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Leslie Lopez

Deadline #8- HW#1 -Part 2: Team Writing-Constructive conflict benefits - by Peter Vajda... - 0 views

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    I think an important part of part 2 of Team Writing is constructive conflict. I thought this website was useful because it provided the reader with the benefits of constructive conflict. I have taking a course called Organizational Behavior and they also stress that constructive conflict is important in a team. I also think it goes well with the team project we are working on now.
Alex Portela

D#8 HW# 1.1: Conflict Management - 0 views

    • Alex Portela
       
      The difference between destructive and constructive conflict as discussed in our text for Team Writing on pages 51-54. Healthy conflict is good to bring to light more views and better understanding of a subject.
  • Destructive and Constructive Conflict
  • Destructive conflict. Behaviors that escalate a conflict until it seems to have a life of its own are dysfunctional and destructive.
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  • Destructive conflicts may degenerate sufficiently so the conflict parties forget the substantive issues and transform their purposes to getting even, retaliating or hurting the other person.
  • Constructive conflict. Behaviors that are adaptive to the situation, person and issues of the moment are functional and constructive.
  • Constructive conflicts appropriately balance the interests of both parties to maximize the opportunities for mutual gains.
  • Focusing on the process, not just the outcome one person desires, is key to productive conflict management.
gabrielle begay

Constructive conflict is essential for creating commitment to decisions - The Practice ... - 0 views

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    To keep every one interested in a project and keep them on their toes this article tell us why constructive conflict is important, how to keep te conflicts from going beyond constructive and how to keep everything fair within a group. 
Hector Garcia

D#11HW#3: Remediation Revisited: Replies to Gaut, Matravers, and Tavinor - 1 views

    • Hector Garcia
       
      Remediation is a great advance and is opening the door to those who do not work with traditional means such as the world of art.  The computer allows for a new branch of art although it does revolutionize the way art is made and how it is critiqued.  
  • “media” – suitable vehicles of art, and he proposed that a solution to this “bricoleur problem” will be largely determined by “analogies and disanalogies that we can construct between the existing arts and the art in question” (1980: 43).
  • Every work of computer art has an interface or display made up of text, images, or sound; and perhaps these provide a basis for constructing the comparisons needed to solve the bricoleur problem. Remediation to the rescue after all? Not so fast.
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  • Some readers will have noticed a sneaky reformulation of the bricoleur problem as concerning what is a suitable medium for appreciation instead of art.
  • They say that any medium is in principle a suitable vehicle for art.
  • One appreciates The Sims for how its little dramas are realized through interaction: the interaction is what it is only given the representational elements and the representation is what it is only given the interaction. So, in trying to understand why video games are suitable vehicles for appreciation, why not draw analogies between drama-realized-interactively and drama-realized-by-actors-following-a-script?
  • Perhaps the analogies we need to solve computer art’s acute case of the bricoleur problem are not to be found by comparing interactivity to media like acting, narrative, depiction, and tone-meter-timbre structures, but rather by comparing the formal, expressive, and cognitive achievements of interactivity alongside those of acting, narrative, depiction, and tone-meter-timbre structures.
  • . To the extent that the problem pushes
  • Second, the “normally” requires a word of explanation. It is possible to appreciate a K as a K* (Lopes 2008). For example, it is possible to appreciate a building as a sculpture, though buildings are not sculptures, and it is also possible to appreciate a building as an antelope, though it would probably not come off very well (it depends on the building!).
Hector Garcia

D#2HW#8: Basic Instructions - Basic Instructions - How to Construct an Inform... - 0 views

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    Good example of a comic tutor.
Hector Garcia

D#2HW#8: Introduction to Technical Writing/Documentation - 2 views

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    I like this website, because it simplifies the major steps of technical writing. Very concise, and lots of bullet points. I love bullet points.
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    Resource for constructing introductions.
Helen Lennarson

BBC News - 0 views

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    The general construction of this page does a marvelous job of using contrast to liven up their page, as opposed to a more traditional news page which usually doesn't offer too much in way of color of format variation.
julian serventi

The Social Media Construct - a case in remediation « Kshitiz Anand - 0 views

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    This website is very in-depth. It gives several examples of what remediation is and also goes into hyperimmediacy. It talks about transparent immediacy as well. It lets the reader know exactly what is ongoing in the media.
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    I found this article to give an interesting insight to remediation through a different format. The author focuses on how social medias have become a center for marketing. This leads the author to talk about how transparent everything is becoming due to the immediate response from a "tweet" or "status update". Through purchasing anything, the online experience has remediated the face to face experience. Customers now leave their comments on a certain product, and others use this information to persuade their purchase. From this we are now able to even share our purchases through social medias. The real store has been remediated into an online experience and allows for social connection, without the physical connection.
Alex Portela

Revising with others - 0 views

    • Alex Portela
       
      This covers some techniques in revising with others in a group. Constructive discussions help people think in different ways.
Hector Garcia

How TV is handling the new media revolution | In-depth | Broadcast - 0 views

    • Hector Garcia
       
      This is an example on how the internet has revolutionized modern media, that before had been thought to be the most innovative, have been impacted by digital media.
  • Social media is the buzzword of the moment. It has even overtaken porn as the most popular activity on the web, and the term is being bandied about as a catch-all phrase to sum up everything broadcasters do online.
  • For me, social media is about collaboration, participation and storytelling.
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  • For us, social media is an editorial tool. It is a great source of tip-offs.
  • We haven’t segregated social media by having a person/team dedicated to it as, for example, The Sun does, because the most important thing is that everybody realises that every single person in our newsroom has to be social media savvy
  • You don’t necessarily want to put everybody’s opinion on air, but you can see trends and it helps with your impartiality and openness.
  • Social media is at the heart of everything MTV does. We now test talent and programming on social media audiences before we make commissioning decisions. We see it as a form of marketing, providing social currency for our brands.
  • James Kirkham Five years ago, it was about building a fanbase early doors, so by the time the show came on, everyone knew about it. But now social media has become an awful lot more. It still facilitates conversation but, at its best, it takes that conversation and allows viewers to have an impact on a show.
  • Suddenly everyone, from marketing to PR to digital, has to work together and recognise each other’s disciplines, which is quite difficult.
  • people are constructing their own storylines. Programme-makers are no longer such strict storytellers.
  • My worry is that because we can see social media and it’s cheap for research, we will stop trying to have those conversations face to face. We need to always remember that some people don’t want to use social media to talk.
  • So you have to bear in mind that social media can be amazingly superficial and sometimes, ultimately, meaningless.
  • Social media might be fine for certain demographics, but it’s not going to be your whole audience.
Tana Ingram

Japan Association of Translators » Working with Translators - 0 views

    • Tana Ingram
       
      I hadn't thought about the difference between translating and interpreting
    • Tana Ingram
       
      OOps, messed up the highlighting! I don't know how to delete that. What I wanted to note was that I thought it was interesting that it is rare to find a translator who can translate well both ways.
  • 日本翻訳者協会 Working with Translators What is the difference between translating and interpreting? Translation means the transfer of written messages from one language to another, while interpreting refers to the transfer of spoken messages. Sometimes ‘translation’ is used as a generic term covering both practices, but when hiring someone’s services it will be less confusing if you distinguish between these different skills. What can a professional translator do for you? give you access to documents written in a language you don’t understand enable you to communicate your views in another language enhance the image of your company or organization by producing a professional document that is accurate and uses a style and terminology that are consistent and appropriate for your target audience help sell your products or services and ensure that a bad translation does not compromise your reputation or the quality of your products or service save you money by reducing the number of errors in your documents and eliminating delays and the need for expensive patch-up jobs later save you the worry and problems that arise from working with amateurs save you from possible embarrassment by pointing out any problems in cross-cultural communication. If you care about the quality of the end product, it is essential to use a professional translator rather than somebody who simply has a knowledge of two languages. What are the qualities of a good translator? a sophisticated understanding of the foreign language an understanding of the topic being translated an ability to transfer ideas expressed in one language into an equally meaningful form in the other language an above-average capacity to write well in the target language (the language in which the translation is written), using language appropriate for the topic and readership broad general knowledge a sound knowledge of the two cultures involved mental agility sensitivity and attention to detail an understanding of specialized terminology in the field of the translation and a willingness to do further research if necessary training or experience. Translation is more than just a mechanical exercise in looking up words in a dictionary and substituting the grammatical constructions of one language for those of another. Often there is no one-to-one equivalence between words in different languages–for instance, a particular word might have different emotional connotations in the other language. A professional translator will be aware of these potential difficulties and know how to cope with them. What are the characteristics of a good translation? Accuracy, logic and clarity in expression are key characteristics of a good translation, along with an appropriate tone and level of language (e.g., level of formality or technicality). On-time delivery is also essential. Above all, a translation must fulfil the function you require of it. With a translation for use in court, accuracy will be of paramount importance, even if the translation reads somewhat awkwardly, whereas with texts for publication it is vital that the translation reads smoothly. Tell the translator about your needs, what and who the translation is for, and what you expect the final product to look like. This won’t take a minute, but could save you a great deal of money and frustration and will help ensure a good translation. Can translators work in both language directions equally well? It is very rare
  • Clients are sometimes surprised at the high cost of translations.
Norma rubio

Welcome to the OCRT - 0 views

    • Norma rubio
       
      This is a good site to help you as a workplace writer gain an understaning of other religion and to help you construct your document efficiently.
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    Religious Tolerance is good website to get information about all types of religions from all over the world. This is meant to help people achieve tolerance to other individual's believes, yet it discuses the points of views of anyone who visits and leaves comments. It could be a good source to, hopefully, both achieve tolerance and research how other religions see the world. This is a good source for transnational communication and considering your audiences' believes.
April Gallegos

Virtual Communities - M/Cyclopedia of New Media - 2 views

  • There are virtual communities representing everything from intense one-on-one encounters, people interested in gardening, political and environmental lobbyists to political prisoners (Rosenberg, 2004, p.612). The uses are diverse but all virtual communities on some level provide an interactive forum for communication between its users. The level of communication is often directly related to 1: the needs of the users and 2: the specific purpose of the particular virtual community. Most virtual communities have at least one of three main purposes: either to network and collaborate, provide emotional support or to improve quality of life (Joinson, 2003, p.169)
    • April Gallegos
       
      This is exactly what the article was saying about the different reasons people use virtual communities.
  • The term ‘virtual community’ was first cited as commonplace by Howard Rheingold, to define the online cultures of those engaging in computer-mediated communication (CMC), establishing “alternative planetary information networks�? (Rheingold quoted in Flew, 2005, p. 62). This was made possible due to the three interrelated components of CMC: the construction of social networks and social capital, the sharing of knowledge and information, and the facilitation of new forms of democratic participation in society (Flew, 2005, p. 62)
    • April Gallegos
       
      They talked about Rheingold and quoted him in the article as one of the first persons to study virtual communities, an activist entrpreneur
Victoria Burch

D#9, HW#3 -WordLingo New Media - 0 views

  • New media rely on digital technologies, allowing for previously separate media to converge. Media convergence is defined as a phenomenon of new media and this can be explained as a digital media.“
  • he most prominent example of media convergence is the Internet, whereby the technology for video and audio streaming is rapidly evolving. The term convergence is disputed, with critics such as Lev Manovich pointing out that the 'old' medium of film could be seen as the convergence of written text (titles and credits), photography, animation and audio recording
  • New Media has become a significant element in everyday life. It allows people to communicate, bank, shop and entertain. The global network of the Internet, for instance, connects people and information via computers.[3] In this way the Internet, as a communication medium of New Media, overcomes the gap between people from different countries, permitting them to exchange opinions and information. Diverse means for this exist even within the context of the Internet, including chat rooms, Instant Messaging applications, forums, email messaging, online video and audio streaming and downloads, and voice-over-internet telecommunications. New Media is defined not only as a communication tool, but also as a tool for the commercial exchange of goods and services.[
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  • transition to new media has seen a handful of powerful transnational telecommunications corporations who own the majority achieve a level of global influence which was hitherto unimaginable.
  • new media follows the logic of the postindustrial or globalised society whereby 'every citizen can construct her own custom lifestyle and select her idology from a large number of choices. Rather than pushing the same objects to a mass audience, marketing now tries to target each individual separately.'
  • "virtual communities" are being established online and transcend geographical boundaries, eliminating social restrictions. Rheingold (2000) describes these globalised societies as self-defined networks, which resemble what we do in real life. "People in vi
  • rtual communities use words on screens to exchange pleasantries and argue, engage in intellectual discourse, conduct commerce, make plans, brainstorm, gossip, feud, fall in love, create a little high art and a lot of idle talk"
  • New Media has been used extensively by social movements to educate, organize, share cultural products of movements, communicate, coalition build, and more.
  • New media can be defined not only as things you can see such as graphics, moving images, shapes, texts, and such. It is also things that cannot be seen, such as a Wi-Fi connection. Like radio or electricity, no one can see the Wi-Fi waves in the air floating through the air. But the Wi-Fi concept can be considered new media. So new media can be either concept-based, refer to a solid object, or both.
  • Any individual with the appropriate technology can now produce his or her online media and include images, text, and sound about whatever he or she chooses. [27] So the new media with technology convergence shifts the model of mass communication, and radically shapes the ways we interact and communicate with one another.
  • even some forms of digitized and converged media are not in fact interactive at all
  • "the global interactive games industry is large and growing, and is at the forefront of many of the most significant innovations in new media" (Flew 2005: 101). Interactivity is prominent in these online computer games such as World of Warcraft and The Sims. These games, developments of "new media", allow for users to establish relationships and experience a sense of belonging, despite temporal and spatial boundaries. These games can be used as an escape or to act out a desired life. Will Wright, creator of The Sims, "is fascinated by the way gamers have become so attached to his invention-with some even living their lives through it" [30]. New media have created virtual realities that are becoming mere extensions of the world we live in.
  • The advertising industry has capitalized on the proliferation of new media with large agencies running multi-million dollar interactive advertising subsidiaries. In a number of cases advertising agencies have also set up new divisions to study new media. Public relations firms are taking advantage of the opportunities in new media through interactive PR practices.
  • New media can be seen to be a convergence between the history of two separate technologies: media and computing.
  • new media can now be defined as "graphics, moving images, sounds, shapes, spaces, and texts that have become computable; that is, they comprise simply another set of computer data.
  • Flew (2002) stated that as a result of the evolution of new media technologies, globalisation occurs. Globalisation is generally stated as "more than expansion of activities beyond the boundaries of particular nation states".[6] Globalisation shortens the distance between people all over the world by the electronic communication (Carely 1992 in Flew 2002) and Cairncross (1998) expresses this great development as the "death of distance". New media "radically break the connection between physical place and social place, making physical location much less significant for our social relationships" (Croteau and Hoynes 2003: 311).
  • Old media
  • involve analog processes
  • as opposed to new media which sample media as a numerical representation in binary code.
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    This is the best article I've found for this topic. It discusses new media in relation to Manovich's article AND actually interrelates Flew's virtual communities article too! I thought that was pretty cool. It also gives examples of what new media is, and how it is affecting our communities through globalization and social change
Colleen Urban

D#2 HW#7 - 0 views

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    The websites I found really break down planning and the process of writing. This is something that will help me with project 1 because I will be able to follow their process. By following their process, I feel like my work will be more succesful and have better structure.
Santiago Tolosa

D#2 HW#7 - 0 views

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    I believe that this part of the book would be pretty handy and useful. It narrows down some important points and the process of how to do stuff.
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