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robert morris

Loomio | Collaborative Decision-Making - 2 views

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    1. Talk things through Start a discussion on any topic, and bring in the right people. Share diverse perspectives and develop ideas together. 2. Build agreement Anyone can propose a course of action. People can agree, abstain, disagree, or block - so you can see how everyone feels, and why.
robert morris

Ask Big Questions - 2 views

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    I really enjoyed this article - hoping you do too.
Pris Laurente

African Journal of Business Management - the effects of biased technological change on ... - 3 views

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    "The paper explains the effect of biased technological change (BTC) on total factor productivity (TFP) from the new perspective of appropriate technology. We have certified that the assumption of neutral technology progress of Solow is ostensible and also to get the general technological progress which can be divided into three parts: effect of knowledge progress, effect of capital intensity improvement and scale effect."
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    VERY interesting angle - thank you for sharing.
Ad Huikeshoven

assorted stuff - 1 views

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    Seek, sense and share. I have found 'assorted stuff'. A blog by Tim SI tahmer, expert in instructional technology. This guy seems to know stuff about internet and other digital things. I found him on Twitter, https://twitter.com/timstahmer, but haven't spot him here in the Diigo group.
AJ Williams

About ds106 - 2 views

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    From the site: "Digital Storytelling (also affectionately known as ds106) is an open, online course that happens at various times throughout the year at the University of Mary Washington... but you can join in whenever you like and leave whenever you need." I took part in the open ds106 course for a while. I am impressed that it keeps going and morphing over time. The dedication to openness - both the the tools used and the content being produced by the participants - is also impressive. Concepts taught in this course included remix, reuse and re-share are core to the concepts of OER and open knowledge.
Ad Huikeshoven

David Young from Zimbabwe: EDCMOOC blog - 0 views

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    Seek, sense, share. David Young is a co-student in this course. David is from Zimbabwe. He is coach, mentor and the MOOC leader and expert in his country. He posts also on G+ https://plus.google.com/+DaveYoungcoachandmentor/posts and DaveAlex in the course discussion forum https://class.stanford.edu/courses/Education/OpenKnowledge/Fall2014/discussion/forum/undefined/threads/54130a0a03ff2271720000de. He brings a life long professional experience to our class.
v woolf

Explore Copyright Reform with Creative Commons\' site: \"Team Open\" - 0 views

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    "Team Open is a project to collect and share stories of the power of Creative Commons licenses." (http://teamopen.cc/all/) This site is a project by Creative Commons to advertise the power of creative commons licensing; it includes trading cards (!) for donating, and powerful stories about how CC has been used for good in the world and why it is such an important movement. This is a great piece of advertising for CC, and it really captures some of the ways that CC can be used. I think all too often, copyright is not seen as something "sexy" or interesting, but using clear language, simple but elegant graphics, and some really captivating stories, this site is a very useful tool.
chuckicks

Lockdown: The coming war on general-purpose computing - 2 views

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    By Cory Doctorow - Share this article This article is based on a keynote speech to the Chaos Computer Congress in Berlin, Dec. 2011. General-purpose computers are astounding. They're so astounding that our society still struggles to come to grips with them, what they're for, how to accommodate them, and how to cope with them.
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    This is a charged essay on the challenges to computing freedom in light of copyright, digital rights management (DRM), piracy (SOPA) and related issues. The author argues for the need to examine and, at user's discretion, shut down backdoor programs that monitor and/or enforce limits of fair use.
Ad Huikeshoven

Integrating Lifelong Learning Perspectives - 3 views

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    From the UNESCO Institute for Education, published in 2002. Quote "As humanity invented writing 5000 years ago, the culture of shared knowledge reached a new dimension; its horizon went on expanding until it became planetary through Internet." That is just something I needed while evaluating the John Willinsky video in module 5, hoping to find an answer to his question why do we want access to knowledge.
Kevin Stranack

All Is Not Vanity | Literary Review of Canada - 0 views

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    "Self-publishing is at a stage analogous to the early days of Wikipedia, when users were reluctant to trust information contained in a communally written encyclopedia. It turns out that online democracy performs quite an effective self-regulating function. "
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    Good points in the article: There are several good reasons a novelist chooses to self-publish: 1. Because of repeated rejection. 2. To get the book to market more quickly. 3. To have more control over the process. 4. To receive a larger share of the book's earnings. 5. To attract the attention of a major publisher.
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    With digitization of publishing its now an option to self publicize especially for new writers who thing their work will never be acknowledged. But musicians are also using the self publicizing/promotion and later one it does pays on. I heard of Justin Bieber story of when the mother was busy posting you-tube videos.So its possible to go a "freenuim" way and start with e.g blogging and eventually build a fan/interest base
Kevin Stranack

5 Key Trends in Self-Publishing for 2014 | Mediashift | PBS - 2 views

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    Trends in the production and distribution of self-published ebooks.
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    Very interesting. Let me share on twitter. Thank you.
joenmori

91% of Americans concerned about online privacy -- 7% would change their name as protec... - 1 views

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    In this article I could see that the privacy is a topic very important in the life of each person in America, with the increment of technology, people can enjoy of many services that help to make any task in a easier way, but the government has taken a lot of actions "worried" about social welfare, finishing with the privacy that new technological services can offer. So, I think that the providers of these services should explain the rules to use them in a clearly way, and people must decide about what personal information to share and specify that this have to respect, and think in alternatives to change this trend where government wants to control everything, well, it's just a review.
Leopoldo Basurto

Cómo gestionar el conocimiento en las Pymes: El modelo de Harold Jarche. - 0 views

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    I can´t acces the Harold Jarcher's site [jarcher.com], [ :( so upset!!!] but i found a review of his PKM at this URL.
anonymous

Known: a social publishing platform - 2 views

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    New startup that grew out of discussions among the IndieWebCamp folks. Provides a Tumblr-like open source tool (and hosted version) to publish content, then syndicate to other networks.
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    Gracias por compartir -- Thanks for sharing
caitlinjarvis

Wunderlist | To-do list, Reminders, Errands - App of the Year! - 0 views

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    We love lists. They capture ideas, things to do and places to see. And when you share them, they influence the world around you. This is Wunderlist.
begalu02

Uso cultural del móvil en distintos países - 1 views

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    I find this interesting. Using the mobile phone is now a daily activity for everyone as we can do many things with it such as sending mesagges, sharing information, pictures, documents, and most important LEARNING.
bhowatg

Proud to be a LIBRARIAN!!! Love the L-sign - 0 views

shared by bhowatg on 15 Sep 14 - No Cached
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    this blog celebrates my 18+ years as an Information Professional, precisely as a Documentalist. the blog will touch on this and that regarding the often misconstrued LIS/RAM world, sharing my personal and professional experiences. the blog will also have a strong bias towards manipulation of ICTs and LIS/RAM and will be very interactive and your input will be most welcome...
chuckicks

Radical Librarianship: how ninja librarians are ensuring patrons' electronic privacy - 4 views

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    Researching online often means leaving a trail of information about yourself, including your location, what websites you visited and for how long, with whom you chatted or emailed, and what you downloaded and printed. All of these details are all easy to associate with a particular computer user when insufficient privacy protections are in place.
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    Thanks for sharing this article. The right to electronic privacy is most important to me. It's frightening how 'big brother' can trace everything we do. I intend following up on the links and asking our local professional association to run a workshop on this.
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    Librarians in Massachusetts are working to give their patrons a chance to opt-out of pervasive surveillance. Partnering with the ACLU of Massachusetts, area librarians have been teaching and taking workshops on how freedom of speech and the right to privacy are compromised by the surveillance of online and digital communications -- and what new privacy-protecting services they can offer patrons to shield them from unwanted spying of their library activity.
Maria Romanova-Hynes

Is There a Text on This Screen? Reading in an Era of Hypertextuality - 2 views

  • Does a literary text retain the same status once it has become virtual? What is the status of any text in today's era of hypertexts and linked computers? What type of materiality are we dealing with? What forms of reading, what forms of knowledge?
  • The computer and the internet radically change our relationship with texts, the methods of their production, and our ways of reading. But do we know the real capabilities of the instrument we use with such increasing frequency? Do we really understand what we're dealing with? The computer is no longer simply a tool — it is a medium.
  • It is providing us with a set of new media forms and genres, just as printing, the cinema, radio, and television have done before
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • One does not approach a literary text the same was as a news item. With the linked computer, these generic markers lose their relevance. Books and magazines, literary texts, and press releases share the same space, the window of a browser, and they are subject to the same initial reading strategies.
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    Highly recommended to those interested in hypertextuality and the transformation of reading practices in the digital age.
tlsohn

How Does Online Gaming Affect Social Interactions? - 3 views

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    Old article worth a read considering the large release of 'Destiny' this week, another massive open world game to help connect users globally Online multiplayer communities are social networks built around multiplayer online computer games. Members of these communities typically share an interest in online gaming and a great deal of the interaction between them is technologically mediated. It is a playground which can give us clues about the future of social and technological developments, according to the researcher.
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    I`m reading this http://bit.ly/1qbGmKK but I haven`t formed an opinion, not being a gamer myself.
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