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carinecroteau

Preparing students for the tech jobs of tomorrow: PwC - 0 views

  • There will be one million more computing jobs than applicants who can fill them.
  • Only 10% of K–12 teachers surveyed nationally feel confident incorporating higher-level technology into student learning.
  • Of the K–12 teachers surveyed, 64% say they feel more emphasis should be placed on teaching technology.
  • ...4 more annotations...
  • "Students who are given dedicated time to learn technology-based subjects will be more prepared for possible jobs and view technology more like a tool and less like a toy."
    • carinecroteau
       
      Je partage ce point de vue.
  • More than half, 60%, of classroom technology use is passive
  • While only 32% of classroom technology use is active
  • Students in underserved schools are even more likely to lack access to technology at home
    • carinecroteau
       
      Important de ne pas augmenter la fracture des classes sociales.
edecelien

The Inevitable Steve Jobs Vs. Dennis Ritchie Discussion via @forbes - 0 views

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    Alors que nous pleurions la mort et nous souvenions de la vie du PDG d'Apple, Steve Jobs, le week-end dernier, Dennis Ritchie - le développeur du logiciel qui a facilité l'interface Apple que nous connaissons - est décédé seul. La nécrologie du New York Times résumait assez bien l'impact de Ritchie et incluait ceci :
cathrochefort

Five jobs that didn't exist 10 years ago | Money | guardian.co.uk - 2 views

    • cathrochefort
       
      Les médias sociaux sont omniprésents et créent des emplois. La position de gestionnaire de communauté est un des métiers qui n'existaient pas il y a tout juste cinq ans. Gageons que ce n'est pas demain la veille qu'elle disparaîtra non plus!
Jean-Michel Dugre

Tim Cook's Freshman Year: The Apple CEO Speaks - Businessweek - 1 views

  • Prior to his death on Oct. 5, 2011, Steve Jobs made sure that the elevation of Tim Cook—his longtime
    • Jean-Michel Dugre
       
      Prior to his death on Oct. 5, 2011, Steve Jobs made sure that the elevation of Tim Cook-his longtime
Jean-Baptiste Coubès

Target Your Next Employer With a Personal Ad - Marketing and Sales Jobs News and Advice - 0 views

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    Il existe un moyen supplémentaire de rechercher du travail : la publicité ciblée via les réseaux sociaux. Il suffit de créer une publicité avec un CV, puis les futurs employeurs pourront cliquer dessus et obtenir vos coordonnées ou arriver sur votre site Web ... (Chris Prentice - FINS.com)
Jean-Baptiste Coubès

Community Manager Job Description - 0 views

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    avec le web2.0 et le dévelopement des médias sociaux est apparu un nouveau type de poste défini ici par Erin Bury : "Community Manager" ou gestionnaire de communautés (une des nombreuses traductions).
einsteininf6107

How to Use Social Media to Find Your Next Job - The Reserves Network - 0 views

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    Il est intéressant de constater que les réseaux sociaux répondent à différents besoins. L'objectif étant surement de converger le traffic vers eux et d'y garder l'utilisateur le plus longtemps possible.
royer901

How many jobs are available in technology? | Computerworld - 2 views

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    Actuellement, il y a plus de 3,9 millions de postes informatiques non pourvus aux États-Unis.Jusqu'à présent en 2022, le marché du travail informatique a augmenté de 93 400 emplois, soit 43 000 de plus que pour la même période en 2021.
Caro Mailloux

Activité-A, partage de lien 9: Facebook Contest Lets You Pick the NCAA's Marc... - 0 views

  • The NCAA’s popular March Madness basketball tournament is annually a cause of groans from know-it-all fans who think they they could have done a better job of picking its teams. But this year via Facebook, the NCAA is giving fans a chance to show that they could, indeed, make better selections.
  • Ramos said that the Super 10 is the NCAA’s first major Facebook contest, but that the “marriage of sports and social media is a really strong one because of all the fan excitement that surounds sports.”
    • Caro Mailloux
       
      La publication démontre comment le sport et les médias sociaux sont liés et comment un évènement peut raviver, stimuler ou augmenter l'intérêt de ses participants en utilisant Facebook (ou autre médial social).  L'auteur est Sam Laird et l'article a été publié le 2 février 2012 vers 04:00.
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    La publication démontre comment le sport et les médias sociaux sont liés et comment un évènement peut raviver, stimuler ou augmenter l'intérêt de ses participants en utilisant Facebook (ou autre médial social).  L'auteur est Sam Laird et l'article a été publié le 2 février 2012 vers 04:00.
Caro Mailloux

Activité-A, partage de lien 10: How to Make Your Company More Social - 0 views

    • Caro Mailloux
       
      Les médias sociaux ne doivent plus être bannis des milieux de travail, ils doivent être reconnus pour l'apport qu'ils peuvent fournir aux employés et ainsi à la qualité de leur travail.
  • Social networks are flooded with potential customers.
  • A social business engages the entire company, from CEO to executive assistant. Take advantage of the opportunity to foster your company’s internal community and teach valuable social media skills as the space rapidly grows and evolves.
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  • Chances are you already have several employees that love social media,
  • Focus on Fun Ways
  • Once they learn the basic tools and creative uses of social media, they will naturally see how they can gather more information applicable to their jobs as well.
  • Once you start finding way to feature and utilize the social media prowess of employees, more of the team will chime in and participate.
  • he opportunities to infuse social behavior into your company only increase with engagement. You’ll be able to create more advanced tutorials, educate about emerging platforms, launch new initiatives that bring everyone closer together, and much more.
  • It’s important that your internal experts feel their social skills and expertise is appreciated by the company. These people will naturally start helping and encouraging other employees to do the same.
  • it’s time to get everyone involved in some straight-up fun. Try launching a contest:
  • Be sure to follow up with incentives and recognition, crucial aspects of any competition.
  • Social media allows for a great deal of creativity
  • People want to learn information from social networks, but they also want to communicate with one another. Social media channels provide a way to do this outside the normal confines of cubicle culture, and can boost overall company moral by augmenting the experience of working together.
  • Have everyone bring laptops and phones to the session to keep it interactive. Try setting tasks at the beginning of the session, such as creating a special tutorial hashtag, and then ask everyone to tweet photos of the tutorial.
    • Caro Mailloux
       
      On y aborde l'intégration des médias sociaux pour améliorer la cohésion au sein de l'entreprise, l'image publique de l'entreprise ainsi que l'image faite au consommateurs et partenaires. Très actuel comme sujet et, surtout, bien détaillé.   L'auteure est Mae Karwowski et le texte a été publié le1er février à 1:00.
Arthur Cane

Expert Web Developer - 2 views

I was looking for a web development company and I found Syntactics in my search list. Thanks to the expert team from the company for an excellent job. Since it is my first website project, I do not...

web development

started by Arthur Cane on 03 Feb 12 no follow-up yet
Harry Sahyoun

Collective Knowledge Systems: Where the Social Web meets the Semantic Web - 1 views

  • Collective Knowledge Systems: Where the Social Web meets the Semantic Web
  • What can happen if we combine the best ideas from the Social Web and Semantic Web?
  • The Vision of Collective Intelligence
  • ...20 more annotations...
  • The Social Web is represented by a class of web sites and applications in which user participation is the primary driver of value.
  • Collective intelligence is a grand vision, one to which I subscribe.  However, I would call the current state of the Social Web something else: collected intelligence.   That is, the value of these user contributions is in their being collected together and aggregated into community- or domain-specific sites
  • The grand challenge is to boost the collective IQ of organizations and of society
  • With the rise of the Social Web, we now have millions of humans offering their knowledge online, which means that the information is stored, searchable, and easily shared.  The challenge for the next generation of the Social and Semantic Webs is to find the right match between what is put online and methods for doing useful reasoning with the data.  True collective intelligence can emerge if the data collected from all those people is aggregated and recombined to create new knowledge and new ways of learning that individual humans cannot do by themselves.
  • Technology can augment the discovery and creation of knowledge. For instance, some drug discovery approaches embody a system for learning from models and data that are extracted from published papers and associated datasets.  By assembling large databases of known entities relevant to human biology, researchers can run computations that generate and test hypotheses about possible new therapeutic agents.
  • The first approach is to expose the structured data that already underlies the unstructured web pages.  An obvious technique is for the site builder, who is generating unstructured web pages from a database, to expose the structured data in those pages using standard formats.
  • the second approach, to extract structured data from unstructured user contributions [2] [28] [39] .  It is possible to do a reasonable job at identifying people, companies, and other entities with proper names, products, instances of relations you are interested in (e.g., person joining a company) [1] [7] , or instances of questions being asked [24] . There also techniques for pulling out candidates to use as classes and relations, although these are a bit noisier than the directed pattern matching algorithms [8] [23]  [31] [32] [36] [38] [42]
  • Tomorrow, the web will be understood as an active human-computer system, and we will learn by telling it what we are interested in, asking it what we collectively know, and using it to apply our collective knowledge to address our collective needs.
  • The other major area where Semantic Web can help achieve the vision of collective intelligence is in the area of interoperability.  If the world's knowledge is to be found on the Web, then we should be able to use it to answer questions, retrieve facts, solve problems, and explore possibilities. 
  • In a sense, the TagCommons project is attempting to create a platform for interoperability of social web data on the Semantic Web that is akin to the "mash-up" ecology that is celebrated in Web 2.0.
  • An example of how a system might apply some of these ideas is RealTravel.  RealTravel is an example of "Web 2.0 for travel".  It attracts travelers to share their experiences: sharing their itineraries, stories, photographs, where they stayed, what they did, and their recommendations for fellow travelers.  Writers think of RealTravel as a great platform to share their experiences -- a blog site that caters to this domain.  People who are planning travel use the site as a source of information to research their trip,
  • The collection of tags for a site is called the folksonomy, which is useful data about collective interests.
  • like many Web 2.0 sites, combines these structured dimensions to order the unstructured content.  For example, one can find all the travel blogs about diving, sorted by rating.  In fact, the site combines all of the structured dimensions into a matrix, which offers the user a way to "pivot browse" along any dimension from any point in the matrix.
  • This paper argues that the Social Web and the Semantic Web should be combined, and that collective knowledge systems are the "killer applications" of this integration.  The keys to getting the most from collective knowledge systems, toward true collective intelligence, are tightly integrating user-contributed content and machine-gathered data, and harvesting the knowledge from this combination of unstructured and structured information.
  • Structured and unstructured, formal and informal -- these are not new dimensions.  They are typically considered poles of a continuum.
  • We are beginning to see companies launching services under the banner of Web 3.0 [25] that aim explicitly at collective intelligence.  For instance, MetaWeb [35] is collecting a commons of integrated, structured data in a social web manner, and Radar Networks [25] is applying semantic web technologies to enrich the applications and data of the social web.
  • The third approach is to capture structured data on the way into the system.  The straightforward technique is to give users tools for structuring their data, such as ways of adding structured fields and making class hierarchies.
    • Harry Sahyoun
       
      Folksonomies_Semantic_Collectivities Web2_To_Web3
    • Harry Sahyoun
       
      3-étoiles
    • Harry Sahyoun
       
      Activité-A
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    Technology can augment the discovery and creation of knowledge. For instance, some drug discovery approaches embody a system for learning from models and data that are extracted from published papers and associated datasets. By assembling large databases of known entities relevant to human biology, researchers can run computations that generate and test hypotheses about possible new therapeutic agents
anonymous

Revue hebdo techno, semaine du 10 octobre 2011 - 1 views

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    Chaque lundi, Technaute propose des éléments d'actualité technologique. -Maryse Tessier
Admission Times

Earn while you Study - 0 views

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    Post Study Work Visa
anonymous

Shirky: Ontology is Overrated -- Categories, Links, and Tags - 1 views

  • I want to convince you that many of the ways we're attempting to apply categorization to the electronic world are actually a bad fit, because we've adopted habits of mind that are left over from earlier strategies.
    • Caro Mailloux
       
      need of novelty
  • because it is both widely used and badly overrated in terms of its value in the digital world.
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  • Yahoo is saying "We understand better than you how the world is organized, because we are trained professionals. So if you mistakenly think that Books and Literature are entertainment, we'll put a little flag up so we can set you right, but to see those links, you have to 'go' to where they 'are'."
  • You don't have to have just a few links, you could have a whole lot of links.
  • A URL can only appear in three places. That's the Yahoo rule.
  • They missed the end of this progression, which is that, if you've got enough links, you don't need the hierarchy anymore. There is no shelf. There is no file system. The links alone are enough.
  • One reason Google was adopted so quickly when it came along is that Google understood there is no shelf, and that there is no file system. Google can decide what goes with what after hearing from the user, rather than trying to predict in advance what it is you need to know.
    • Caro Mailloux
       
      Laisser les usagers se faire leur langage et le tagger à leur façon puis, en tant que Google, prendre cette info et l'utiliser pour créer une ''taxonomie''.
  • "Well, that's going to be a useful category, we should encode that in advance."
  • They point to the signal loss from the fact that users, although they use these three different labels, are talking about the same thing.
  • You can also turn that list around. You can say "Here are some characteristics where ontological classification doesn't work well": Domain Large corpus No formal categories Unstable entities Unrestricted entities No clear edges Participants Uncoordinated users Amateur users Naive catalogers No Authority
  • The other big problem is that predicting the future turns out to be hard, and yet any classification system meant to be stable over time puts the categorizer in the position of fortune teller.
    • Caro Mailloux
       
      ne pas prévoir d'avance
  • Here is del.icio.us, Joshua Shachter's social bookmarking service. It's for people who are keeping track of their URLs for themselves, but who are willing to share globally a view of what they're doing, creating an aggregate view of all users' bookmarks, as well as a personal view for each user.
    • Caro Mailloux
       
      chouette description concrète de l'utilisation de del.icio.us!
  • " If you find a way to make it valuable to individuals to tag their stuff, you'll generate a lot more data about any given object than if you pay a professional to tag it once and only once.
    • Caro Mailloux
       
      utilité du tagging
  • Tags are simply labels for URLs, selected to help the user in later retrieval of those URLs. Tags have the additional effect of grouping related URLs together. There is no fixed set of categories or officially approved choices. You can use words, acronyms, numbers, whatever makes sense to you, without regard for anyone else's needs, interests, or requirements.
    • Caro Mailloux
       
      Chouette description de ''Tags''.
  • The chart shows a great variability in tagging strategies among the various users.
  • But this is what organization looks like when you turn it over to the users -- many different strategies, each of which works in its own context, but which can also be merged.
  • We are moving away from binary categorization -- books either are or are not entertainment
  • But they either had no way of reflecting that debate or they decided not to expose it to the users. What instead happened was it became an all-or-nothing categorization, "This is entertainment, this is not entertainment." We're moving away from that sort of absolute declaration, and towards being able to roll up this kind of value by observing how people handle it in practice.
  • What you do instead is you try to find ways that the individual sense-making can roll up to something which is of value in aggregate, but you do it without an ontological goal.
  • you believe that we make sense of the world, if we are, from a bunch of different points of view, applying some kind of sense to the world
    • Caro Mailloux
       
      ''we make sens of the world together thru what's worth aggregating'' = not ontology 
  • we're going to be able to build alternate organizational systems, systems that, like the Web itself, do a better job of letting individuals create value for one another, often without realizing it.
  • If you think the movies and cinema people were going to have a fight, wait til you get the queer politics and homosexual agenda people in the same room.
    • Marie-Noëlle Therrien
       
      ¸Bel exemple pour démontrer la problématique.
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    Un article de Clay Shirky qui nous donne son analyse de l'Ontologie, un point de vue intéressant sur les différentes façons de classer l'information sur le Web.
anonymous

Ginni Rometty on How AI Is Going to Transform Jobs-All of Them - WSJ - 0 views

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    Excellent article du Wall Street Journal sur la vision de la présidente d'IBM et comment l'intelligence artificielle va transformer le marché du travail.
anonymous

Activité D : Service no.2 - LinkedIn - 3 views

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    Analyse d'un service Web. Service no.2 - LinkedIn
nancy_pitre

The new iPhone will land in Apple's flying-saucer shaped campus - 1 views

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    iPhone 8 : Bye bye home button, hello new OLED screen!
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