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Keri-Lee Beasley

YouTube - The Scrollwheel Poker Face - 0 views

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    Funny video about watching people enter things into Google badly!
Keri-Lee Beasley

YouTube - Cheap Flights with subtitles - 0 views

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    Funny youtube vid about flying with budget airlines. Not suitable for children
Keri-Lee Beasley

Teachers - The 10 Stages of Twitter « syded - 0 views

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    Very funny and surprisingly accurate portrayal of a teacher learning how to use Twitter.
Katie Day

Whichbook | A new way of choosing what book to read next - 0 views

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    a cool tool that lets you choose up to 4 factors to help find you the next best book to read, including happy/sad, funny/serious, safe/disturbing, expected/unpredictable, etc.
Katie Day

ikea lamp - YouTube - 1 views

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    Ikea Lamp video. You're the light, you're not the lamp...
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    funny IKEA advertisement about a discarded lamp -- that can be used as an analogy for how people might feel left out technology-wise.... also a lesson in our anthropomorphic tendencies....
Katie Day

60-Second Adventures in Thought - OpenLearn - Open University - 0 views

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    "Can a cat be both alive and dead? Can a computer think? How does a tortoise beat Achilles in a race? Voiced by comedian David Mitchell, these fast-paced animations explain six famous thought experiments, from the ancient Greeks to Albert Einstein, that have changed the way we see the world. Subjects as vast as time travel, infinity, quantum mechanics and artificial intelligence, are squeezed into 60-second clips that will tickle your funny bone and blow your mind."
Keri-Lee Beasley

Visual Culture Online | Off Book | PBS Arts - YouTube - 0 views

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    Awesome vid about Visual Culture online. Not suitable for kids, but very interesting and funny. Finally I understand where Nyan Cat came from.  Watch to the end to see how to make a meme. Very amusing.
Keri-Lee Beasley

YouTube - Dot Dot Dot (Official Video HD) - 1 views

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    Fantastically funny kinetic typography example showing why spelling matters. I love it.
Katie Day

Word Painting - Commas: They save lives! - 2 views

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    funny poster showing the importance of commas....
Keri-Lee Beasley

Social media flowchart. - 3 views

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    Funny yet well-put-together infographic on social media. Where/when to post
Katie Day

YouTube - Univ. of Bergen funny take on plagiarism....Et Plagieringseventyr - 0 views

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    aimed at university students, but still great for secondary  -- acts out Dickens' Christmas Carol as showing what will happen if you plagiarize
Keri-Lee Beasley

Teach Parents Tech - 0 views

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    Clever letter from google on how to teach your parents tech. Lots of useful and practical ideas. Worth checking out.
Katie Day

In Pursuit of the Perfect Brainstorm - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • Jump’s work has elements of management consulting and a bit of design-firm draftsmanship, but its specialty is conceiving new businesses, and what it sells is really the art of innovation. The company is built on the premise that creative thinking is a kind of expertise. Like P.&G. and Mars, you can hire Jump to think on your behalf, for somewhere between $200,000 to $500,000 a month, depending on the complexity and ambiguity of the question you need answered. Or you can ask Jump to teach your corporation how to generate better ideas on its own; Jump imparts that expertise in one- and five-day how-to-brainstorm training sessions that can cost $200,000 for a one-day session for 25 employees.
  • What’s clear is that in recent years, much of corporate America has gone meta — it has started thinking about thinking. And all that thinking has led many executives to the same conclusion: We need help thinking. A few idea entrepreneurs, like Jump, Ideo and Kotter International, are companies with offices and payrolls. But many are solo practitioners, brains for hire who lecture at corporations or consult with them regularly. Each has a catechism and a theory about why good ideas can be so hard to come by and what can be done to remedy the situation.
  • “We’re not only blind to certain things, but we’re blind to the fact that we’re blind to them.”
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  • You often hear this from idea entrepreneurs: Don’t ask us for the answers. Let us help you frame the questions, so you can answer them yourself.
  • At Jump, they prefer to brainstorm with a variation of a technique pioneered in improv theater. A comic offers the first sentence of a story, which lurches into a (hopefully funny) tale, when someone else says, “Yes, and?” then adds another sentence, which leads to another “Yes, and?”— and back and forth it goes. In the context of brainstorming, what was once a contest is transformed into a group exercise in storytelling. It has turned into a collaboration.
  • Why now? Why did innovation-mania take hold in the last decade or so? One school of thought holds that corporations both rise and die faster than ever today, placing a premium on the speedy generation of ideas.
  • Other ideas entrepreneurs offer a “great man” theory, pointing to the enormous influence of Clayton M. Christensen, a Harvard Business School professor and an author of books including “The Innovator’s Dilemma”and “Innovation and the General Manager.”
  • Dev Patnaik of Jump has his own answer to the why-now question. He contends that advances in technology over the past three decades have gradually forced management to reconceive its role in the corporation, shifting its focus from processing data to something more esoteric.
  • “Suddenly it’s about something else. Suddenly it’s about leadership, creativity, vision. Those are the differentiating things, right?” Patnaik draws an analogy to painting, which for centuries was all about rendering reality as accurately as possible, until a new technology — photography — showed up, throwing all those brush-wielding artists into crisis.
  • Most idea entrepreneurs offer what could be described as Osborn deluxe. Govindarajan, the Dartmouth professor, presents companies with what he calls the three-box framework. In Box 1, he puts everything a company now does to manage and improve performance. Box 2 is labeled “selectively forgetting the past,” his way of urging clients to avoid fighting competitors and following trends that are no longer relevant. Box 3 is strategic thinking about the future. “Companies spend all of their time in Box 1, and think they are doing strategy,” he says. “But strategy is really about Box 2 and 3 — the challenge to create the future that will exist in 2020.” He recommends to clients what he calls the 30-30 rule: 30 percent of the people who make strategic decisions should be 30 years old or younger.
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    long article on creativity, innovation, and people who are dedicated to the process of coming up with ideas....
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