Skip to main content

Home/ Diigo Community/ Group items matching "government" in title, tags, annotations or url

Group items matching
in title, tags, annotations or url

Sort By: Relevance | Date Filter: All | Bookmarks | Topics Simple Middle
Alex Parker

21st century battlefield: 5 experts decode the OPM data breach - 1 views

  •  
    The US Office of Personnel Management falls victim to massive data breach - but what can be learnt from this latest cyberattack? The US Office of Personnel Management has confirmed reports of a massive data breach hitting its systems, with the personal information of over 4 million government employees compromised.
andybendyman

digital digs: the positive confluence of academia and the web - 5 views

  • Clearly one of the challenges academia faces is to figure out a productive use of networks in terms of research practices. Usually I write more about the teaching aspects of the university and clearly there are many ways universities will employ networks. But I want to think specifically about the use of the web for research with a few goals in mind: to enhance collaboration between academics to publish and share research to share knowledge with a broader audience (students, governments, industries, non-profits, the general public, and so on) One might say that these have been answered, but the real challenge is that as the web continues to evolve and now converge with other networks, the practices we have established need to change as well. That is, from the inception of the web, one could find the appearance of academic journals: genuine, rigorously reviewed, academic scholarship available freely online. There were (and are) listservs that might facilitate collaboration. Similarly individual faculty and faculty organizations built websites where they offered information, policy statements, and so on (NCTE or MLA for example in English Studies). But how are we moving forward?
  • Conventional academic discourse lies with journals and conferences. For all the advantages of these modes, neither offers an ongoing, dynamic interchange. Listservs offer that, but, in my experience anyway, they don't really create a productive, collaborative space. Sometimes there are debates on listservs; sometimes there is sharing of information (e.g. does anyone know a good article about x"?). But there isn't a sustained building of knowledge there. I suppose there could be, but there isn't, probably b/c we all go off to write our individually authored articles and conference presentations. In any case, the listserv is too large a community for collaborative work. Yes, tens of thousands contribute to Wikipedia, but they don't all work on the same article, right? So I don't know what the magic number is, but let's say I was looking for a dozen scholars in who were interested in the same things I'm interested in: mobile networks virtual worlds audio/video production public, collaborative learning It's unlikely that we would all work on the same research project at once, but there would be a handful of project undertaken by individuals or small groups. There would be a public face to the group and a private project management site, like Basecamp. The public face would offer a steady stream of information as we shared what we were doing, what was going on in our teaching, what we were reading and writing. We'd be assembling streams of information from our blogs, twitters, flickr, YouTube, and so on--wherever we were post information. The result is a collection of information that is hopefully useful groundwork for more formal investigation and also a mechanism for fruitful collaboration between our classes.
  • Meanwhile, in a more private space we might be orchestrating collaborative classroom projects and sharing research, drafts, and other media: constructing our scholarly work. When it's complete, we publish it in traditional venues and republish it on our public site as well.
Graham Perrin

Effect of the Depression on Technology - O'Reilly Radar - 2 views

  • this recession will be good for innovation because recessions generally are
  • A recession means technologists cease to be paid vast amounts to duplicate the work of others
  • low-cost high-impact physical events we've created (Ignite, hacker meetups, coworking spaces, foo/bar camps) will thrive
  • ...20 more annotations...
  • agree that tough times foster innovation
  • @gregor's point about cultural activities increasing in Argentina during their 2001 recession sounds like an indicator in favour of open source
  • We are dealing with this as I will be graduating from college and entering the job market
  • I will be a hacker housewife and improve my skills while taking care of husband and home
  • innovation is a cultural effect within companies and cannot be turned on or off due to economic conditions
  • if the company has a traditional mindset
  • then innovation is going to be an uphill climb regardless of how many great ideas are floating around
  • a Fortune 500 company
  • clearly defined ROI
  • also those companies who attempt to clean up the mess government is going to make. The regulations that come out of the current crisis are going to be draconian
  • The additional costs of compliance will also affect new launches and IPOs due to the additional costs, so there is another negative drag on innovation, or at least the monetization of those innovations
  • a social network that harnesses its members to contribute to open source projects? Instead of playing facebook games or posting pics of yourself wasted at the latest party, get the members to commit to donating that extra time to a small piece of a large open source project
  • benefit from a legion of even poorly skilled members if given clear directions
  • qualified peer review
  • use it as a learning process
  • Help others by online mentoring in resource-challenged places, etc.
  • We can afford to devote maybe 10-20% of our time to open source
  • the truth is I put in 20-30 hours a week in the evenings, mornings and week ends to make the big pushes happen
  • sweat equity
    • Graham Perrin
       
      I like that expression - sweat equity
  • Everyone puts in extra time
  •  
    Diigo community thoughts on (at least) the highlighted points will be greatly appreciated. If you can, make your sticky notes public; the highlights will be shared with other interested groups. Thanks!
Graham Perrin

Best Ways To Track All Annotations on A Website - 37 views

I want to do some heavy duty tracking of all annotations going up on the various government websites (whitehouse.gov, recovery.gov etc.). I've added them all to my watch list but what are other wa...

annotation track help bug

betsy stone

HX series Sand Maker is Ideal Equipment for Dry Mortar Processing - 0 views

The common premixed dry mortar products include dry powder wall covering, dry powder wall mortar, dry powder tile adhesive and dry powder concrete. As a matter of fact, the premixed dry mortar is t...

Windows XP

started by betsy stone on 17 Oct 14 no follow-up yet
iupdateyou123

What about unemployment - 0 views

  •  
    What about unemployment is the exist question in the heart of every job seeker to the government of his country. Very first we should be known what is the exact meaning of unemployment ? unemployment's exact meaning is the less number of jobs in front of the job seekers quantity.
Alex Parker

6 up and coming global tech hubs - 1 views

  •  
    A selection of cities around the world which could be housing the next big thing. There's no doubt that the world as we know it is becoming an ever-more connected place as technology increasingly covers and governs much of our everyday lives.
Alex Parker

5 tech take-aways from the 2015 Budget - 1 views

  •  
    Internet of Things, broadband, renewable energy - the government is embracing technology and realising its economic potential. Between the jokes tailored to evoke the maximum jeering from backbenchers, Chancellor George Osborne delivered the 2015 Budget.
Alex Parker

Tabakoto Gold Mine - Mining Technology - 1 views

  •  
    Endeavour Mining's Tabakoto Gold Mine in western Mali is located approximately 360km west of the capital city, Bamako. Endeavour owns 80% of the mine through its wholly owned Malian subsidiary Ségala Mining Corporation, while the Government of Mali owns the remaining 20%.
Alex Parker

UK nuclear waste - where it's generated, contained, transported and stored - 1 views

  •  
    It will be decades before the UK Government builds a long-term storage for the country's radioactive nuclear waste; but where is this waste produced, contained, transported and stored in the interim, and just how much of it is there? Via an interactive map, Future Power Technology, provides the answers to these questions.
Alex Parker

Angra-3 PWR Nuclear - Power Technology - 1 views

  •  
    The 1,405MWe Angra-3 PWR nuclear reactor project is on again. The Brazilian Government has announced plans to complete the reactor, which will work alongside the other two at Angra, which is between Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo. The project is estimated to cost $5.6bn and is scheduled for completion in 2018.
Alex Parker

Why should you care about net neutrality? - 1 views

  •  
    CBR lists 7 reasons why you should care about net neutrality. Net neutrality is the principle that ISP's and governments should treat all data on the internet as equal. This means that there should be no discrimination or charging of separate rates to different users, content, sites, platforms or applications.
adimedia

Netiquette: Rules of Behavior on the Internet | Education.com - 0 views

  • The etiquette guidelines that govern behavior when communicating on the Internet have become known as netiquette. Netiquette covers not only rules of behavior during discussions but also guidelines that reflect the unique electronic nature of the medium. Netiquette usually is enforced by fellow users who are quick to point out infractions of netiquette rules.
    • adimedia
       
      Netiquette: Rules of Behavior on the Internet
adimedia

Internet Privacy | American Civil Liberties Union - 0 views

  • Internet Privacy The things we do and say online leave behind ever-growing trails of personal information. With every click, we entrust our conversations, emails, photos, location information, and much more to companies like Facebook, Google, and Yahoo. But companies - and the government - are collecting that information in ways that fundamentally threaten our freedoms. 
  •  
    Keep America safe and free / Internet Privacy
Alex Parker

Fighting fossil fuels: divestment movement continues to grow - 1 views

  •  
    In 2012, a new campaign was formed in the US to spearhead the movement to divest in fossil fuels. Fossil Free, a project of 350.org, has since grown exponentially, claiming last year that organisations - ranging from healthcare, religious groups, universities and local governments
Alex Parker

5 key points on the government's digital surveillance proposals... - 1 views

  •  
    List: ...and why it matters to UK tech
Graham Perrin

Highlighting problem in Chrome 4 - 109 views

If the issue is what I think: it's not specific to Chrome, you'll find that some types of content can not be highlighted. Example: at http://planet.hackingcongress.org/ try to draw a single highl...

chrome highlight bookmarklet help bug diigolet

bloggerent

De wants to check the existence of the US gold rejected by the Russian media into overseas hostages - 0 views

  •  
    For decades, the Bundesbank has been storing 1,200 tons of gold in the Feds vault. In recent years, Germany has repeatedly frustrated when trying to retrieve these gold from the United States, and the Fed has been delayed. The media even commented that these gold bars have become overseas hostag
chrismcdonald423

Use a VPN to Protect your Digital Identity | Complete Connection - 0 views

  •  
    If you want to stay protected, VPNs that the first step to protecting your digital identity.Use it wherever you go to keep you under the radar of cyber criminals, hackers, and government agencies!
  •  
    Social media,for instance,makes it easier to communicate with people around the world. At the same time, it becomes an addiction with many turning into narcissists, who cannot maintain composure, without uploading a selfie or food pic on Instagram!
« First ‹ Previous 281 - 300 of 364 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page