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Drienyovszki János

User Generated Content and the Threat to Journalism - 0 views

  • Participation - many are no longer satisfied to just consume the thoughts and opinions of professional experts - but want to be involved in the process of discussing and interacting with the news. Beyond this we’re seeing more and more focus upon citizen journalism where millions of people have the means to engage in the reporting of news - simply by getting their mobile phone out.
  • Relationality - many of the new forms of media that are emerging not only involve readers in the reporting and interpretation of news - but they create spaces where community springs up around the news and information being shared. People are no longer finding meaning in news alone - but together in social networks. Suspicion of Institution - Government, Church, Big Business and other ‘institutions’ are increasingly being viewed with suspicion. I’m finding in my own daily interactions that more and more people have a growing sense of disillusionment and suspicion of mainstream media outlets and are looking for alternative sources of information.
  • Customization - we live in an age where we have almost unlimited choice in many areas of our lives. New media allows people to customize the information and news that they want to consume. Using tools like news aggregation they can now choose specific topics that they wish to follow and control when and how they consume it. Immediacy - no longer satisfied to wait for tomorrows paper or tonight’s news broadcast - people are increasingly following events in real time online. While TV and Radio have live coverage of some big events with broad appeal - New Media is light footed, nimble, highly targeted to special interests and quick. Whether it be watching Apple release it’s new iPod live via a blogger at the press event or getting reports and pictures of a natural disaster from a blogger caught up in the middle of the action - new media is increasingly ahead of the rest in getting information out.
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  • None of the above signals the end of journalism in my mind - there will always be a demand for well researched and well presented information. However it does present main stream media with numerous challenges - mainly around the way that they deliver news and information, how they draw readers into the process of reporting and interpreting news and how they keep journalistic standards high yet still compete to break stories.
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    Profi újságírók cikkei VS bloggerek cikkei.
Mercédesz Illés

eUSER : Country background (eLearning country report for HUNGARY) - 0 views

  • eLearning country report for HUNGARYNational correspondent who has collected qualitative and, where available, quantitative information from national sources for this document: György Lengyel, Institut of Socioligy, HUNGARYIssue: Main suppliers of adult education (excl. employers) in the countryMain suppliers of adult education courses in Hungary can be divided into two major categories. There are institutes which are part of the national educational system:universities like Corvinus University of Budapest (Budapesti Corvinus Egyetem), University of Politechnics and Economy of Budapest (Budapesti Műszaki és Gazdaságtudományi Egyetem), West-Hungarian University (Nyugat-Magyarosrzági Egyetem) business colleges like Budapest Business School (Budapesti Gazdasági Főiskola) institutes which provide post-graduate studies like The Institute of Post-graduate Legal Studies (Jogi Továbbképző Intézet), Institute of Post-Graduate Medicine Studies (Orvosi Továbbképző Intézet) folk institutes like Association of Hungarian Folk Institutes (Magyar Népfőiskolai Társaság).On the other hand there are institutions which are not part of the national educational system:County Labour Centres (Megyei Munkaügyi Központok) which provide certain professions Accredited Language Schools, Adult Educational Institute which handles mainly the education of already employed people.
Darák Péter

North Korean Economy Watch - 0 views

  • Mr Hwang, 87, once a close confidant of North Korean leader Kim Jong-il, defected to the South in 1997. Pyongyang’s official government website had recently threatened him with death. The alleged plot to kill Mr Hwang was uncovered when the two men, named by the Yonhap news agency as Kim and Tong, crossed into South Korea from Thailand earlier this year, posing as defectors themselves. They were questioned by South Korean officials during the debriefing sessions that await all North Korean refugees who make it to Seoul. A unnamed senior official at Seoul Central District Prosecutors’ Office told reporters they had said their orders were to “slit the betrayer’s throat”, the Associated Press news agency reports.
    • Darák Péter
       
      Mintha Trockij-ról lenne szó. A magas rangú hivatalnok azután hagyta el hazáját, hogy megtapasztalta a 90'-es években történt hatalmas éhínséget. Az észak-koreai kormány megfenyegette, majd bérgyilkosokat küldött rá, de azok lebuktak. Mr Hwang azóta rendőri őrizetben él egy ismeretlen helyszínen.
Anna Csák

E-INCLUSION IN HUNGARY, 2008 - Inforum report « INFORUM - 0 views

  • The members of the 50+ age group got acquainted with the internet at the age of 53 on the average, but there are also people, who started to learn the basis at the age of 87. The elder age group mostly browses, reads email, reads news, searchesand searches/checks things when using the internet.
  • In the case of the older people not using the internet the reasons of staying away is mostly cognitive type of reasons (not interested, do not need it), and not financial type of reasons.
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    Azt láthatjuk, hogy a magyarországi idősödő emberek főként nem anyagi okokból utasítják vissza az internetet.
anonymous

Report: Prestige captain criticizes Spanish authorities for refusal to dock leaking shi... - 0 views

  • "It was a mistake to order the ship out to sea, it should have been taken to a quiet place where the cargo could have been offloaded," he said.
    • anonymous
       
      A spanyol hatóságok vitatható döntést hoztak, de a bíróságon végül felmentették őket a felelősség alól.
Peitli Csilla

Global Warming Causes, Climate Change Causes - National Geographic - 0 views

  • The only way to explain the pattern is to include the effect of greenhouse gases (GHGs) emitted by humans.
  • the United Nations formed a group of scientists called the International Panel on Climate Change, or IPCC. The IPCC meets every few years to review the latest scientific findings and write a report summarizing all that is known about global warming
  • Most come from the combustion of fossil fuels in cars, factories and electricity production
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  • A molecule of methane produces more than 20 times the warming of a molecule of CO2
  • Since 1990, yearly emissions have gone up by about 6 billion metric tons of "carbon dioxide equivalent" worldwide, more than a 20% increase.
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    Külön szervezet jött létre mely nemzetközi szinten összegzi néhány évente a tudósok legfrissebb felfedezéseit a a globális felmelegedéssel és az azt okozó tényezőkkel kapcsolatban. (IPCC)
Zsuzsi Deri

Bangladesh Newspapers : Newspapers from Bangladesh : Bangladesh News - 0 views

  • Bangladesh newspapers for information on local issues, politics, events, celebrations, people and business.
  • Information about holidays, vacations, resorts, real estate and property together with finance, stock market and investments reports; also look for theater, movies, culture, entertainment, activities and events all covered in Bangladesh newspapers.
Drienyovszki János

Nintendo World Report - FEATURES: User Generated Content: Past, Present and Future - In... - 0 views

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    A UGC térhódítása elősegítette a Nintendo felhasználóinak hogy kiteljesítsék kreativitásukat.
Drienyovszki János

Why user-generated medical content works | FreshNetworks Blog - 0 views

  • The medical industry is one that sees a lot of UGC. A search on YouTube finds thousands of videos of people talking about their illnesses, from cancer sufferers to people with bullemia. Support groups are flourishing and people are finding that sharing experiences and content online is sometimes easier than face-to-face. Talking about your experiences to video and uploading this to YouTube for others to respond to and comment on is probably easier than discussing it in real life. The internet and social networks probably offer access to a greater number of fellow-sufferers than even a local support group might offer. Beyond support, people can use social media and user-generated content to help understand their illnesses. The supposed danger here is that people will self-diagnose and that this may be incorrect. At the same time, you’d expect that privacy issues would prevent any meaningful and useful exchange of ideas. But in fact, user-generated medical content is a vibrant example of how the social networking and online communities can be powerful for exchanging information.
  • A report by Jupiter Research in 2007 showed that 20% of Americans turn to others online for information about medical issues. They are clearly not shy of seeking or giving advice, even on more personal issues. They use sites such as OrganizedWisdom, a Wiki-style community, to share information they have and get information they need. The concern over the accuracy of this information still stands, with worries about non-medical professionals sharing information that people use to self-diagnose. But research by the British Medical Journal in 2004 found that in the online support communities it studied only 6% of content was incorrect. If this replicated across all medical content online then it would probably be among some of the more accurate user-generated content on the internet. User-generated medical content shows that people are willing to share and are accurate when they do so. Even in a more niche and potentially risky area such as medical advice and disgnosis, the quality and usefulness of user-generated content is high.
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    Miért népszerű a UGC? A UGC-k mint az orvosi konzultáció egy újabb foruma.
Drienyovszki János

User-Generated Content: Lessons From Italy - SPIEGEL ONLINE - News - International - 0 views

  • The proposed legislation -- outlined after local media reported Facebook fan groups for convicted Italian mafia bosses had spouted up on the social network -- would force Internet companies to remove supposedly criminal content within 24 hours or face a fine as high as $320,000. Italian Senator Gianpiero D'Alia told the Bloomberg news agency the law isn't aimed at blocking sites like Facebook or YouTube outright, but instead at forcing them to remove individual pages or groups.
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    Olyan rajongói csoportok tűntek fel a Facebook-on amelyek elítélt maffiafőnököket népszerűsítenek.
Drienyovszki János

Huawei - Expert's Forum--User-generated content: opportunities for wireless o... - 0 views

  • They have been largely caught unawares by the growth of such sites as Flickr, YouTube, OhMyNews and MySpace. Their growth stems from both better broadband availability and the increased scope for tribalism, identity expression and personalisation that user-generated content provides. Paul Saffo of the marvellously titled Institute of the Future notes that this could herald a 'Cambrian explosion' of creativity: a flowering of expressive diversity on the scale of the eponymous proliferation of biological species 530 million years ago. So what does this trend mean for wireless carriers? John Delaney looks at the implications.
  • Mobile operators are well-placed to benefit from the explosion of interest in user-generated content (UGC). It fits well as an extension of the trend to personalize that is already so successful in the mobile environment, and offers a way to monetize the wealth of 'user-generated content' currently residing (unsent) on mobile terminals worldwide.
  • Other trends facilitating the growth in content include: The growth in storage capacity, coupled with ever cheaper prices. The growth of standardized, non-proprietary capacity in mobile phones encourages both sharing across other devices and upgrading.
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  • Operator reluctance to both lower the price of carriage and facilitate access to off-portal content will restrict the growth of mobile user-generated content.
  • During the last two years we have seen a considerable growth in online social networking sites and (often by extension) those that feature user-generated content, among the most successful of which are YouTube, MySpace and Second Life.
  • At the moment, around 10% of heavy users generate 40% of all MMS traffic
  • Recent research conducted by Nokia indicated that in emerging markets a very high percentage of users consider their phone as their primary camera (68% in India).
  • o take one example, an early band of foot fetishists has split into those who prefer tickling, different types of toe, or simply the pure aesthetics of the shape of the foot.
  • Users pay £0.50 to post a video via MMS to the See Me TV site. The most popular clips appear at the top of the browser menu, and 3 also adds categories so that customers can navigate to different types of clips. Viewer downloads are charged at a minimum of £0.10 each, of which 10% is returned to the originator of the content, with 3 pocketing the remainder. By September 2006, 3 had received more than 100,000 video clips from customers willing to share their recordings, with an average of over 1 million downloads per month. It had paid out a total of £250,000 to creators of the content, and recorded a tidy gross margin of 90%.
  • people falling over seems perennially popular).
  • his is growing, with customers being made aware of the possibilities of their mobile terminal for creating user-generated content in two ways: Much of the popular content on YouTube and other popular sites is recorded using the video function on camera phones. This in turn provides a trigger to other viewers to generate similar content User-generated content recorded on the mobile phone is increasingly featured on major news sites, such as BBC Online, and Yahoo! News. This was apparent in the aftermath of the London bombings in July 2005, when both websites posted material captured on the mobile phones of the public before their reporters could get to the scene.
  • Operators and vendors have already taken considerable steps to make the uploading of content to the network much easier.
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    Egy érdekes a cikk a UGC-ekről amelyek mobilokon születnek. Bizonyos cégek arra szakosodnak hogy előfizetésért cserébe a felhasználó képeket, kommenteket, blogot tölthet fel a mobiljáról.
Barbara Révész

[oucs] E-learning at Oxford - 0 views

  • E-learning at Oxford
  • In the last few years, e-learning has become a very important factor at Oxford. This quick guide is intended to help Oxford members become familiar with the available resources and the experts that you can contact.
Mónika Czank

Tiresias :: Design guidelines :: Ageing population :: The ageing population and ICT - 0 views

  • the increase has been most striking in relation to adults aged 55-64 and 65-74; the percentage reporting that they are confident has increased by 15 and 13 percentage points respectively
  • it is notable that the majority of adults in all age groups use e-mail.
  • Some members of the ageing population struggle to use ICT because of accessibility issues, this might be because they have failing memory or physical health. Others may just not be interested in using for example, the Internet. This might be because they see no added value in using the Internet, consider it unnecessary or feel that alternative channels are adequate.
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    Why elderly people wouldn't use ICT?
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