Difference between revisions of "Understanding the CLIO Content Folder"

From CLIO

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*[[CLIO Development#Slater Museum of Natural History|Bird Diversity:]] designed as a part of a remote lesson plan for the Slater Museum of Natural History.   
*[[CLIO Development#Slater Museum of Natural History|Bird Diversity:]] designed as a part of a remote lesson plan for the Slater Museum of Natural History.   
*[[CLIO Development#Slater Museum of Natural History|Tooth Sleuth:]] designed as a part of a remote lesson plan for the Slater Museum of Natural History.   
*[[CLIO Development#Slater Museum of Natural History|Tooth Sleuth:]] designed as a part of a remote lesson plan for the Slater Museum of Natural History.   
*[[CLIO Development#The Evergreen State College|Evergreen]]: designed for use on kiosks around the Evergreen State College's ''Indigenous Arts Campus''.
*[[CLIO Development#The Evergreen State College|Evergreen]]: designed for use on kiosks around the Evergreen State College's ''Indigenous Arts Campus''.
 
== Location ==
If you are using a Linux-based operating system, including DietPi, Raspbian or our Quick Start image, this folder will be located at /var/www/html/content. 
 
For Windows, this is dependent on the web server being used, with XAMPP's located at C:/xampp/htdocs/content

Revision as of 16:14, 30 October 2022

Add a photo.png

Overview

All of the data needed to operate the kiosk is stored locally on the kiosk in the web server’s directory.  The ‘content’ folder is located at the root directory of the CLIO web application.  When the kiosk is powered on, the CLIO web application will search this directory for available Programs and use this list to populate the Settings menu. 

We include two several sample Programs in the CLIO toolkit:

  • Getting Started: designed to help you get a better understanding of the toolkit using the different activity types.  
  • Example Activities: designed to show the different ways activities can be configured.
  • Habitable Worlds: reinterpretation of the Roger Williams Natural History Museums exhibit.
  • Nature's Networks: designed as a pop-up exhibit for the Burke Museum's BurkeMobile program.
  • Bird Diversity: designed as a part of a remote lesson plan for the Slater Museum of Natural History.
  • Tooth Sleuth: designed as a part of a remote lesson plan for the Slater Museum of Natural History.
  • Evergreen: designed for use on kiosks around the Evergreen State College's Indigenous Arts Campus.