

- #Ipevo annotator alternatives portable
- #Ipevo annotator alternatives software
- #Ipevo annotator alternatives license
This includes mouse drags and both right and left button clicks.
#Ipevo annotator alternatives software
The Interactive Pen allows users to draw, annotate and control software apps, remotely and right at the board.
#Ipevo annotator alternatives portable
The IW2 is made up of three lightweight and portable devices, so it can be easily swapped between classrooms. It creates a more visual, hands-on experience, which actively engages them in the learning process.” Students have also found it easy to use for labeling diagrams or working through calculations. I especially like that it’s very easy to save my annotations. “For example, I use the IW2 to annotate web pages and images, or write and draw on a blank background. It’s really the same thing, but they’re just mesmerized by it.“I teach environmental science to about 60 students, and I use the IW2 daily in my classroom.” said Nick LaFave, teacher at Clover School District in South Carolina. For some reason, teens really want to get to the board and write with digital ink instead of regular old whiteboard markers. In my class, one of the best things about the IPEVO (and the SMARTBoard before it) is the ability to save notes/slides to share with absent kids or those with IEPs, not to mention the “cool” factor that keeps everyone’s attention. The only thing that’s new with that is I need to make sure my body doesn’t block the line-of-sight between the wand and the little cyclops monster attached to my laptop when I’m working at the board. Oh, and the plastic “wand” becomes the mouse, so you will be able to drag and slide things around on your board, just as you did before.
#Ipevo annotator alternatives license
In fact, my campus still has a license for SMART’s Notebook software (a few other teachers on my campus still have working SMARTBoards), so I plan to just keep using that or, more likely, Prezi whenever I want to build something new. I haven’t yet built any slides from scratch within IPEVO’s Annotation software (their equivalent of Notebook) because I’m still able to run all of my old SMART Notebook files and Powerpoints, just as I did before. The minimalism of the software doesn’t really bother me because I never used SMART’s pre-made files, so I don’t miss them. I definitely like the IPEVO, but it doesn’t have all of the fancy infrastructure (clip art library, pre-made lesson exchange) that SMART offers and the software is still pretty bare bones, though they did just add a windowshade and spotlight feature that are pretty snazzy. (I ask because you have used it, and you used to have a Smartboard)

What else can it do that makes it stand out? Does IPEVO have that? And are there any premade lessons with IPEVO like you get with Smart on the Smart Exchange? I’m not really trying to compare apples to oranges, but I’m trying to figure out if the IPEVO is going to work for me, and from what I can tell, it really just annotates and writes. Can you do that in IPEVO? Also, with Smart Notebook, you got the gallery with all kinds of clipart.

Do you remember in Smart Notebook, you could drag things around. I came from a classroom with a Smartboard, and I am missing it SO MUCH!! One thing I have not seen on anything I’ve watched about the iPevo is the ability to drag things. My school has no $$, but my principal is looking at getting me an IPevo to use to engage and motivate my students.

I just watched your video and I have a question.
