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Dennis OConnor

Information Investigator 3 by Carl Heine on Prezi - 0 views

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    What if every student (and educator) was a good online researcher?  I know, you don't have the time to teach information fluency skills.  What if you could get a significant advance is skills with just a 2 -3  hour time commitment?  Here's a great Prezi 'fly by" of the new Information Investigator 3.1 online self paced class.  Watch the presentation carefully to find the link to a free code to take the class for evaluation purposes. 
awqi zar

25 Q & A Sites About Information Technology - 15 views

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    With this new generation of information technology, also known as IT, there can be just as many problems as there are solutions. To help keep you from dialing an 800 number or online chat, we have gathered 25 Q & A sites about information technology. They can help you do everything from send an email to write your very own software.
oneecm

Digital Transformation Partner - ONE ECM - 0 views

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    NE ECM "Your Digital Information Partner". ONE ECM is an international organization providing on premise and in the cloud solutions, skills, and expertise to manage the complete information lifecycle enabling successful digital transformation. We are a dedicated business serving the Enterprise Information Management (EIM) market, Cognitive intelligence (CI) and Robotic Process automation (RPA) to enable Digital Transformation through customer centricity. ONE ECM recognizes the need for a focused and experienced organization specifically focused to deliver domain expertise and successful implementations that will increase efficiency and productivity overcoming the digital disruption. We are fully committed and dedicated to serve its customers by developing long-term partnerships and it is our firm belief that these partnerships will best serve the long term needs of our present and future customers. ONE ECM has a long history of demonstrating high quality customer service and a track record of performance.
Muslim Academy

Iran getting national internet network - 0 views

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    After the series of attacks on Islamists, internet has been made a platform to attack and bounce back. Lately, in Iran, there have been going on the modifications with the internet attacks which are the sole way of influencing the people and attack their religion. In Iran, they are setting up the modifications in a way that whatever the information will be, it will be filtered by the national online network in Iran. Although the concept is not new, they talks are going on over the decade about the settlement of the flow of information which has been influencing the people in Iran, moreover, there are doubts that country has been under many cyber-attacks due to the Nuclear program. As if some forces are trying hard to steal their information. Iran is working on gathering infrastructure and security. Regarding the security measures, Iran communication and other government officials proclaimed key government agencies and military outfits offline and onto the new network by the end of September. But as per the U.S. beliefs, it's nothing more than publicity by Iranians.
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    if you want best news like this. Or follow. Your article in here www.killdo.de.gg
David Wetzel

How to Use Twitter to Stay Informed in Science and Math - 0 views

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    The value of Twitter for helping you and your colleagues stay informed of the latest trends, ideas, resources, and Web 2.0 integration tools has increased tremendously in the past year. A Web 2.0 tool is available for exploiting the every growing information on Twitter to remove barriers and allow you to collaborate with other science and math teachers. This new online tool is paper.li - a source of daily Twitter newsletters in education.
chelfyn Baxter

Management and Virtual Decentralised Networks: The Linux Project - 0 views

  • A mechanistic management system is appropriate to stable conditions. It is characterised by:The Organismic form is appropriate to changing conditions. It is characterised by: Hierarchic structure of control, authority and communicationNetwork structure of control A reinforcement of the hierarchic structure by the location of knowledge of actualities exclusively at the top of the hierarchyOmniscience no longer imputed to the head of the concern; knowledge may be located anywhere in the network; the location becoming the centre of authority Vertical interaction between the members of the concern, ie. between superior and subordinateLateral rather than vertical direction of communication through the organisation  A content of communication which consists of information and advice rather than instructions and decisions
    • chelfyn Baxter
       
      This is very similar to many Web 1.0/2.0 analogies
  • Structurehierarchicalnetworked Scopeinternal/closedexternal/open Resource focuscapitalhuman, information Statestabledynamic, changing Directionmanagement commandsself-management Basis of actioncontrolempowerment to act Basis for compensationposition in hierarchycompetency level
  • However, "the Linux movement did not and still does not have a formal hierarchy whereby important tasks can be handled out ... a kind of self-selection takes place instead: anyone who cares enough about a particular program is welcomed to try" [54]. But if his work is not good enough, another hacker will immediately fill the gap. In this way, this 'self-selection' ensures that the work done is of superb quality. Moreover this "decentralisation leads to more efficient allocation of resources (programmers' time and work) because each developer is free to work on any particular program of his choice as his skills, experience and interest best dictate" (Kuwabara, 2000). In contrast, "under centralised mode of software development, people are assigned to tasks out of economic considerations and might end up spending time on a feature that the marketing department has decided is vital to their ad campaign, but that no actual users care about" [55].
  • ...4 more annotations...
  • Industrial AgeInformation Age Focus on measurable outcomesFocus on strategic issues using participation and empowerment Individual accountabilityTeam accountability Clearly differentiated-segmented organisational roles, positions and responsibilitiesMatrix arrangement - flexible positions and responsibilities Hierarchical, linear information flowsMultiple interface, 'boundaryless' information networking Initiatives for improvement emanate from a management eliteInitiatives for improvement emanate from all directions
  • There is only one layer between the community of Linux developers and Linus: the "trusted lieutenants". They are a dozen hackers that have done considerably extended work on a particular part of the kernel to gain Linus' trust. The "trusted lieutenants" are responsible to maintain a part of the Linux Kernel and lots of developers sent their patches (their code) directly to them, instead of Linus. Of course, apart from Linus that has encouraged this to happen, this informal mechanism represents a natural selection by the community since the "trusted lieutenants" are recognised [by the community] as being not owners but simple experts in particular areas [57] and thus, their 'authority' can always be openly challenged. This does not mean that Linus has more influence than they have. Recently, "Alan Cox (one of the "trusted" ones) disagreed with Linus over some obscure technical issue and it looks like the community really does get to judge by backing Alan and making Linus to acknowledge that he made a bad choice" [58].
  • In 1991, Linus Torvalds made a free Unix-like kernel (a core part of the operating system) available on the Internet and invited all hackers interested to participate. Within the next two months, the first version 1.0 of Linux was released. From that point, tens of thousands of developers, dispersed globally and communicating via the Internet, contributed code, so that early in 1993, Linux had grown to be a stable, reliable and very powerful operating system. The Linux kernel is 'copylefted' software, patented under the GNU GPL, and thus, nobody actually owns it. But more significantly, Linux is sheltered by the Open Source (hacker) community. From its very birth, Linux as a project has mobilised an incredible number of developers offering enhancements, modifications/improvements and bug fixes without any financial incentive. Despite the fact that an operating system is supposed to be developed only by a closely-knit team to avoid rising complexity and communication costs of coordination (Brook's Law), Linux is being developed in a massive decentralised mode under no central planning, an amazing feat given that it has not evolved into chaos. Innovation release early and often: Linus put into practice an innovative and paradox model of developing software. Frequent releases and updates (several times in a week) are typical throughout the entire development period of Linux. In this way, Linus kept the community constantly stimulated by the rapid growth of the project and provided an extraordinary effective mechanism of psychologically rewarding his co-developers for their contributions that were implemented in the last version. On top of this, in every released version, there is a file attached which lists all those who have contributed (code). Credit attribution if neglected, is a cardinal sin that will breed bitterness within the community and discourage developers from further contributing to the project. According to conventional software-building wisdom, early versions are by definition buggy and you do not want to wear out the patience of your users. But as far as the Linux development stage is concerned, developers are the users themselves and this is where most innovation is created (Figure 8). "The greatest innovation of Linux is that treating your users as co-developers is your least-hassle route to rapid code improvement and effective debugging" (Raymond, 1998a).
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    It's a great article
Janos Haits

DIASPORA* - 17 views

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    Diaspora is the social network that puts you in control of your information. You decide what you'd like to share, and with whom. You retain full ownership of all your information, including friend lists, messages, photos, and profile details. "Share what you want, with who you want." Full Control: built-in If you take twenty photos at a party, you can show the three least-incriminating to your coworkers, while posting the whole set to your friends. Your coworkers can't find out that they're seeing the expurgated version. Future employers can't either. You can post updates to everyone, to just your close friends, to just your family, or to any other subset of your friends. It's easy to make these groups, called "aspects," and it's straightforward to share different things with different aspects. Diaspora doesn't expose your information to advertisers, or to games you play, or to other websites you visit. It's inherently private - you tell Diaspora who gets to see those pictures of your kids, and only those people will see them. Period. Choose a home, make an account, and invite your friends to join you! Take back your network.
LeapFish Living the Web

Leapfish Brings Us the Living Web « Black Web 2.0 - 0 views

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    LeapFish is an interesting search portal that creates it's results by pulling together information from the major search engines. It also includes results from the social web and embeds all types of media directly on the results page. As you type your search, the results are pulled together using their "proprietary hyper-threading technology" in conjunction with the API's of each service. Basically, LeapFish is a meta search engine. We've created the first multi-dimensional information aggregator and search portal in the world. Our goal is to gather, organize and render the most relevant information from the internet's most valuable destinations for each users search, in one single simple shot.
John Onwuegbu

Google+ Local: Discover Local Information - 14 views

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    The local information tool is integrated across Google products: Search, Maps, and Mobile. It's integrated into Google+ as a new tab, and you can take it with you on the go with Google Maps for mobile on Android, and soon on iOS platform.
Janos Haits

Zukmo.com/ - 13 views

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    MANAGE YOUR INFORMATION Use Zukmo to save your information securely to the cloud, share it easily with your contacts, sync it instantly with your devices and access it anytime from anywhere.
Janos Haits

MyPermissions.com/ - 20 views

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    Protect Your Personal Information - Do You Know How Many Apps Access Your Personal Information? Automatically scan your apps permissions Clean your apps permissions in one click Get alerts when apps gain access to your private info
Stephanie Garcia

CrisisWire, One Site with Multiple Sources Giving You Real-Time Crisis Information | St... - 0 views

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    CrisisWire aggregates various types and formats of crisis related information all in one place.
Janos Haits

qodify.com - The new way to manage contact information! - 11 views

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    Share your contact information and more as easy as never before. You can keep them always up to date - just edit and save. Quick connect. Make all online-profiles accessible in one place. No need to search by hand! Just click and connect. Just add you contact information online, put your personal qodi wherever you want and let everybody scan and save it.
Dave Crusoe

The Accomplished Librarian: A Web Information Organizing Tool - 1 views

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    The Accomplished Librarian is a web-information organizing tool for educators; used to embed a large, organized quantity of information into lessons, school websites and education-related, web-based resources.
ruhul122

Info on Betting Sites Available Online - 1 views

I assume by now we all recognize that anything that can be done offline is currently readily available to do on-line as well, and also sporting activities wagering is no different! As a matter of f...

started by ruhul122 on 19 Nov 19 no follow-up yet
Janos Haits

Peer Belt Inc - 18 views

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    Peer Belt is an application, built on the idea that our information of interest can be better organized, easier to find, go back to, and fun reviewing. We do this by processing the passive user activity in the browser. Peer Belt's goal is to help you stay on top of the ever-increasing pile of information you read and process online.
Richard Kendall

Be Better at Twitter: The Definitive, Data-Driven Guide - Megan Garber - Technology - T... - 0 views

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    * Old news is no news: Twitter emphasizes real-time information, so information rapidly gets stale. Followers quickly get bored of even relatively fresh links seen multiple times. * Contribute to the story: To keep people interested, add an opinion, a pertinent fact or otherwise add to the conversation before hitting "send" on a retweet. * Keep it short: Twitter limits tweets to 140 characters, but followers still appreciate conciseness. Using as few characters as possible also leaves room for longer, more satisfying comments on retweets. * Limit Twitter-specific syntax: Overuse of #hashtags, @mentions and abbreviations makes tweets hard to read. But some syntax is helpful; if posing a question, adding a hashtag helps everyone follow along. * Keep it to yourself: The clichéd "sandwich" tweets about pedestrian, personal details were largely disliked. Reviewers reserved a special hatred for Foursquare location check-ins. * Provide context: Tweets that are too short leave readers unable to understand their meaning. Simply linking to a blog or photo, without giving readers a reason to click on it, was described as "lame." * Don't whine: Negative sentiments and complaints were disliked. * Be a tease: News or professional organizations that want readers to click on their links need to hook the reader, not give away all of the news in the tweet itself.
Janos Haits

Stipple - Your information and images together again. - 20 views

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    Your images and information, together again.
Janos Haits

CrowdMap.com/ - 27 views

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    Crowdmap allows you to... Collect information from cell phones, news and the web. Aggregate that information into a single platform. Visualize it on a map and timeline.
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