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Mélanie Roy

INFOGRAPHIC: A Facebook Page Management Checklist - AllFacebook - 1 views

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    Éléments à tenir compte lorsqu'on crée une page facebook pour une entreprise, organisation, etc. Pourrait éventuellement nous sevir, pour notre information ainsi que pour appuyer nos propos auprès d'un client.
Jacques Cool

Nik Cubrilovic Blog - Logging out of Facebook is not enough - 0 views

  • This is not what 'logout' is supposed to mean - Facebook are only altering the state of the cookies instead of removing all of them when a user logs out.
Jacques Cool

Digital Literacies for Writing in Social Media - 0 views

  • According to Cathy Davidson's Now You See It, 65 percent of students entering school today will have careers in fields that haven't been invented yet. 
  • how do we prepare our students to write effectively in environments that don't yet exist?
  • as recently as four years ago, who would have imagined that major companies would have employees whose jobs were to interact with customers on Twitter, or that someone could make a career out of writing for Facebook? Four years before that, not only did those jobs not exist, Twitter and Facebook didn't exist
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  • students should be aware of the speed of digital communications and the types of interactions that speed encourages, the ways in which digital writing environments preserve and provide access to data, and how writing technologies manage the divide between public and private.
Frank Aubé

Museum of ME - 4 views

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    Aller voir ca, Faut lie votre compte Facebook mais ca vaux la peine !!
Jacques Cool

Rethinking How We Communicate With Students Via an LMS | Hack Education - 0 views

  • Rethinking How We Communicate With Students Via an LMS by Audrey Watters on 02. Aug, 2011 in News Rethinking (Student) Communication When Mark Zuckerberg unveiled Facebook’s new messaging system last year, he started the press event with an anecdote about his girlfriend’s little sister and her friends — how high school students use (or rather, don’t use) email. That’s not a surprising revelation to those of us who work or live with teenagers. A recent Pew Internet study found that only 11% of teens say they use email to communicate with friends, and even that figure seems a little high. For many students — both in high school and in college — email is not their preferred mode of personal communication; rather, it’s the mode they’re forced to use for professional purposes (i.e., for school). In its attempt to become the central hub of communications — personal and professional — Facebook’s new messaging system was seen as an attempt to “kill” email. (“Take that, Google!” is the subtext here, of course.) There are plenty of reasons why doing so makes sense (I mean, ugh, email), and even though it hasn’t killed email — not remotely — there’s a lot to like about Facebook’s new messaging system: it’s real-time. It ditches the formality of email. It can be synchronous or asynchronous, depending if the person you’re talking to is online. You can respond via email or SMS, so you aren’t force to visit the site in order to respond. Rethinking Communication via the LMS All of the things that make Facebook’s messaging system appealing for students and for schools — something I wrote about back in November last year — are largely absent when it comes to the traditional learning management sy
  • stem’s communication offerings
Jacques Cool

Infographic Explores The Social Evolution Of Gaming - SocialTimes.com - 0 views

  • A decade ago there was somewhere between 150 to 250 million gamers.  Today that number has jumped to between 1 to 1.2 billion gamers.  A lot of this growth has to do with the growth of gaming on mobile devices and in social networks.  A new infographic from Facebook video chat app Rounds and Column Five Media explores this phenomenon—the evolution of social gaming.
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