The Three Effective Ways to Search The Web Educators Must Know about - 0 views
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Successful control of their own websites - 0 views
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E' un lavoro che si rivolge non solo agli addetti ai lavori ma per un pubblico sempre più vasto; l'arte aiuta la pace, ha detto Umberto Agnelli consigliere per l'Italia del Praemium Imperiale" l'an...
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The internet's cyber radicals: heroes of the web changing the world | Technology | The ... - 0 views
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Web ushers in age of ambient intimacy - International Herald Tribune - 0 views
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It is easy to become unsettled by privacy-eroding aspects of awareness tools. But there is another — quite different — result of all this incessant updating: a culture of people who know much more about themselves. Many of the avid Twitterers, Flickrers and Facebook users I interviewed described an unexpected side-effect of constant self-disclosure. The act of stopping several times a day to observe what you're feeling or thinking can become, after weeks and weeks, a sort of philosophical act. It's like the Greek dictum to "know thyself," or the therapeutic concept of mindfulness. (Indeed, the question that floats eternally at the top of Twitter's Web site — "What are you doing?" — can come to seem existentially freighted. What are you doing?) Having an audience can make the self-reflection even more acute, since, as my interviewees noted, they're trying to describe their activities in a way that is not only accurate but also interesting to others: the status update as a literary form.
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Laura Fitton, the social-media consultant, argues that her constant status updating has made her "a happier person, a calmer person" because the process of, say, describing a horrid morning at work forces her to look at it objectively. "It drags you out of your own head," she added. In an age of awareness, perhaps the person you see most clearly is yourself.
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Of course, reminds me of this - http://blog.wired.com/wiredscience/2009/02/talkitout.html
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"It's just like living in a village, where it's actually hard to lie because everybody knows the truth already,"
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Arab Media: The Web 2.0 Revolution - 0 views
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The Cairo News Company, which provided satellite services and equipment for Al Jazeera, the BBC and CNN, was raided by police after it transmitted footage of the food riots.
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But new media applications were changing the rules. This was demonstrated by the arrest of a journalism student from Berkeley named James Karl Buck, who was detained along with his Egyptian interpreter as he photographed a street protest. Buck used the Twitter application on his cell phone to send a snapshot of himself and the text message “arrested” to a list serve of his contacts. His friends used the message to prompt intervention from Berkeley and the U.S. consulate. Buck was soon able to Twitter the word “free,” and mounted an online campaign to release his interpreter.
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police finally located him and tortured him for his Facebook password and names of the other group members (the vast majority of which he didn’t know).
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MediaShift . NBC's Penguin Story Goes from Web to 'Nightly News' | PBS - 0 views
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For Duffy, as for the other producers, editors and camerapeople who have tried it, walking on the "digital journalist" side has been exhilarating. The ability to totally control the assignment and embrace the full craft of storytelling is a refreshing change in what has become an almost assembly-line-like news production system of specialists.
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