Skip to main content

Home/ Advanced Concepts Team/ Group items tagged social

Rss Feed Group items tagged

nikolas smyrlakis

How Twitter Will Change the Way We Live - TIME - 0 views

  •  
    If you're looking for interesting articles or sites devoted to Kobe Bryant, you search Google. If you're looking for interesting comments from your extended social network about the three-pointer Kobe just made 30 seconds ago, you go to Twitter.
ESA ACT

Women would endure most pain for a best friend - 0 views

  •  
    females are just more social, really??
ESA ACT

Technology Review | Infotech | Software | Netzwerk für Profis - 0 views

  •  
    Social networking in companies (german only)
ESA ACT

NASA.gen.y.pdf (application/pdf-Objekt) - 0 views

  •  
    NASA should use social media to make generation Y interested in space
ESA ACT

Web of Fate | Share your future - 0 views

  •  
    A social experiment that harnesses the collective intelligence of the web to visualize and uncover hidden relationships among future events.
ESA ACT

Dynamic spread of happiness in a large social network: longitudinal analysis over 20 ye... - 0 views

  •  
    be happy and infect your neighbors with it :-) ....
nikolas smyrlakis

Convert PSD to Wordpress with Divine. Convert Photoshop to Wordpress theme - 2 views

  •  
    seems interesting for web design, not for drupal yet though.. (wordpress is similar to drupal, drupal is a bit more powerful for social nets websites)
pacome delva

Ants Take a Cue From Facebook - ScienceNOW - 2 views

  • This pattern of interactions matches how humans share information on social networking sites like Facebook, says the study's lead author, biologist Noa Pinter-Wollman. Most Facebook users are connected to a relatively small number of friends. A handful of users, however, have thousands of friends and act as information hubs.
  • computer simulations of the ants' social networks showed that information flows fastest when a small number of individuals act as information hubs. Fast-flowing information allows ant colonies to respond faster to threats such as predators and weather hazards, Pinter-Wollman says.
  • These well-connected ants might have an advantage in responding to threats, but they are also more vulnerable to infectious diseases, which can spread quickly through the colony.
  •  
    for Tobi! nice analogy between the threat and the fast responding in human network
  •  
    Yet another example of "because scientifically accurate title would sound sooo boring".
santecarloni

[1107.0392] Emergence of good conduct, scaling and Zipf laws in human behavioral sequen... - 3 views

  •  
    ... proof that humanity is good?
  •  
    "The dataset contains practically all actions of all players of the MMOG Pardus since the game went online in 2004 [18]. Pardus is an open-ended online game with a world- wide player base of currently more than 370,000 people. Play- ers live in a virtual, futuristic universe in which they interact with others in a multitude of ways to achieve their self-posed goals [22]. Most players engage in various economic activities typically with the (self-posed) goal to accumulate wealth and status. Social and economical decisions of players are often strongly influenced and driven by social factors such as friend- ship, cooperation, and conflict." quite impressive ...
Joris _

Yammer : The Enterprise Social Network - 3 views

  •  
    "Yammer is a tool for making companies and organizations more productive through the exchange of short frequent answers to one simple question: What are you working on?" Have you tried it yet?
ESA ACT

White Label Social Networking Solutions Chart, Part II - 1 views

  •  
    hard to choose ....
darioizzo2

Physics is stuck - and needs another Einstein to revolutionize it, physicist Avi Loeb s... - 0 views

  •  
    """ Today, it's all about impressing each other. And that's part of social media, you know, trying to impress other people to say things that look smart, that look very intelligent, that completely align with what everyone else is saying so that they will like you, that you would have more likes on Twitter. Okay. So that's the motivation, so that you can get more awards, more grants so that you can get a tenure appointment and everyone would respect you. """
LeopoldS

Sorting and wage premiums in immoral work - 0 views

  •  
    are we paying more for socially less valued jobs or are "immoral" jobs paying more because of the nature of their work?
Nicholas Lan

Advancing Aeronautics: A Decision Framework for Selecting Research Agendas | RAND - 1 views

  •  
    possibly some of you might find this interesting. methodology for selecting research agendas particularly with respect to NASA from the RAND corporation "Develops a unified decisionmaking approach for selecting aeronautics research agendas that quantifies the social and economic reasons for the research, balances competing perspectives, and enables transparent explanation of the resulting decisions."
Tom Gheysens

Biomimicr-E: Nature-Inspired Energy Systems | AAAS - 4 views

  •  
    some biomimicry used in energy systems... maybe it sparks some ideas
  •  
    not much new that has not been shared here before ... BUT: we have done relativley little on any of them. for good reasons?? don't know - maybe time to look into some of these again more closely Energy Efficiency( Termite mounds inspired regulated airflow for temperature control of large structures, preventing wasteful air conditioning and saving 10% energy.[1] Whale fins shapes informed the design of new-age wind turbine blades, with bumps/tubercles reducing drag by 30% and boosting power by 20%.[2][3][4] Stingray motion has motivated studies on this type of low-effort flapping glide, which takes advantage of the leading edge vortex, for new-age underwater robots and submarines.[5][6] Studies of microstructures found on shark skin that decrease drag and prevent accumulation of algae, barnacles, and mussels attached to their body have led to "anti-biofouling" technologies meant to address the 15% of marine vessel fuel use due to drag.[7][8][9][10] Energy Generation( Passive heliotropism exhibited by sunflowers has inspired research on a liquid crystalline elastomer and carbon nanotube system that improves the efficiency of solar panels by 10%, without using GPS and active repositioning panels to track the sun.[11][12][13] Mimicking the fluid dynamics principles utilized by schools of fish could help to optimize the arrangement of individual wind turbines in wind farms.[14] The nanoscale anti-reflection structures found on certain butterfly wings has led to a model to effectively harness solar energy.[15][16][17] Energy Storage( Inspired by the sunlight-to-energy conversion in plants, researchers are utilizing a protein in spinach to create a sort of photovoltaic cell that generates hydrogen from water (i.e. hydrogen fuel cell).[18][19] Utilizing a property of genetically-engineered viruses, specifically their ability to recognize and bind to certain materials (carbon nanotubes in this case), researchers have developed virus-based "scaffolds" that
Athanasia Nikolaou

The drawbacks of open office - 1 views

  •  
    The natural multitaskers are profited the least from this configuration. And then there is Thijs
  •  
    haha :) "The psychologist Nick Perham, who studies the effect of sound on how we think, has found that office commotion impairs workers' ability to recall information, and even to do basic arithmetic. Listening to music to block out the office intrusion doesn't help: even that, Perham found, impairs our mental acuity." Actually, I grew up studying my homework in my parents shop downstairs. No noise whatsoever drives me insane :)
‹ Previous 21 - 40 of 108 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page