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romie_mui

Reading in a Whole New Way | 40th Anniversary | Smithsonian Magazine - 5 views

    • Elias Rumley
       
      Right away, skimming the page, I feel that there needs to be more pictures. E-readers struggle to keep their attention to text for an extended period, so pictures will help break the monotony.
    • J.Randolph Radney
       
      This is a great idea, Elias. Do you have some particular pictures in mind?
    • Jordan Turgeon
       
      The picture provides a good visual that precedes the actual topic
  • American prosperity and liberty grew out of a culture of reading and writing.
    • Elias Rumley
       
      Very strong statement. Perhaps a tad over-reaching, but it is effective in demonstrating the writer's belief that literacy is key in culture.
  • ...11 more annotations...
  • As digital screens proliferate and people move from print to pixel, how will the act of reading change?
    • Jordan Turgeon
       
      Clearly states the general topic in a simple and easily understood manner right away
  • Books were good at developing a contemplative mind. Screens encourage more utilitarian thinking. A new idea or unfamiliar fact will provoke a reflex to do something: to research the term, to query your screen “friends” for their opinions, to find alternative views, to create a bookmark, to interact with or tweet the thing rather than simply contemplate it.
    • farouk hamood
       
      interesting
  • In ancient times, authors often dictated their books. Dictation sounded like an uninterrupted series of letters, so scribes wrote down the letters in one long continuous string, justastheyoccurinspeech. Text was written without spaces between words until the 11th century. This continuous script made books hard to read, so only a few people were accomplished at reading them aloud to others. Being able to read silently to yourself was considered an amazing talent. Writing was an even rarer skill. In 15th-century Europe only one in 20 adult males could write.
    • Jordan Turgeon
       
      An interesting summary of reading and writing during the ealier times
  • The first screens that overtook culture, several decades ago—the big, fat, warm tubes of television—reduced the time we spent reading to such an extent that it seemed as if reading and writing were over. Educators, intellectuals, politicians and parents worried deeply that the TV generation would be unable to write.
    • Elias Rumley
       
      It's interesting to see that, at one point, professionals believed writing would become a rare skill and the rarity of literacy would regress back to ancient times.
  • Pixels encourage numeracy and produce rivers of numbers flowing into databases.
    • Elias Rumley
       
      Very strong imagery, that effectively contrasts the pixels (which are small and humble) produce a river (usually powerful and comparitively large) of information.
  • Books  
  • But screens engage our bodies. Touch screens respond to the ceaseless caress of our fingers.
  • The most physically active we may get while reading a book is to flip the pages or dog-ear a corner.
    • romie_mui
       
      interesting point
  •  The most physically active we may get while reading a book is to flip the pages or dog-ear a corner.  But screens engage our bodies. Touch screens respond to the ceaseless caress of our fingers.
  • or dog
  • pages or dog -ear a corner.   But screens
ivanhartling

7 Secrets to Getting Your Next Job Using Social Media - 10 views

  • About 1 year ago Dan Schawbel 607 Secrets to Getting Your Next Job Using Social Media
    • Kai Zhao
       
      hello team?
  • About 1 year ago Dan Schawbel 607 Secrets to Getting Your Next Job Using Social Media
    • Yingpeng Wu
       
      hi there
  • 7 Secrets to Getting Your Next Job Using Social Media
  • ...5 more annotations...
  • The current environment
    • Yingpeng Wu
       
      FBI
    • Yingpeng Wu
       
      gg
    • nikki hogg
       
      Really lengthy homepage, it would be nice if they have a sort of table of contents with hyperlinks that could take you to each of the 7 secrets
    • ivanhartling
       
      I don't like how long this page is. It requires a lot of scrolling to navigate and I think it would be easier if the 7 secrets were seperated into seperate pages.
    • nikki hogg
       
      the sidebar on the right is a bit distracting and it makes it challenging to focus. it isnt that easy to quickly navigate through this site
  • 1. Conduct a people search instead of a job search
    • ivanhartling
       
      Title catches your attention.
  •  
    This supplements Chapter Seven of the course text, providing some social media job search ideas.
caitlin molson

Googling and Facebooking to a job | Marketplace From American Public Media - 5 views

  • Social media more often seems to be a way to get kicked out of a job -- unseemly photos, an off-color post -- but some job-seekers are using it to land their dream jobs
    • J.Randolph Radney
       
      Engaging opening sentence.
    • J.Randolph Radney
       
      I don't particularly like this colour choice here. Perhaps it is a branding artifact?
    • Carly Madsen
       
      Vertical layout works well for this site
  • ...3 more annotations...
    • Carly Madsen
       
      Nice to have a picture to catch your attention along with a brief sentence to tell you what the article is about.
    • caitlin molson
       
      Is it just me or is anyone else distracted by the amount of advertising here, the actual content is pushed to a third of the page
  • When they Googled themselves, they would see Brownstein's ads asking for a job, and directing them to his website. Total cost of placing the ads? Six dollars
  •  
    Someone in a class recently told me they would like to work at Google. Here's how some people went after the job they wanted.
J.Randolph Radney

YouTube - Fun with Rhetorical Analysis using cereal - 2 views

  •  
    Most of this video is relevant to the topic of graphic design.
J.Randolph Radney

Online Office Hours with Google Docs - Official Google Docs Blog - 0 views

  •  
    Virtual Office Hours
J.Randolph Radney

YouTube - docs's Channel - 1 views

  •  
    Some good videos on Google Docs.
J.Randolph Radney

In Defense of Links, Part One: Nick Carr, hypertext and delinkification - Scott Rosenbe... - 0 views

  •  
    This article (in three parts) discusses the importance of proper use of links in writing (and reading) Web materials.
J.Randolph Radney

Seth's Blog: Don't forget about color - 0 views

  •  
    Here's an idea about the use of colour.
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