Scientific Notebook provides hypertext links that use your standard
web browser. This way, you can provide jumps that load Java applets, for
example. Your standard Web browser is called for links that are URLs but
don't have the .tex extension, and for any other jumps that have targets
with the extension .htm or .html. The latter jumps can be used for very
responsive jumps to local documents with local Java applets (and, in the
case of Internet Explorer, ActiveX objects). You might also experiment with
VRML as a very nice way to illustrate geometry.
Here are some examples:
- Enc lessons for Mathematics and Science Educationhttp://www.enc.org/lesmath.htm
- Try this linkhttp://buteo.colorado.edu/ yosh/delta/system2/images/image2/head66.wrl if
you have VRML support in your browser
- A site with many links to other mathematical siteshttp://archives.math.utk.edu
- The Geometry Centerhttp://www.geom.umn.edu
- Java and other interactive web pageshttp://archives.math.utk.edu/cgi-bin/interactive.html
- Interactive freshman calculus activitieshttp://links.math.rpi.edu/~shamt/seesaw/seesaw.html
- Java applets for teaching calculushttp://xanadu.math.utah.edu/java
- Interactive freshman calculus Java activityhttp://links.math.rpi.edu/~shamt/seesaw/act1/act1a.java1.html
- Experimenting with graphs of cubic polynomialshttp://xanadu.math.utah.edu/java/CubicGraph.html
- Experimenting with the arc length of the graph of a cubic
polynomialhttp://xanadu.math.utah.edu/java/ApproxLength.html
- College of the Redwoods home pagehttp://www.redwoods.cc.ca.us/sciweb/
- Wei Chi Yang's student sitehttp://www.runet.edu/ wyang/121.html