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natalie arellano

D#10 HW#6-Video Resume Tips - 0 views

  • A video resume is a short video created by a candidate for employment that describes the individual's skills and qualifications and is typically used to supplement a traditional resume
  • It's important to keep in mind that a video resume isn't going to get you a job. However, if can assist you in marketing yourself to prospective employers - if it's done right.
  • Video Resume Image © Suprijono Suharjoto zSB(3,3)Sponsored Links Free Resume TemplatesFree Resume Templates America's #1 Resume Templates.LiveCareer.com Free Resume TemplatesCreate Custom Resumes Quickly! Templates Based On Your Occupationwww.PongoResume.com Video to DVD TransferShare & enjoy your old video tapes Convert VHS, 8mm tapes to DVDwww.HomeVideoStudio.com zob();if(zs Job Searching Ads Resume Job Resume Samples New Resume Format Writing a Resume Video
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  • CareerBuilder, Jobster, and MyWorkster, have a section of your profile where you can include video.
  • Dress professionally in business attire, just as if you were going to an in-person interview. Keep your video resume short: one - three minutes. Look at the camera not at the desk or table below you. Don't speak too fast. Make sure there isn't any background noise and that the wall behind you isn't too busy. Practice what you're going to say ahead of time. Start by mentioning your name (first and last). Focus on your professional endeavors, not your personal ones. Discuss why you would be a good employee and what you can do for the company that hires you. Thank the viewer for considering you for employment.
  • Where to Upload Your Video
  • Don't expect your video resume to replace your traditional resume.
  • Tips to Help You Prepare a Professional Video Resume:
  • How to Promote Your Video Resume
  • Include a link to your video resume in your paper/online resume. Include your video resume or a link to it in your professional profiles on career networking sites like MyWorkster, Jobster or LinkedIn. Send the link to your networking contacts.
  • Video Resume Don'ts Don't mix your personal life with your professional one.
  • your own web site
  • chances of getting an interview
  • ask friends or family to review it
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    This blog is a good resource for tips on making an impressionable resume video. It provides samples of good quality resumes and gives you specific tips on what to do and how to dress. It also has examples of poor tapes that seemed like it was a joke. Overall a great blog site with helpful hints.
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    The what, where,how, who, why?
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    Great tips on video resumes. How to make them as well as why they help.
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    Video resumes are different than a Typical resume because you're actually the one in front of the camera and speaking about who you are and what you do. This is a lot different and I would say harder then writing your information on a piece of paper. But the advantages of this are they can see you for who you really are and not what's written on a piece of paper. A disadvantage of this is that you have to make sure you pin point your audience is and that can be difficult at times. When writing something on a paper it's easy to address certain people but when you are actually in front of someone or in front of a camera you have to work a little harder to present yourself in the right way.
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    this website gives good tips on how a video resume would be helpful and tips on how to create a video resume
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    This is a great resource that gives tips on video resumes
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    This website had a lot of information regarding video resumes. It had the basics, good tips, and great resources to other sites that can help you promote your video resume such as myworkster and LinkedIn.
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    This website gives tips on how to act while on camera, what to wear, where to upload the video for the best outcome and how to promote it.
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    This site provides helpful tips and how to create a video resume.
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    This website talks about what video resume is about , how a video resume can help, tips that will help you prepare a professional video resume and how to promote your video resume by including a link to it in your professional profiles on career networking sites like myworkster, jobster or linkedIn.
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    This site is helpful because it explains and link out to other sites on how to create a video response. It also explains how you can benefit from a video resume.
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    -dress nice -dont talk too fast -3 min max -rehearse -keep it to professional, not personal -remember to thank at the end -look at camara -include a link to a video resume at the end of real resume
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    Tips about viedo resumes and how they do and dont help get you an interview
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    This website provides useful information about video resumes. I liked that it provided tips that will help us prepare when making a video resume. The tip I thought was important was making sure to keep the video short. It also provided a list of "don't"s. I like that it mentioned not to mix one's personal life with the professional one. I thought this was important especially because we are googling ourselves as part of our HW for Deadline #11.
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    This website is very helpful when it comes to building up your resume.  It gives you tips on what you should include to have chances on getting an interview and what not to do.  It also tells you where to upload your video and how to promote your video.  
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    This site list tips on how to create a resume video. Where to post your video resume. Also, why to create a resume video.
Julie Keith

Remediation - 0 views

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    This is my favorite of the websites that supplement my understanding of remediation because it does a great job of explaining the subject. It gives great examples of movies and events that involved remediation that I would know and this helped me understand it more. 
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    An article from Jay David Bolter and Richard Grusin from the MIT Press in 1999. Goes over what remediation is in new media.
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    D#11, HW#3-- I thought this was a great example of remediation because it explains remediation and then uses different examples from movies to help people understand the meaning.
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    This article analyzing Bolter, Grusin book has fianlly helped me "get it." For some reason this was hard for me to wrap my mind around, but the way it is re-stated here is better for me.
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    This is a writing from Jay David Bolter and Richard Grusin that defines remediation, hypermediacy and immediacy. It has very good descriptions written in a way we can relate to by bringing in examples that are familiar to us like the movie Jurassic Park and the Pathfinder landing on Mars.
Hector Garcia

D#2HW#11: D#2 HW# 5 | gmbegay - 1 views

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    My comment on a fellow classmate
Lucia Albert

11 Ways to Improve a Blog Theme Without a Complete Re-Design - Web Design Blog - Design... - 1 views

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    D#4 HW#4
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    Website to help improve sidebars on Wordpress Blog
Matthew Aber

D#1,HW#13.1 - 0 views

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    This web page provides some useful information on outlining, the concept covered on pages 9 to 11 in Lisa Graham's Basics of Design Layout & Typography for Beginners: Second Edition.
April Gallegos

11 Tips to Improve Your Blog Writing - Food Blog Alliance - 0 views

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    This is a good resource for how to improve your blog because it tells you to spell check (which I'm surprised lately with how many things I've been reading on and offline that are not spell checked...), it says to back up facts, and have a plan. Even though this webpage is mostly for food blogs, I think a lot of the info can be used for regular blogs also.
anonymous

D#1, HW#13 - 1 views

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    The design process put to work when creating a logo.
Alex Knab

D#11, HW #3 - 0 views

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    This page talks directly about the double logic of remediation and correlates closely with a lot of the concepts and theory talked about in the reading. It mentions immediacy which is aimed at diminishing users awareness of the media and hypermediacy which is aimed at enhancing that same awareness. It gives some great examples of the double logic of remediation and really helped me better understand what it means. This was my favorite of the different pages that I explored.
Heather Groen

D #11 HW #3 - Immediacy Versus Hypermediacy - 1 views

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    According to this website, immediacy allows for a synthetic experience of reality that generated real emotions. For example, a horror film that has its viewers clutching their seats and jumping at the slightest noise has achieved immediacy. The film transcends its status as just that; a staged, planned, and recorded movie. It becomes "real" for the audience. Hypermediacy, on the other hand, calls attention to the medium. This would occur while watching a film and reveling in its special effects created by computer. Here is a good explanation of the relationship between immediacy and hypermediacy: "Immediacy erases that limits of what we are capable of experiencing, while hypermediacy gives us the power and the means by which to experience it."
Alex Portela

D#11 HW# 3.1: A Review of _Remediation - 0 views

    • Alex Portela
       
      In all honesty this course has introduced very unfamiliar terms. This site give a cited explanation of the definitions. A good example of hypermediacy was given through Alfred Hitchcock's Psycho how we see Norman's acts then Hitchcock puts us through Norman's eyes and its a question of how we react to that emotionally and mentally as viewers.
  • Remediation is the process whereby computer graphics, virtual reality, and the WWW define themselves by borrowing from and refashioning media such as painting, photography, television, and film. It is the anxiety of influence acted out in the poetics of technology
  • Immediacy is the perfection, or erasure, of the gap between signifier and signified, such that a representation is perceived to be the thing itself.
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  • Hypermediacy is a "style of visual representation whose goal is to remind the viewer of the medium" (Bolter and Grusin 272). Hypermediacy plays upon the desire for immediacy and transparent immediacy, making us hyper-conscious of our act of seeing (or gazing).
  • Mediation is the representation of an object, a formative interface whereby the object of contemplation is structured and presented by some intervening medium (my definition). In this sense, it refers to the symbolic act itself and thus would include writing.
natalie arellano

D#11 HW#3-Immediacy, hypermediacy, and remediation | Mediated Memories - 0 views

    • Alex Portela
       
      From this explanation I understand that we take media and renew it to life in a more extended or virtual environment.
  • mediation; the medium is expressly present in the users experience
  • remediation is media used anew in other media.
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  • immediacy is looking through a medium
  • hypermediacy is looking at a medium
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    This site has definitions of remediation, mediation, immediacy, and hypermediacy. Which are short and sweet.
Hector Garcia

D#2HW#11: Deadline # 2, Homework # 5- Animoto Quote Collage « Michael's TWC 3... - 0 views

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    Comments on a fellow classmate's blog.
Hector Garcia

D#2HW#11: Deadline #2 HW #4 - Rhetoric on the Town « julian.serventi - 2 views

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    Comment on a fellow classmate.
Hector Garcia

D#2HW#11: Deadline #2, Homework # 4- Rhetoric on the Town « Michael's TWC 301... - 1 views

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    Comment on a blog of a fellow classmate.
Mckell Keeney

D#6 HW# 1 TIP: Repetition in Graphic Design - John McLachlan - 0 views

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    This Graphic Designer gives tips on how to effectively use repetition in graphic design.
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    Example of facing book pages that utilize repetition through colors, drop caps, fonts selected and eye catching footnotes.
Hector Garcia

D#7HW#6: 10 Big Myths about copyright explained - 0 views

  • in the USA, almost everything created privately and originally after April 1, 1989 is copyrighted and protected whether it has a notice or not
  • The default you should assume for other people's works is that they are copyrighted and may not be copied unless you know otherwise.
  • Note that granting something to the public domain is a complete abandonment of all rights. You can't make something "PD for non-commercial use." If your work is PD, other people can even modify one byte and put their name on it. You might want to look into Creative Commons style licences if you want to grant wide rights.
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  • Fair use is generally a short excerpt and almost always attributed. (One should not use much more of the work than is needed to make the commentary.
  • It should not harm the commercial value of the work -- in the sense of people no longer needing to buy it (which is another reason why reproduction of the entire work is a problem.) Famously, copying just 300 words from Gerald Ford's 200,000 word memoir for a magazine article was ruled as not fair use, in spite of it being very newsworthy, because it was the most important 300 words -- why he pardoned Nixon.
  • The "fair use" concept varies from country to country, and has different names (such as "fair dealing" in Canada) and other limitations outside the USA.
  • False. U.S. Copyright law is quite explicit that the making of what are called "derivative works" -- works based or derived from another copyrighted work -- is the exclusive province of the owner of the original work. This is true even though the making of these new works is a highly creative process. If you write a story using settings or characters from somebody else's work, you need that author's permission. Yes, that means almost all "fan fiction" is arguably a copyright violation. If you want to publish a story about Jim Kirk and Mr. Spock, you need Paramount's permission, plain and simple. Now, as it turns out, many, but not all holders of popular copyrights turn a blind eye to "fan fiction" or even subtly encourage it because it helps them. Make no mistake, however, that it is entirely up to them whether to do that.
  • The DMCA also changed the liability outlook for ISPs in major ways, many of them quite troublesome.
  • n general, respecting the rights of creators to control their creations is a principle many advocate adhering to.
  • Copyright law was recently amended by the Digital Millennium Copyright Act which changed net copyright in many ways. In particular, it put all sorts of legal strength behind copy-protection systems, making programs illegal and reducing the reality of fair use rights.
  • Don't rationalize whether it hurts the owner or not, ask them.
  • False. Whether you charge can affect the damages awarded in court, but that's main difference under the law. It's still a violation if you give it away -- and there can still be serious damages if you hurt the commercial value of the property.
  • False. Copyright is effectively never lost these days, unless explicitly given away. You also can't "copyright a name" or anything short like that, such as almost all titles. You may be thinking of trade marks, which apply to names, and can be weakened or lost if not defended.
  • You generally trademark terms by using them to refer to your brand of a generic type of product or service. Like a "Delta" airline. Delta Airlines "owns" that word applied to air travel, even though it is also an ordinary word. Delta Hotels owns it when applied to hotels. (This case is fairly unusual as both are travel companies. Usually the industries are more distinct.) Neither owns the word on its own, only in context, and owning a mark doesn't mean complete control -- see a more detailed treatise on this law for details.
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    10 (actually 11) myths about copyright. This article went along the videos and reading for this deadline. I think it was good advice to treat everything as copyrighted until you know for sure
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    10 Big Myths about copyright explained
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    10 myths about copyrights. Great read for everybody because there are a few that I wasn't even aware of! #1 is usually not known by many!
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    explains copyright a bit farther, using common questions asked about copyright policy and providing answers.
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    This article describes the ten myths about copyright and the author explains the truth about each myth. The first myth states if it doesnt have a copyright notice then its not copyrighted, another one of the myths says, "if I dont charge for it, its not a violation". This article is very informative and explains the information in an understandable manner. There is a brief summary towards the end summarizing the main points.
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    I really liked this cite as well because he goes into detail on the myths of copyright. These are some common mistakes people make when it comes to copyright and things we should also pay attention to when we find a piece of work we may like and want to use a quote or phrase from.
Lacey Preach

D#12 HW#3--Twitter changes customer service - 0 views

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    This is an article about stories of Twitter turning into a customer service site for companies. It talks about how a man got the attention of a major company by tweeting them many times so they would listen to him. Twitter is becoming a site where customer service will be the norm. One man describes the social media world a New York City night club where it is always crowded and loud. And the experience can be either good or bad. Social media in the business world is going to grow as more and more people jump on the twitter train.
anonymous

D#1, HW#1 Strategic Design: 6 Steps For Building Successful Websites - Smashing Magazine - 0 views

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    This website focuses more on building a design for a successful website, but it's another example of using the same strategic steps in chapter one of "Basic of Design". I especially am drawn to the second step of this website "Identify your audience". Nowadays new technology being introduced to a variety of generations can be somewhat tricky. The fact that they mentioned "technical competency" as a consideration, gives a better understanding of who you will be dealing with and what levels of technology to consider.   
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