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Francois Bergeron

Social Media Management Dashboard - HootSuite - 1 views

shared by Francois Bergeron on 24 Jan 14 - No Cached
  • Manage multiple social networks • Schedule messages and tweets • Track brand mentions • Analyze social media traffic • 8 million+ satisfied users
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    Manage multiple social networks * Schedule messages and tweets * Track brand mentions * Analyze social media traffic * 8 million+ satisfied users
Kurt Laitner

8 concepts pour une pédagogie ouverte et hybride | JEFF T@VERNIER - 1 views

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    via christophe cessetti
Tiberius Brastaviceanu

Postage-Stamp-Sized Micropumps for Both Gas and Liquid Sensor Systems | Sensors - 3 views

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    "550 mbar/ 8 psi (100 Hz)"
Justin McCollen

Learning Spill Risk Management - 1 views

started by Justin McCollen on 15 Jan 13 no follow-up yet
Francois Bergeron

safer industrial robots - robot skin - 0 views

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    Clément Gosselin, prof in robotics and mechatronics shows improvements and the the famous robot skin
Francois Bergeron

food safety test on a chip - 1 views

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    food safety test on a chip
Francois Bergeron

Télé-Québec : Code Chastenay - 0 views

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    new ENGAGE grant ? :)
Kurt Laitner

Battery-free wireless could send text messages after your phone dies | The Verge - 1 views

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    radio powered by ambient backscatter - potential for sensor applications
Tiberius Brastaviceanu

Places to Intervene in a System by Donella H. Meadows - developer.*, Developer Dot Star - 0 views

  • Folks who do systems analysis have a great belief in "leverage points."
  • where a small shift in one thing can produce big changes in everything.
  • backward intuition
  • ...15 more annotations...
  • "Places to Intervene in a System," followed by nine items: 9.  Numbers (subsidies, taxes, standards). 8.  Material stocks and flows. 7.  Regulating negative feedback loops. 6.  Driving positive feedback loops. 5.  Information flows. 4.  The rules of the system (incentives, punishment, constraints). 3.  The power of self-organization. 2.  The goals of the system. 1.  The mindset or paradigm out of which the goals, rules, feedback structure arise.
  • an invitation to think more broadly about system change.
  • Numbers ("parameters" in systems jargon) determine how much of a discrepancy turns which faucet how fast.
  • some of which are physically locked in, but most of which are popular intervention points.
  • Probably ninety-five percent of our attention goes to numbers, but there's not a lot of power in them.
  • Not that parameters aren't important—they can be, especially in the short term and to the individual who's standing directly in the flow. But they rarely change behavior. If the system is chronically stagnant, parameter changes rarely kick-start it. If it's wildly variable, they don't usually stabilize it. If it's growing out of control, they don't brake it.
  • Spending more on police doesn't make crime go away.
  • Numbers become leverage points when they go into ranges that kick off one of the items higher on this list.
  • Probably the most common kind of critical number is the length of delay in a feedback loop.
  • A delay in a feedback process is critical relative to rates of change (growth, fluctuation, decay) in the system state that the feedback loop is trying to control.
  • Delays that are too short cause overreaction, oscillations amplified by the jumpiness of the response. Delays that are too long cause damped, sustained, or exploding oscillations, depending on how much too long. At the extreme they cause chaos. Delays in a system with a threshold, a danger point, a range past which irreversible damage can occur, cause overshoot and collapse.
  • delays are not often easily changeable
  • It's usually easier to slow down the change rate (positive feedback loops, higher on this list), so feedback delays won't cause so much trouble
  • Most systems have evolved or are designed to stay out of sensitive parameter ranges. Mostly, the numbers are not worth the sweat put into them.
  • The plumbing structure, the stocks and flows and their physical arrangement, can have an enormous effect on how a system operates.
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