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Becky Novak

Social Networking in Schools - 0 views

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    This resource includes a great image to represent the effects of social networking on elementary children.
Mae Menk

One-Fifth of third graders own cellphones - 0 views

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    Resource for Mobile and Ubiquitous, Education. Provides statistics and information on the availability of mobile phones to young children.
Mae Menk

BOYD policies - 0 views

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    Mobile and Ubiquitous, Education. Resource with explanations on BOYD policies that we often see enacted in schools.
Kyle Bambu

The Changing World of Software | SEI Digital Library - 0 views

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    This article comes up with some interesting questions and gives a quick background to software in the world.
Mae Menk

How Technology Has Affected Communication - 0 views

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    Resource with definitions for how GovPolEm is affected by the Mobile and Ubiquitous flatten-er.
Karley Friend

Where would globalization be without outsourcing? - 0 views

  • "Will Soaring Transport Costs Reverse Globalization?" The report argues that high energy costs could potentially reverse the outsourcing that has occurred in some areas of manufacturing. Foreign trade cannot expect the same opportunities to develop markets in India as there were 30 years ago because of today's high energy costs. This situation could give countries closer to the U.S. like Mexico a little more appeal in the future than current economic giants such as China.
  • But do not expect outsourcing — the major transformer of world economies in the last 30 years — to go silently into the night.
  • high energy prices do not affect all aspects of global trade, including the areas of telecommunications and computers. For example, the software industry in India will continue to thrive because it thrives on cheap Internet and not natural resources.
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    "Will soaring transport costs reverse globalization? and HIgh energy prices do not affects all aspects of global trade."
tommy s

Outsourcing - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • Outsourcing or sub-servicing often refers to the process of contracting to a third-party.
  • Cost savings — The lowering of the overall cost of the service to the business. This will involve reducing the scope, defining quality levels, re-pricing, re-negotiation, and cost re-structuring. Access to lower cost economies through offshoring called "labor arbitrage" generated by the wage gap between industrialized and developing nations.[10] Focus on Core Business — Resources (for example investment, people, infrastructure) are focused on developing the core business. For example often organizations outsource their IT support to specialised IT services companies. Cost restructuring — Operating leverage is a measure that compares fixed costs to variable costs. Outsourcing changes the balance of this ratio by offering a move from fixed to variable cost and also by making variable costs more predictable. Improve quality — Achieve a steep change in quality through contracting out the service with a new service level agreement. Knowledge — Access to intellectual property and wider experience and knowledge.[11] Contract — Services will be provided to a legally binding contract with financial penalties and legal redress. This is not the case with internal services.[12] Operational expertise — Access to operational best practice that would be too difficult or time consuming to develop in-house. Access to talent — Access to a larger talent pool and a sustainable source of skills, in particular in science and engineering.[13][14] Capacity management — An improved method of capacity management of services and technology where the risk in providing the excess capacity is borne by the supplier. Catalyst for change — An organization can use an outsourcing agreement as a catalyst for major step change that can not be achieved alone. The outsourcer becomes a Change agent in the process. Enhance capacity for innovation — Companies increasingly use external knowledge service providers to supplement limited in-house capacity for product innovation.[14][15] Reduce time to market — The acceleration of the development or production of a product through the additional capability brought by the supplier.[16] Commodification — The trend of standardizing business processes, IT Services, and application services which enable to buy at the right price, allows businesses access to services which were only available to large corporations. Risk management — An approach to risk management for some types of risks is to partner with an outsourcer who is better able to provide the mitigation.[17] Venture Capital — Some countries match government funds venture capital with private venture capital for start-ups that start businesses in their country.[18] Tax Benefit — Countries offer tax incentives to move manufacturing operations to counter high corporate taxes within another country. Scalability — The outsourced company will usually be prepared to manage a temporary or permanent increase or decrease in production. Creating leisure time — Individuals may wish to outsource their work in order to optimise their work-leisure balance.[19] Liability — Organizations choose to transfer liabilities inherent to specific business processes or services that are outside of their core competencies. [edit] Implications
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    Definition of outsourcing: "Outsourcing or sub-servicing often refers to the process of contracting to a third-party."
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    wikipedia on outsourcing
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    overview of outsourcing
Brandon Meszar

FCP Resource 2 - 0 views

  • A remote control is a component of an electronics device, most commonly a television set, used for operating the device wirelessly from a short line-of-sight distance.
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    "Remote Control." //Wikipedia//. Wikimedia Foundation, 03 May 2013. Web. 11 Mar. 2013.
Marin Merge

Y2K Information and Resources - 0 views

shared by Marin Merge on 28 Sep 10 - Cached
  • IT companies around the world spent billions of dollars to go through their entire application source code to look for the Y2K bug and fix it. Almost everybody raced around to make themselves Y2K compliant before the fast approaching deadline.
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    This website explains the history of the Y2K and what happened with it.
MICHAEL A

Internet - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

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    "The Internet is a global system of interconnected computer networks that use the standard Internet Protocol Suite (TCP/IP) to serve billions of users worldwide. It is a network of networks that consists of millions of private, public, academic, business, and government networks, of local to global scope, that are linked by a broad array of electronic and optical networking technologies. The Internet carries a vast range of information resources and services, such as the inter-linked hypertext documents of the World Wide Web (WWW) and the infrastructure to support electronic mail."
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    Some great information on the internet and how it has evolved and connected the world.
Haley A

HealthBase Australia - Workflow Software - 0 views

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    Health part of WFS
Toni Olivieri-Barton

SHOW®/WORLD - A New Way To Look At The World - 0 views

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    This can show us where cell phone are most populated.
Shaine L.

Health Behaviors Influenced by Social Networking - 0 views

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    Great resource, Shaine with some hard data and studies to back it up! Can you go back in and add an additional tag of "flatclassroomproject" to each source?
Vicki Davis

PC World - 15 Hot New Technologies That Will Change Everything - 2 views

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    Great resources for people inventing things.
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    Great article on the technologies that will change everything. Wonderful for your movies.
Vicki Davis

Smithsonian Education - Educators - 0 views

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    An incredible resource from the Smithsonian for educators
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    An online presence for the smithsonian.
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    Government organizations like the smithsonian are reaching out to educators and others with an online presence. This cool site has lesson plans and lots of great information for arts, science and technology, history and culture, and language arts.
Nolan R

QR Code - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • A QR Code is a matrix code (or two-dimensional bar code) created by Japanese corporation Denso-Wave in 1994. The "QR" is derived from "Quick Response", as the creator intended the code to allow its contents to be decoded at high speed.
  • QR Codes are now used in a much broader context, including both commercial tracking applications and convenience-oriented applications aimed at mobile phone users (known as mobile tagging).
  • QR Codes storing addresses and URLs may appear in magazines, on signs, buses, business cards or just about any object that users might need information about. Users with a camera phone equipped with the correct reader software can scan the image of the QR Code causing the phone's browser to launch and redirect to the programmed URL. This act of linking from physical world objects is known as a hardlink or physical world hyperlinks.
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    Explanation from Wikipedia about QR codes and hardlinking.
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    This explains what QR Codes are. QR Codes are unknown right know but could start to be widely used in the next few years.
Vicki Davis

TEDTalks as of 09.02.09 - 0 views

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    Spreadsheet with every Ted Talk ever given!
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    These are incredible videos and will give you inspiration and resources to quote in your topics.
Ivy F.

Ubiquitous or Pervasive Mobile - Shaping the future mobile information society - 2 views

shared by Ivy F. on 04 Feb 10 - Cached
  • This page provides resources on "ubiquitous" or "pervasive" mobile, relating to developments in the miniaturization of mobile wireless devices and the proliferation of always-on, everywhere communications. This phenomenon has been referred to as '"pervasive communications", invisible mobile (Forrester), "ambient computing", "ubiquitous computing" (USA) or "ubiquitous networking" (Japan). Technological convergence underlying next-generation networks (NGN) is set to play a key role in realizing this wireless ubiquity. 
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