fun!

5 Responses to “Free education blogs - edublogs.org”

  1. Tekrati Weblog Says:

    Blogs for PR Practioners

    Auburn University’s Robert French (no relation), with the support of James Farmer, has launched PRblogs.org to bring PR professionals, educators and students together within a blogging community. For PR pro’s, this is a low risk, no (monet…

  2. genevieve Says:

    Goodness, that is terrific. Will trackback to this. I have just seen a colleague’s blog on this domain and thought it looked familiar.
    Well done. I think there is something like this in the arts area but it doesn’t provide support for something as nice as Wordpress. I am jealous- does my blog qualify as educational?
    Please consider!

  3. James Says:

    Looks fine to me! Feel free to have a play :)

  4. genevieve Says:

    Many thanks. It will be a useful addition to the skillset to know how to use Wordpress.

  5. Colleen Mills Williams Says:

    Password protected for student use? Something like nicenet.org?