Skip to main content

Home/ AUBSpring12-MCOM251/ Group items tagged technology

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Dima Saber

TEDxNYED - Mike Wesch - 03/06/10 - YouTube - 0 views

  •  
    This is a talk by Mike Wesch (A vision of students today), speaks of mediated & non-mediated worlds, relation between tech & human connections but gets REALLY interesting around '8 >> speaking of today's classrooms, teachers, learners etc. Pretty inspiring (! as it just makes my day kinda inspiring...). 15 min total, hope you enjoy! 
Dima Saber

A Vision of Students Today - YouTube - 5 views

  •  
    I am working on a proposal to encourage faculty to train their instructors/professors on digital learning etc. kinda shifting the focus from teaching students, to teaching teachers... Working on modules right now & just remembered this video (posted in 2007) & thought you guys should like it!
  •  
    Nice :)
  •  
    This was made in 2007: Today the issue is a lot more important and still very few professors are aware of that!
Dima Saber

After Kony, could a viral video change the world? | World news | The Observer - 0 views

  • Viral dissemination has been a feature of the internet almost from the beginning, but the deliberate exploitation of it dates from Independence Day in the US in 1996, when Hotmail was launched by Sabeer Bhatia and Jack Smith. It was the first "webmail" system (allowing people to send and receive email using an internet browser) and its makers had the brilliant idea of appending a footer to every message sent stating that it had been sent by Hotmail and inviting the recipient to "get a free Hotmail account" at www.hotmail.com.Viral dissemination received a really powerful boost with the launch of YouTube in 2005. Thereafter, people were able to post striking, amusing or daft videos online and the service made it easy to "share" anything that viewers liked. This is what led to the LOLcat explosion and the astonishing viewing totals for charming videos like Charlie Bit My Finger, which has been watched more than 12 million times since it first appeared in 2007.Viral dissemination was also responsible for making Bruno Ganz, the actor who played Adolf Hitler in Downfall, the 2004 film about the last days of Hitler, into the most famous German actor in the world – though in this case the makers of the film came to regard its online notoriety as a mixed blessing as parodies of one of its climactic scenes started to spread virally across the network.
    • Dima Saber
       
      An examination of the spread of the Kony video suggests that one weak tie in particular may have been critical in launching it to its present eminence. Her name is Oprah Winfrey and she tweeted: "Have watched the film. Had them on show last year" on 6 March, after which the graph of YouTube views of the video switches to the trajectory of a bat out of hell. Winfrey, it turns out, has 9.7 million followers on Twitter.
  •  
    This article is pretty interesting in the sense that it gives some answers to most of the questions you all raised in the discussion topic on "Kony? What about America's war criminals" 
1 - 4 of 4
Showing 20 items per page