Chad Moutray on Twitter: “Weak domestic demand was the top primary business challenge for manufacturers in the second quarter (83.1%), supplanting the inability to attract and retain talent (41%), which had been the top concern for 10 consecutive quarters. https://t.co/hgfcDlxoa3” / Twitter. (n.d.). Twitter. Retrieved June 7, 2020, from https://twitter.com/chadmoutray/status/1265976648454848512
- Jun 2020
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twitter.com twitter.com
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spreadprivacy.com spreadprivacy.com
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if you search for something on Google, you may start seeing ads for it everywhere.
In comparison to DuckDuckGo, Google presents you ads everywhere, not just in the search results
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When you search on DuckDuckGo, we can show you an ad based on the keywords you type in. That’s it. And it works.
Simple model how DuckDuckGo makes its business
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Almost all of the money search engines make (including Google) is based on the keywords you type in, without knowing anything about you, including your search history or the seemingly endless amounts of additional data points they have collected about registered and non-registered users alike. In fact, search advertisers buy search ads by bidding on keywords, not people. It makes intuitive sense, too. If you search for ‘car’, you are more likely to respond to a car ad than something you searched for last week.
Search engines do most of the business on keywords
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signal.org signal.org
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Some large tech behemoths could hypothetically shoulder the enormous financial burden of handling hundreds of new lawsuits if they suddenly became responsible for the random things their users say, but it would not be possible for a small nonprofit like Signal to continue to operate within the United States. Tech companies and organizations may be forced to relocate, and new startups may choose to begin in other countries instead.
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lifehacker.com lifehacker.com
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Facebook already harvests some data from WhatsApp. Without Koum at the helm, it’s possible that could increase—a move that wouldn’t be out of character for the social network, considering that the company’s entire business model hinges on targeted advertising around personal data.
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Graham, R. (2020, May 18). My Town Just Lost Its Only Coffee Shop. It’s Shattering to the Community. Slate Magazine. https://slate.com/human-interest/2020/05/my-town-just-lost-its-only-coffee-shop-schoodacs-warner-new-hampshire.html
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www.pasbdc.org www.pasbdc.org
- May 2020
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jamanetwork.com jamanetwork.com
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Cutler, D. M., Nikpay, S., & Huckman, R. S. (2020). The Business of Medicine in the Era of COVID-19. JAMA. https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.2020.7242
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newsroom.ibm.com newsroom.ibm.com
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IBM. (2020 April 02). IBM offers "Watson Assistant for Citizens" to provide responses to COVID-19 questions. newsroom.IBM.com. https://newsroom.ibm.com/2020-04-02-IBM-Offers-Watson-Assistant-for-Citizens-to-Provide-Responses-to-COVID-19-Questions
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www.theguardian.com www.theguardian.com
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Fraser, N., Neiman, S., Mouffe, C., Sassen, S., Müller, J.-W., Rodrik, D., Piketty, T., Zucman, G., Chang, H.-J., & others, and many. (2020, May 15). Humans are not resources. Coronavirus shows why we must democratise work | Thomas Piketty and others. The Guardian. https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2020/may/15/humans-resources-coronavirus-democratise-work-health-lives-market
Tags
- human rights
- capitalism
- dignity
- health
- democratization
- lang:en
- opinion
- work
- is:webpage
- business
- employee
- human resource
- COVID-19
- economy
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www.sfchronicle.com www.sfchronicle.com
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San Francisco plans to offer sidewalks, streets, public spaces for business activity. (2020, May 27). SFChronicle.Com. https://www.sfchronicle.com/business/article/San-Francisco-plans-to-offer-sidewalks-streets-15295445.php
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www.irs.gov www.irs.gov
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Credit for employer-provided childcare facilities and services (Form 8882).This credit applies to the quali-fied expenses you paid for employee childcare and quali-fied expenses you paid for childcare resource and referral services. For more information, see Form 8882.
Business Credits
What are Business Credits?
You can take business credits if you pay for certain business expenses. Business credits include:
- Investment credit
- Low-income housing credit
- Passive activity credits
- Disabled access credit
- Credit for employer pension plan start-up costs
- Credit for employer-provided child-care facilities and services
- Indian employment credit
- Credit for increasing research activities
- Orphan drug credit
- New markets credit
- Renewable electricity production credit
- Credit for alcohol used as fuel
- Geothermal energy credit
- Solar energy credit
- Microturbine energy credit
- Advanced coal project ended after August 8, 2005
- Biofuels credit
- Low sulfur diesel fuel production credit
- Nonconventional source fuel credit
- Alternative fuel vehicle refueling property credit
- Distilled spirits credit
- Qualified railroad track maintenance credit
- Mine rescue team training credit
- General credits from an electing large partnership
- General Business Credit carryover
More Information
- IRS Publication 334 - Tax Guide for Small Business Publication 334 is not included in this TurboTax product, you may request a copy.
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www.thelancet.com www.thelancet.com
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Lee, K., Worsnop, C. Z., Grépin, K. A., & Kamradt-Scott, A. (2020). Global coordination on cross-border travel and trade measures crucial to COVID-19 response. The Lancet, 395(10237), 1593–1595. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(20)31032-1
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www.theguardian.com www.theguardian.com
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Savage, M. (2020, May 10). A return to work is on the cards. What are the fears and legal pitfalls? The Guardian | The Observer. https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/may/09/coronavirus-return-to-work-employment-law-logistical-nightmare
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themargins.substack.com themargins.substack.com
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Third-party delivery platforms, as they’ve been built, just seem like the wrong model, but instead of testing, failing, and evolving, they’ve been subsidized into market dominance.
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numinous.productions numinous.productions
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Here’s three classes of tools for thought which do:
- algorithm
- network effects
- distribution and manufacturing
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paper.li paper.li
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Jameson, J. #eLeadership. Paper.li. https://paper.li/jjameson/1299791439#/
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about.gitlab.com about.gitlab.com
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We believe everyone deserves to report to exactly one person that knows and understands what you do day to day. The benefit of having a technically competent manager is easily the largest positive influence on a typical worker’s level of job satisfaction. We have a simple functional hierarchy, everyone has one manager that is experienced in their subject matter.
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www.oliverwyman.com www.oliverwyman.com
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Wyman, O. (2020 May 05). Empowering Displaced Teams in the Time of COVID. https://www.oliverwyman.com/our-expertise/insights/2020/may/humanitarian-organizations-teach-us-to-empower-during-coronavirus.html
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science-sciencemag-org.ezproxy.redlands.edu science-sciencemag-org.ezproxy.redlands.edu
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Aspesi, C., & Brand, A. (2020). In pursuit of open science, open access is not enough. Science, 368(6491), 574–577. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aba3763
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en.wikipedia.org en.wikipedia.org
- Apr 2020
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psyarxiv.com psyarxiv.com
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Sibley, C. G., Greaves, L., Satherley, N., Wilson, M., Lee, C., Milojev, P., … Barlow, F. (2020, April 20). Short-term effects of the COVID-19 pandemic and a nationwide lockdown on institutional trust, attitudes to government, health and wellbeing. https://doi.org/10.31234/osf.io/cx6qa
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podcastnotes.org podcastnotes.org
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People pay for premium content for the content itself and connection to the creator, not for studio lighting and animations
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Lades, L., Laffan, K., Daly, M., & Delaney, L. (2020, April 22). Daily emotional well-being during the COVID-19 pandemic. https://doi.org/10.31234/osf.io/pg6bw
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arxiv.org arxiv.org
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Koren, M., & Petö, R. (2020, March 20). Business disruptions from social distancing. Cornel University. arXiv:2003.13983.
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www.nature.com www.nature.com
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McKee, M., Stuckler, D. If the world fails to protect the economy, COVID-19 will damage health not just now but also in the future. Nat Med (2020). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41591-020-0863-y
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www.thelancet.com www.thelancet.com
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Kentikelenis, A., Gabor, D., Ortiz, I., Stubbs, T., McKee, M., & Stuckler, D. (2020). Softening the blow of the pandemic: Will the International Monetary Fund and World Bank make things worse? The Lancet Global Health, S2214109X20301352. https://doi.org/10.1016/S2214-109X(20)30135-2
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www.gov.uk www.gov.uk
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UK Government. (2020 April 03). £20 million for ambitious technologies to build UK resilience following coronavirus outbreak. Gov.uk. https://www.gov.uk/government/news/20-million-for-ambitious-technologies-to-build-uk-resilience-following-coronavirus-outbreak
Tags
- technology
- funding
- protection
- UK
- press release
- business
- resilience
- economy
- is:news
- innovation
- lang:en
- development
- research
- COVID-19
- future
- government
Annotators
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www.centerforhealthsecurity.org www.centerforhealthsecurity.org
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Rivers, C., Martin, E., Gottlieb, S., Watson, C., Schoch-Spana, M., Mullen, L., Sell, T.K., Warmbrod, K.L., Hosangadi, D., Kobokovich, A., Potter, C., Cicero, A., Inglesby, T. (2020 April 17). Public health principles for a phased reopening during COVID-19: Guidance for governors. Johns Hopkins. https://www.centerforhealthsecurity.org/our-work/publications/public-health-principles-for-a-phased-reopening-during-covid-19-guidance-for-governors
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www.technologyreview.com www.technologyreview.com
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Rotman, D. (2020 April 8). Stop covid or save the economy? We can do both. MIT Technology Review. https://www.technologyreview.com/2020/04/08/998785/stop-covid-or-save-the-economy-we-can-do-both/
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www.imperial.ac.uk www.imperial.ac.uk
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The economic impact of coronavirus: Analysis from Imperial experts | Imperial News | Imperial College London. (n.d.). Imperial News. Retrieved April 8, 2020, from https://www.imperial.ac.uk/news/196514/the-economic-impact-coronavirus-analysis-from/
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www.cambridge.org www.cambridge.org
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Torsello, M., & Winkler, M. M. (undefined/ed). Coronavirus-infected international business transactions: A preliminary diagnosis. European Journal of Risk Regulation, 1–8. https://doi.org/10.1017/err.2020.30
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sciencebusiness.net sciencebusiness.net
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Science|Business Database: Coronavirus Funding Opportunities. (n.d.). Science|Business. Retrieved April 20, 2020, from https://sciencebusiness.net/sciencebusiness-database-coronavirus-funding-opportunities
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www.forbes.com www.forbes.com
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wouldn't let me send a two-line memo to another department without showing it to him before I sent it. John's leadership style was oppressive. He micr0-managed everything. I learned from the hellish experience of working for him that unless somebody wants another set of eyes on their correspondence, it's insulting and a waste of time to micro-manage your team members' email messages.
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As a matter of fact, you do pay me to think
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data.census.gov data.census.gov
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marker.medium.com marker.medium.com
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When Casper filed its S-1 in January, analysts, investors, and business nerds descended on the document like vultures. Not only was it a precarious moment to take a startup public, it was the first time anyone could actually access the raw numbers under the hood of a DTC. “The economics work better if Casper sent you a mattress for free, stuffed with $300,” jabbed NYU Stern marketing professor and tech doomsayer Scott Galloway. “This appears to be Casper’s business,” tweeted number-crunching Atlantic columnist Derek Thompson. “Buy mattress at $400. Sell at $1,000. Refund/return 20% of them. Keep $400, on avg. Then spend $290 of that on ads/marketing and $270 on admin (finance, HR, IT). Lose $160. Repeat.”
Summary of Casper's business model
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- Mar 2020
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matomo.org matomo.org
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Did you know accurate data reporting is often capped? Meaning once your website traffic reaches a certain limit, the data then becomes a guess rather than factual.This is where tools like Google Analytics becomes extremely limited and cashes in with their GA360 Premium suite. At Matomo, we believe all data should be reported 100% accurately, or else what’s the point?
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threadreaderapp.com threadreaderapp.com
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Another nice SQL script paired with CRON jobs was the one that reminded people of carts that was left for more than 48 hours. Select from cart where state is not empty and last date is more than or equal to 48hrs.... Set this as a CRON that fires at 2AM everyday, period with less activity and traffic. People wake up to emails reminding them about their abandoned carts. Then sit watch magic happens. No AI/ML needed here. Just good 'ol SQL + Bash.
Another example of using SQL + CRON job + Bash to remind customers of cart that was left (again no ML needed here)
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I will write a query like select from order table where last shop date is 3 or greater months. When we get this information, we will send a nice "we miss you, come back and here's X Naira voucher" email. The conversation rate for this one was always greater than 50%.
Sometimes SQL is much more than enough (you don't need ML)
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techcrunch.com techcrunch.com
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So it’s not surprising that Facebook is so coy about explaining why a certain user on its platform is seeing a specific advert. Because if the huge surveillance operation underpinning the algorithmic decision to serve a particular ad was made clear, the person seeing it might feel manipulated. And then they would probably be less inclined to look favorably upon the brand they were being urged to buy. Or the political opinion they were being pushed to form. And Facebook’s ad tech business stands to suffer.
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news.humanpresence.io news.humanpresence.io
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Rojas-Lozano claimed that the second part of Google’s two-part CAPTCHA feature, which requires users to transcribe and type into a box a distorted image of words, letters or numbers before entering its site, is also used to transcribe words that a computer cannot read to assist with Google’s book digitization service. By not disclosing that, she argued, Google was getting free labor from its users.
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www.oracle.com www.oracle.com
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A 1% sample of AddThis Data (“Sample Dataset”) is retained for a maximum of 24 months for business continuity purposes.
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www.forbes.com www.forbes.com
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The truth is that building an innovative organization from top-down is a dynamic process. It often involves people at all levels of the company. But, the fundamental narrative across the board with innovative organizations is the culture. The company culture has to include employees who feel connected to the organization and want to contribute value.
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ma.tt ma.tt
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First, they chose to find a new home for Tumblr instead of shutting it down. Second, they considered not just how much cash they would get on day one, but also — and especially — what would happen to the team afterward, and how the product and the team would be invested in going forward. Third, they thought about the sort of steward of the community the new owner would be. They didn’t have to do any of that, and I commend them for making all three points a priority.
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- Feb 2020
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tjcx.me tjcx.me
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no business book can predict what sorts of situations (businesses, market conditions, etc.) the reader will encounter, so instead it offers general, obvious-sounding rules.
Business books
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- Jan 2020
- Dec 2019
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И если к вам все же попала звезда (настоящая, а не фейковая), трудностей будет много. Во-первых, одна звезда не будет работать за всю команду, вкалывать придется по-прежнему. Во-вторых, звездному сотруднику нужны полномочия и свобода принятия решений, а это понравится не всем. В-третьих, сильному работнику нужно сильное руководство. А есть еще и в-черветрых, и в-пятых. Так что звезда — это, конечно, хорошо, но это точно не волшебная палочка для бренда.
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Многие таланты работают настолько ярко, что становятся настоящими звездами. Когда работодатель хочет нанять звездного сотрудника, то чаще всего ищет золотую таблетку, которая поможет от всего и сразу.
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Экспертов можно нанять — но это рискованный процесс. Вдруг окажется, что методы работы и ценности такого стороннего эксперта не совпадают с методами и ценностями компании. Будет больно и безрезультатно. Экспертов можно мотивировать. Ведь те, кто работает в компании, эксперты в своем деле (не зря же их наняли), другой вопрос, как их привлечь к формированию HR-бренда. Система мотивации у каждого своя, но не надо бояться использовать бонусы, привилегии, рейтинги и награды.
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Хороший контент нельзя создать без экспертов
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Хорошо, когда компанию представляют эксперты. Но вот найти их — одна из самых сложных задач.
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Many so-called strategies are in fact goals. “We want to be the number one or number two in all the markets in which we operate” is one of those. It does not tell you what you are going to do; all it does is tell you what you hope the outcome will be. But you’ll still need a strategy to achieve it.
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- Nov 2019
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www.engadget.com www.engadget.com
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In order for Google to be Google, it has to do evil. This is true for every major technology company. Apple, Facebook, Amazon, Tesla, Microsoft, Sony, Twitter, Samsung, Nintendo, Dell, HP, Toshiba -- every one of these organizations can't compete in the market without engaging in unethical, inhumane and invasive practices. It's a sliding scale: The larger the company, the more integrated it is in our everyday lives, the more evil it can be.
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Take Facebook, for example. CEO Mark Zuckerberg will stand onstage at F8 and wax poetic about the beauty of connecting billions of people across the globe, while at the same time patenting technologies to determine users' social classes and enable discrimination in the lending process, and allowing housing advertisers to exclude racial and ethnic groups or families with women and children from their listings.
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adnauseam.io adnauseam.io
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We can certainly understand why Google would prefer users not to install AdNauseam, as it directly opposes their core business model, but the Web Store’s Terms of Service do not (at least thus far) require extensions to endorse Google’s business model. Moreover, this is not the justification cited for the software’s removal.
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www.bleepingcomputer.com www.bleepingcomputer.com
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We can certainly understand why Google would prefer users not to install AdNauseam, as it directly opposes their core business model, but the Web Store’s Terms of Service do not (at least thus far) require extensions to endorse Google’s business model.
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- Oct 2019
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podcastnotes.org podcastnotes.org
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The top reasons why a product fails:It’s too complicated – simplicity is kingIt doesn’t spread by word-of-mouthIt doesn’t take advantage of the power of iterationThe founder is too fearful of creating something novelIt’s not launched into a community
Think about it before developing a commercial product
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- Sep 2019
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skyclerk.com skyclerk.com
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One of the earliest interactions with a customer is to signal a lack of trust. The bartender is suggesting the customer will leave without paying.
Show your trust to the customer
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I think many business owners do not consider the subconscious effects on how they manage their business
Don't forget about the subconscious effects
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In another example, there is a plaza near where I work that has a number of eating options but my preferred is a sandwich place at the far end of the building. When I pull in I often look for parking in front, if there is not I might need to go to the opposite end of the plaza to find parking. While walking to the sandwich shop I pass by 3 other places to eat. I almost never make it to the sandwich shop. I always convince myself to try something different before getting to the front door of my go-to lunch spot
That's what would happen if your customers would need to take a long walk from the other end of the parking lot
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the experience his customers have while visiting him was very important to him and it started when they pulled into the parking lot. In his view, they should have front row parking
Why to park far away from your own business office
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podcastnotes.org podcastnotes.org
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3 lessons in branding
3 lessons in branding:
- “At the end of the day, brands are about trust”
All great brands are authentic, credible, and aspirational
If you check all three of these boxes, there’s no reason why you can’t enter a new product vertical
To put your brand on steroids, attach yourself to a celebrity or influencer
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- Aug 2019
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www.sensorica.co www.sensorica.co
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ictnews.vn ictnews.vn
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CEO tiki.vn: “Hai cuốn sách thay đổi đời tôi”
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- Jul 2019
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pubs.opengroup.org pubs.opengroup.org
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8.3.2 Business Function A business function is a collection of business behavior based on a chosen set of criteria (typically required business resources and/or competencies), closely aligned to an organization, but not necessarily explicitly governed by the organization. Just like a business process, a business function also describes internal behavior performed by a business role. However, while a business process groups behavior based on a sequence or flow of activities that is needed to realize a product or service, a business function typically groups behavior based on required business resources, skills, competencies, knowledge, etc. There is a potential many-to-many relation between business processes and business functions. Complex processes in general involve activities that offer various functions. In this sense a business process forms a string of business functions. In general, a business function delivers added value from a business point of view. Organizational units or applications may coincide with business functions due to their specific grouping of business activities. A business function may be triggered by, or trigger, any other business behavior element (business event, business process, business function, or business interaction). A business function may access business objects. A business function may realize one or more business services and may be served by business, application, or technology services. A business role may be assigned to a business function. The name of a business function should clearly indicate a well-defined behavior. Examples are customer management, claims administration, member services, recycling, or payment processing. Figure 57: Business Function Notation
Definition
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- May 2019
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www.derrickreimer.com www.derrickreimer.com
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I published the Level manifesto with great fanfare: The War on Developer Productivity (And How I Intend to Win It).
Quite a fascinating and interesting way to kick-off such endeavor. This can act as a major source of encouragement for giving one's 100% to the purpose. Of course, avoiding the risks of over-committing without periodic self-examination.
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- Apr 2019
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In questo articolo Bradley Kuhn di SFC cerca di stabilire cosa sia meglio intendere per "sostenibile" nelle recenti discussioni sulla sostenibilità del FLOSS.
La necessità sentita di assicurarsi che i progetti FLOSS abbiano le risorse per progredire, retribuendo chi ci lavora, è corretta. Tuttavia allegare a questa intenzione anche il modello di crescita rapida tipico del capitale di ventura male si adatta ad un concetto di sostenibilità che possa essere trasversale a tutto il mondo del software libero.
Viene quindi proposto essenzialmente un focus su livelli di retribuzione che consentano uno stile di vita adeguato ai membri del progetto, e la diffusione della consapevolezza che la ricerca di margini di profitto eccessivi per singoli individui o per l'entità che gestisce il progetto si scontrano con la sostenibilità per il progetto stesso.
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- Mar 2019
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educationaltechnology.net educationaltechnology.net
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This is one of many discussions of Kirkpatrick's four levels of evaluation. More of the page is taken up with decoration and graphics than needs to be the case but this page is included in this list because it offers a printable guide and because the hierarchy of the four levels is clearly shown. The text itself is printed in black on a white background and it is presented as a bulleted list (the bullets are not organized as well as they could be). Nonetheless it is a usable presentation of this model. rating 3/5
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nautil.us nautil.us
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I really like this picture here. Perhaps for a business card? http://static.nautil.us/5236_78289d91e9c4adcf4e97d6b3d4df6ae0.jpg
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McCulloch was a confident, gray-eyed, wild-bearded, chain-smoking philosopher-poet who lived on whiskey and ice cream and never went to bed before 4 a.m.
Now that is a business card title!
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- Feb 2019
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stratechery.com stratechery.com
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What happened is that Spotify dragged the record labels into a completely new business model that relied on Internet assumptions, instead of fighting them: if duplicating and distributing digital media is free (on a marginal basis), don’t try to make it scarce, but instead make it abundant and charge for the convenience of accessing just about all of it.
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- Jan 2019
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www.jinse.com www.jinse.com
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以太坊社区及以太坊主要开发团队对以太坊的技术纯净性的追求较高,我们无法用工程化融合的方案来看待以太坊的进度,完美的世界计算机和一个全面的区块链工程化应用解决方案在本质上会有性能的个性差异。但相对于看好以太坊的创业者来说,熊市之中,性能较弱的尴尬涉及到了团队的生存问题,以太坊的信仰和共识可能被环境所打败,开发团队转移其他战场。
<big>评:</big><br/><br/>
在求变的过程中,总会有两派行动纲领互为对斥的声音站出来相互抨击。例如当人们谈论「本土」和「外域」时,本土原教旨主义者和全球化开放主义者之间的吵闹声总是尖锐刺耳,但恰恰是在这种极端到偏颇的较量之中产生了张力,推动现世朝着互不偏倚的方向演进,避免了演化成所谓的「分叉」(fork)。 <br/><br/> 有趣的是,即使是处在矛盾两端的反义词也可以互相转化,就像「草食男」也可以被视作「性感」一样,清晰的定义为「模糊另面」赋予了合理性。既然如此,那么像商业应用这么中庸且自制的容器也就更没有理由冒天下之大不韪去自立门户。创业者们不应该用工程化融合的方案看待技术,他们应该用这种视角去审视技术背后的人。
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- Nov 2018
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The website Association for Talent Development is a good tool for profession training. This is an adult learning arena and the information is relevant to training and coaching using a learner centered approach.
9/10
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- Oct 2018
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From reading this I'm left with the impression that the housing boom was just a housing boom, not a general long-term projects boom, as you would expect from the ABCT.
Why was housiing and just housing the epicenter of the boom and bust? Or wasn't it?
If it was just housing, couldn't we explain it (or at least conceive of a different hypothetical scenario) without interest rates even changing? Imagine that the government prints money and uses it to pay companies to build houses -- or creates a special lending program just for houses, but don't messes up with the general interest rate -, wouldn't that have basically the same effect?
If so, perhaps we should start considering a new ABCT version that just talks about new money being created and going to specific sectors, instead of the whole interest/intertemporal adjustments/hayekian triangles talk. Why is this wrong?
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It's not that people switched from buying hot dogs to hamburgers; instead they switched from buying "present consumption" to buying "future consumption."
What if we said that people switched from buying hot dogs to bonds? Not anything "future", just a bond, today.
If they switched to hamburgers, that would increase investment in the hamburger industry in expense of the hot dog industry.
In the same way, if they switch to bonds, that will increase the investment in the "bonds industry", which is basically lending money.
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Because the capital structure of the economy becomes internally inconsistent, eventually some entrepreneurs must abandon their projects because there are insufficient capital goods to carry them all to completion.
This argument have confused me my entire life in all explanations of the Austrian Business Cycle Theory. It is the core of the most famous of all, that Mises story about the master builder who doesn't have enough material to finish the house he's building.
It is misleading and ultimately wrong because economic goods (in the Menger definition) are always insufficient. In simple terms, given the market price, every good can be obtained.
What happens after the economy realizes it was in a malinvestment boom, prices of capital goods adjust in a way that they can become too expensive for some projects to be completed profitably.
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- Aug 2018
- May 2018
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hypothes.is hypothes.is
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hi there check on the SAS Training and Tutorial with better analysis On the Data and forecasting methods for better implication on Business analytics
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hi there get the full insights on MSBI tools training and tutorial with the Real time Examples and application on the Running Projects as well https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OzmdY0zCw4g
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hi there Check this MSBI Tools training and tutorial insights with the real time Examples and projects analysis on the MSBI
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hi there learn MSBI in 20 min with handwritten explanation on each and every topics on the Course with real time examples
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Get the proper Explanation on the ETL testing Tools training and Tutorial Course with better Real time exercises and understanding of Testing Processes on different stages from Extraction to Loading of data in client location
so check this link for better learning:- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-vNgcOsHbIU
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Get the best Explanation on Talend Training and Tutorial Course with Real time Experience and Exercises with Real time projects for better Hands on from the scratch to advance level
so check this link and learn :- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lhTPrpBvakw
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- msbi
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Annotators
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www.paydaywichita.com www.paydaywichita.com
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Are you counting the days until payday? Emergency auto repairs, unexpected bills, and other unplanned expenses can wreak havoc on your finances. There is no need to live with financial stress - a payday loan is an excellent solution for short-term cash flow problems. instant online Payday loans Wichita KS will provide you with cash now, so you can set your worries aside.
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URL
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- Apr 2018
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www.paydayoh.com www.paydayoh.com
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Payday loans Dayton Ohio are helpful in getting instant cash to fulfill your emergency
Getting Instant Payday Loans becomes very easy now. Just fill the application and submit your information. Get instant approval Payday Loans Ohio within 1 hour after applying.
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- Mar 2018
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Website listing productivity MOOC's, geared towards freeing up more time in people's lives.
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- Jan 2018
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www.paydayoh.com www.paydayoh.com
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Bad Credit Accepted Payday Loans Toledo Ohio Online
Online Payday loans in Toledo Ohio is fast money and most companies offer instant cash up to $1500 in borrowers account. You don’t have to fill out various forms, show salary slips and other formalities.
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- Nov 2017
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www.educause.edu www.educause.edu
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the experimentation and possibility of the MOOC movement had become co-opted and rebranded by venture capitalists as a fully formed, disruptive solution to the broken model of higher education.11
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Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs), which have become the poster child of innovation in higher education over the last two to three years
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social engagement, public knowledge, and the mission of promoting enlightenment and critical inquiry in society
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recent promise of Web 2.0
A bit surprised by this “recent”. By that time, much of what has been lumped under the “Web 2.0” umbrella had already shifted a few times. In fact, the “Web 3.0” hype cycle was probably in the “Trough of Disillusionment” if not the Gartner-called “Slope of Enlightenment”.
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institutional demands for enterprise services such as e-mail, student information systems, and the branded website become mission-critical
In context, these other dimensions of “online presence” in Higher Education take a special meaning. Reminds me of WPcampus. One might have thought that it was about using WordPress to enhance learning. While there are some presentations on leveraging WP as a kind of “Learning Management System”, much of it is about Higher Education as a sector for webwork (-development, -design, etc.).
Tags
- MOOC Hype Cycle
- Public Intellectuals
- LMS (Learning Management System)
- #WPcampus
- Corporate Identity
- SIS (Student Information System)
- Citizen Engagement
- Web 2.0
- Open Knowledge
- ERP (Enterprise Resource Planning)
- #WordPress
- #EdTech
- Business Models for Higher Education
- Critical Thinking
- #LearnerData
- University Websites
Annotators
URL
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halfanhour.blogspot.com halfanhour.blogspot.com
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access to one-on-one (and possible small circle) consultations for a fee
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We (had we ever been given the opportunity) would have created the business proposition very differently.
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access to the top researchers in the field
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I think that universities (especially the 'elite' universities) have lost the plot when it comes to their value proposition (or, at least, what they tell the world their value proposition is).
In some ways, the strongest indictment of the MOOC hype.
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www.ht2labs.com www.ht2labs.com
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Often our solutions must co-exist with existing systems. That’s why we also invest time and money in emerging standards, like xAPI or Open Badges, to help connect our platforms together into a single ecosystem for personal, social and data-driven learning.
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www.edcast.com www.edcast.com
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Interesting list of clients.
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en.wikipedia.org en.wikipedia.org
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Barnes & Noble Education, Inc. is now an independent public company and the parent of Barnes & Noble College, trading on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker symbol, "BNED".
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www.bnedloudcloud.com www.bnedloudcloud.com
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a strategic partner and collaborator to the 770 stores on campuses nationwide
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ABOUT BARNES & NOBLE EDUCATION
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www.lynn.edu www.lynn.edu
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Enhanced learning experience Graduate students now receive upgraded iPads, and all students access course materials with Canvas, a new learning management software. The School of Aeronautics is now the College of Aeronautics; and the College of Business and Management is hosting a business symposium Nov. 15.
This from a university which had dropped Blackboard for iTunes U.
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unizin.org unizin.org
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A bit of context.
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Instructors can supplement traditional course materials with low-cost alternatives such as Open Educational Resources and faculty-generated content.
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www.indianaeconomicdigest.net www.indianaeconomicdigest.net
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“We’re between the now and the not yet of moving to digital textbooks. But the model has not been discerned,”
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en.wikipedia.org en.wikipedia.org
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Kroton has more than 1.9 million students
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mfeldstein.com mfeldstein.com
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Moodle Pty—more widely known within the Moodle community as Moodle HQ—does most of the development of the core Moodle code and maintains tight control over which code submitted by third parties gets accepted into the code base
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opencontent.org opencontent.org
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Publishers can compete with free textbooks by making their more-restrictive-than-all-right-reserved offerings 70% more affordable.
Sounds a bit like what Clay Shirky was trying to say about the Napster moment coming to Higher Education, five years ago. Skimmed the critique of Shirky’s piece and was mostly nodding in agreement with it. But there might be a discussion about industries having learnt from the Napster moment. After all, the recording industry has been able to withstand this pressure for close to twenty years. Also sounds like this could be a corollary to Chris Anderson’s (in)famous promotion of the “free” (as in profit) model for businesses, almost ten years ago. In other words, we might live another reshaping of “free” in the next 9-10 years.
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- Sep 2017
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stratechery.com stratechery.com
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Amazon integrated customer data and payment information with e-book distribution and its Amazon publishing initiative
Customer data (big data) + payment info (where's the money) + e-book distribution (infrastructure: kindle store and kindle device's seamless integration)
Earlier guys integrated: Procurement (writers initial draft) + editing + marketing + distribution = Think book reviews and author tours on talk shows.
Amazon's idea is more insightful and focussed on individual customers and not shooting in the DARK :)
Tags
Annotators
URL
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- Aug 2017
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amacombooks.wordpress.com amacombooks.wordpress.com
- Jul 2017
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wayback.archive-it.org wayback.archive-it.org
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Skip to content Events 2014 C-Suites Awards Gala – Feb 5 Human Resources Best Practices for Energy Services Companies – March 18 C-Suite Awards The 2014 C-Suites Gala 2014 Award Winners 2013 Award Winners 2012 Award Winners 2011 Award Winners The 100 & Energy Service 50 Apply Event Articles Magazine Current Issue Columns Promoted Content Back Issues Media Releases Subscriber Address Change About Comment Policy Contact Us Where to get Alberta Oil Advertise Jobs Follow Alberta Oil On:
Trade magazine on Alberta oil industry. Articles have named authors.
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99u.adobe.com 99u.adobe.com
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You’ll have to broaden your skill set. “You can have a great design, but if you can’t communicate the story behind it, it will be the downfall of the greatest designers. It’s important to learn the ‘soft skills’ which are learning how to speak publicly to grab attention, keep attention, and clearly articulate your ideas. You should learn to negotiate your prices, as well as know how to read a room and when you should disappear. The other side is the psychology of the business upfront, the questions of: Why am I building this? Why is it important? Or what impact am I going to have on the world? It’s important to answer before you design. Having the business and designer mindset is important.”
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Specialization + communication = a career win. “Instead of trying to become a jack-of-all-trades, young designers should be trained in one specific design discipline, communication design, product design, interior design, fashion design, or digital media design. The design student should develop an understanding of how the respective design discipline interfaces with technology and business. Students should work in projects together with students from other design disciplines and preferably also with students from engineering and business. This is training for young designers and a time to nurture communication skills.”
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The line between design and business will continue to blur. “The more a designer understands how the business works, the more valuable they will be to employers. Designers who understand a company’s value proposition and mission can help them thrive and grow. They just need to learn the language that someone who is running a company actually speaks. When they can articulate exactly what they bring to the table, executives will realize that they didn’t just hire a designer — they also hired a strategist!”
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- Jun 2017
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www.ishr.ch www.ishr.ch
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his expert group sends to companies are 'taken very seriously' by both States and businesses. As such they can be key channels for human rights defenders to leverage the UN experts to contribute to their protection, and help respond to situations where human rights defenders are stigmatised, criminalised, attacked or killed.
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lucumr.pocoo.org lucumr.pocoo.org
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I think it's natural for like-minded people to group together but the longer that process continues the more of an echo chamber it becomes. What's worse is the longer you wait to try to get people involved in the project that would naturally not try to join the harder it will be. When your team is 4 men, the first woman which joins will make a significant impact. When your team is already 20 men you need to get a lot more women on board to have the same impact. But it's not just gender that is making a difference, it's in particular cultural backgrounds. The reason Unicode is hard is not because Unicode is hard, but because a lot of projects start out with a lack of urgency since many of the original developers might live in ASCII constrained environments (It took emojis to become popular for people to develop a general understanding of why Unicode is useful in the western world).
First time I've seen the slowness of emoji to be presented as a diversity issue. Given how well used they are, it's a good example of how diverse teams miss features that may seem obvious in retrospect.
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- May 2017
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www.sourcewatch.org www.sourcewatch.org
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Business Tobacco Alliance
This may be a front group. Investigate, find additional sources, and leave research notes in the comments.
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www.hotfrog.co.uk www.hotfrog.co.uk
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Business Tobacco Alliance
This may be a front group. Investigate, find additional sources, and leave research notes in the comments.
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- Apr 2017
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creativecommons.org creativecommons.org
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bangordailynews.com bangordailynews.com
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The annual drop in Maine wood demand since 2014 would fill that imaginary 1,770-mile caravan. The loss equals about 350 fewer truckloads of wood a day, every day of the year.
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- Mar 2017
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bangordailynews.com bangordailynews.com
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The state has pumped more than 100 million pounds of low bush fruit into the frozen market each year for the last three growing cycles.
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A typical acre of blueberry barrens will yield about 2,000 to 4,000 pounds of berries, depending on pollination and other factors.
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tachesdesens.blogspot.com tachesdesens.blogspot.com
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I opened the door to the Victorian office block and prepared myself for interview.
power business
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- Oct 2016
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www.businessinsider.com www.businessinsider.com
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With figures like those, it's clear that the education system isn't going away anytime soon.
How so?
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Capterra notes that an average school spends an average of $30,000 to $50,000 per year just on paper, but reusable tech would completely eliminate that cost.
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- Sep 2016
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www.educationdive.com www.educationdive.com
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As many universities are being queried by the federal government on how they spend their endowment money, and enrollment decreases among all institutions nationally, traditional campuses will need to look at these partnerships as a sign of where education is likely going in the future, and what the federal government may be willing to finance with its student loan programs going ahead.
To me, the most interesting about this program is that it sounds like it’s targeting post-secondary institutions. There are multiple programs to “teach kids to code”. Compulsory education (primary and secondary) can provide a great context for these, in part because the type of learning involved is so broad and pedagogical skills are so recognized. In post-secondary contexts, however, there’s a strong tendency to limit coding to very specific contexts, including Computer Science or individual programs. We probably take for granted that people who need broad coding skills can develop them outside of their college and university programs. In a way, this isn’t that surprising if we’re to compare coding to very basic skills, like typing. Though there are probably many universities and colleges where students can get trained in typing, it’s very separate from the curriculum. It might be “college prep”, but it’s not really a college prerequisite. And there isn’t that much support in post-secondary education. Of course, there are many programs, in any discipline, giving a lot of weight to coding skills. For instance, learners in Digital Humanities probably hone in their ability to code, at some point in their career. And it’s probably hard for most digital arts programs to avoid at least some training in programming languages. It’s just that these “general” programs in coding tend to focus almost exclusively on so-called “K–12 Education”. That this program focuses on diversity is also interesting. Not surprising, as many such initiatives have to do with inequalities, real or perceived. But it might be where something so general can have an impact in Higher Education. It’s also interesting to notice that there isn’t much in terms of branding or otherwise which explicitly connects this initiative with colleges and universities. Pictures on the site show (diverse) adults, presumably registered students at universities and colleges where “education partners” are to be found. But it sounds like the idea of a “school” is purposefully left quite broad or even ambiguous. Of course, these programs might also benefit adult learners who aren’t registered at a formal institution of higher learning. Which would make it closer to “para-educational” programs. In fact, there might something of a lesson for the future of universities and colleges.
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As many universities are being queried by the federal government on how they spend their endowment money, and enrollment decreases among all institutions nationally, traditional campuses will need to look at these partnerships as a sign of where education is likely going in the future, and what the federal government may be willing to finance with its student loan programs going ahead.
To me, the most interesting about this program is that it sounds like it’s targeting post-secondary institutions. There are multiple programs to “teach kids to code”. Compulsory education (primary and secondary) can provide a great context for these, in part because the type of learning involved is so broad and pedagogical skills are so recognized. In post-secondary contexts, however, there’s a strong tendency to limit coding to very specific contexts, including Computer Science or individual programs. We probably take for granted that people who need broad coding skills can develop them outside of their college and university programs. In a way, this isn’t that surprising if we’re to compare coding to very basic skills, like typing. Though there are probably many universities and colleges where students can get trained in typing, it’s very separate from the curriculum. It might be “college prep”, but it’s not really a college prerequisite. And there isn’t that much support in post-secondary education. Of course, there are many programs, in any discipline, giving a lot of weight to coding skills. For instance, learners in Digital Humanities probably hone in their ability to code, at some point in their career. And it’s probably hard for most digital arts programs to avoid at least some training in programming languages. It’s just that these “general” programs in coding tend to focus almost exclusively on so-called “K–12 Education”. That this program focuses on diversity is also interesting. Not surprising, as many such initiatives have to do with inequalities, real or perceived. But it might be where something so general can have an impact in Higher Education. It’s also interesting to notice that there isn’t much in terms of branding or otherwise which explicitly connects this initiative with colleges and universities. Pictures on the site show (diverse) adults, presumably registered students at universities and colleges where “education partners” are to be found. But it sounds like the idea of a “school” is purposefully left quite broad or even ambiguous. Of course, these programs might also benefit adult learners who aren’t registered at a formal institution of higher learning. Which would make it closer to “para-educational” programs. In fact, there might something of a lesson for the future of universities and colleges.
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www.educationdive.com www.educationdive.com
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Interactive whiteboards were all the rage in ed tech purchases several years ago, costing schools millions of dollars but gaining little in the classroom.
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www.educationdive.com www.educationdive.com
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We commonly look at Ivy League institutions as the standard of higher education in America, but the truth is that the majority of the nation's workforce, innovation identity and manufacturing futures are tied to those institutions which graduate outside of the realm of high achievers from wealthy families.
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hybridpedagogy.org hybridpedagogy.org
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frame the purposes and value of education in purely economic terms
Sign of the times? One part is about economics as the discipline of decision-making. Economists often claim that their work is about any risk/benefit analysis and isn’t purely about money. But the whole thing is still about “resources” or “exchange value”, in one way or another. So, it could be undue influence from this way of thinking. A second part is that, as this piece made clear at the onset, “education is big business”. In some ways, “education” is mostly a term for a sector or market. Schooling, Higher Education, Teaching, and Learning are all related. Corporate training may not belong to the same sector even though many of the aforementioned EdTech players bet big on this. So there’s a logic to focus on the money involved in “education”. Has little to do with learning experiences, but it’s an entrenched system.
Finally, there’s something about efficiency, regardless of effectiveness. It’s somewhat related to economics, but it’s often at a much shallower level. The kind of “your tax dollars at work” thinking which is so common in the United States. “It’s the economy, silly!”
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www.chronicle.com www.chronicle.com
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often private companies whose technologies power the systems universities use for predictive analytics and adaptive courseware
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tressiemc.com tressiemc.com
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mis-read or failed to read the labor market for different degree types.
Sounds fairly damning for a business based on helping diverse students with the labour market…
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The aggressive recruiting did not extend to aggressive retainment and debt management.
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If an organization works — and extracting billions of dollars in federal student aid money suggests ITT worked for a long time — then who it most frequently and efficiently works best for is one way to understand the organization.
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campustechnology.com campustechnology.com
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The news on the self-paced e-learning industry is so bad, Ambient Insight will no longer publish commercial syndicated reports on the industry
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www.educationdive.com www.educationdive.com
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E-learning systems revenues in the United States and China are expected to drop by more than $6 billion annually, according to a new study.
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www.edsurge.com www.edsurge.com
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University staff who are buying data-driven technology
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www.fastcompany.com www.fastcompany.com
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"At the end of the day, the true value proposition of education is employment,"
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- Jul 2016
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www.thewpcrowd.com www.thewpcrowd.com
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there’s only a fine line between “WordPress in Higher Education” and “WordPress in the Enterprise”.
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www.noshelfrequired.com www.noshelfrequired.com
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market for
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institutions that are preparing tomorrow’s leaders
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www.nacubo.org www.nacubo.org
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Montreal: Melding of Old and New
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education vertical
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hackeducation.com hackeducation.com
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I could have easily chosen a different prepositional phrase. "Convivial Tools in an Age of Big Data.” Or “Convivial Tools in an Age of DRM.” Or “Convivial Tools in an Age of Venture-Funded Education Technology Startups.” Or “Convivial Tools in an Age of Doxxing and Trolls."
The Others.
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education technology has become about control, surveillance, and data extraction
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medium.com medium.com
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efforts to expand worldwide
At the risk of sounding cynical (which is a very real thing with annotations), reaching a global market can be very imperialistic a move, regardless of who makes it.
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ironically while continuing to employ adjunct faculty
Much hiding in this passing comment. As adjuncts, our contributions to the system are perceived through the exploitation lens.
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afford a university education
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hackeducation.com hackeducation.com
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The military’s contributions to education technology are often overlooked
Though that may not really be the core argument of the piece, it’s more than a passing point. Watters’s raising awareness of this other type of “military-industrial complex” could have a deep impact on many a discussion, including the whole hype about VR (and AR). It’s not just Carnegie-Mellon and Paris’s Polytechnique («l’X») which have strong ties to the military. Or (D)ARPANET. Reminds me of IU’s Dorson getting money for the Folklore Institute during the Cold War by arguing that the Soviets were funding folklore. Even the head of the NEH in 2000 talked about Sputnik and used the language of “beating Europe at culture” when discussing plans for the agency. Not that it means the funding or “innovation” would come directly from the military but it’s all part of the Cold War-era “ideology”. In education, it’s about competing with India or Finland. In other words, the military is part of a much larger plan for “world domination”.
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www.theguardian.com www.theguardian.com
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For-profits typically take those funds and spend way more on advertising and profit distribution than on teaching.
Don’t know what the stats are for “non-profit universities and colleges” but it does feel like an increasing portion of their budgets go to marketing, advertising, PR, and strategic positioning (at least in the United States and Canada).
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The phrase “diploma mills” came into popular usage during the era.
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A similar conclusion was reached by the medical (pdf) and legal professions of the late-19th and early-20th centuries.
Somewhat surprising, in the current context.
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This model might make sense if our goal was to produce cars, clothing, and some other commodity more efficiently. But a university education doesn’t fit into this paradigm. It isn’t just a commodity.
In education as in health, things get really complex when people have an incentive for people not to improve.
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The idea is that higher education is like any other industry.
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www.seattletimes.com www.seattletimes.com
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“In five to 10 years, most students will buy their postsecondary education differently from the way they buy it now,”
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medium.com medium.com
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improving teaching, not amplifying learning.
Though it’s not exactly the same thing, you could call this “instrumental” or “pragmatic”. Of course, you could have something very practical to amplify learning, and #EdTech is predicated on that idea. But when you do, you make learning so goal-oriented that it shifts its meaning. Very hard to have a “solution” for open-ended learning, though it’s very easy to have tools which can enhance open approaches to learning. Teachers have a tough time and it doesn’t feel so strange to make teachers’ lives easier. Teachers typically don’t make big purchasing decisions but there’s a level of influence from teachers when a “solution” imposes itself. At least, based on the insistence of #BigEdTech on trying to influence teachers (who then pressure administrators to make purchases), one might think that teachers have a say in the matter. If something makes a teaching-related task easier, administrators are likely to perceive the value. Comes down to figures, dollars, expense, expenditures, supplies, HR, budgets… Pedagogy may not even come into play.
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www.alfiekohn.org www.alfiekohn.org
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districts are pouring money into computers and software programs—money that’s badly needed for, say, hiring teachers
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despite the fact that it’s remarkably expensive
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spend oodles of money
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www.washingtonpost.com www.washingtonpost.com
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the largest consumer of college graduates
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there is widespread agreement among college officials and policymakers that the current accreditation system is broken
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www.insidehighered.com www.insidehighered.com
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Funding for humanities labs
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our faculty are evaluated on not just research, teaching and service but also collaboration
Valuing the teaching profession.
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- Jun 2016
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www.educationdive.com www.educationdive.com
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failure to find revenue and support from unconventional sources
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www.socrative.com www.socrative.com
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However, you may be required to pay fees to use certain features or content made available through the Site and Services.
Wish they said more. No-cost solutions are neat for one-offs, but pedagogues should be wary of building their practice on services which may start requiring payment.
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www.eschoolnews.com www.eschoolnews.com
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timely
Time-sensitive, mission-critical, just-in-time, realtime, 24/7…
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listedtech.com listedtech.com
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Am I asking too many questions?
No.
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opencontent.org opencontent.org
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many more people understand cost than understand pedagogy
While this may be true, it sure is sad. Especially as the emphasis on cost is likely to have negative impacts in the long run.
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- May 2016
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adamcroom.com adamcroom.com
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To me, this is what OER for the web should start to reflect.
You mean it’s not just about the price of textbooks??
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- Apr 2016
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allthingsanalytics.com allthingsanalytics.com
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Millennials are not necessarily great at social, they are just more comfortable with it. There is a huge difference between using social to keep up with friends and family, and using it to generate business value
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techcrunch.com techcrunch.com
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the study of innovation shows that everything hinges on the hard work of taking a promising idea and making it work — technically, legally, financially, culturally, ecologically. Constraints are great enablers of innovation.
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But there’s a downside to the hackathon hype, and our research on designing workplace projects for innovation and learning reveals why. Innovation is usually a lurching journey of discovery and problem solving. Innovation is an iterative, often slow-moving process that requires patience and discipline. Hackathons, with their feverish pace, lack of parameters and winner-take-all culture, discourage this process. We could find few examples of hackathons that have directly led to market success.
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what if projects were designed to combine a hacking mindset with rigorous examination of the data and experience they glean? This would reward smart failures that reveal new insights and equip leaders with the information needed to rescale, pivot or axe their projects.
Sounds somewhat like agile devlopment.
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www.collectorsweekly.com www.collectorsweekly.com
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“dead malls,” and you’ll find photo after photo of tiled walkways littered with debris, untended planters near the darkened rest areas for bored dads, and empty indoor storefronts—the discolored shadows of their missing lighted signs lingering like ghosts.
Here is an interesting mega-mall i have found in china that is now deserted because of online shopping. The plans have even started taking back its land.
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- Mar 2016
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medium.com medium.com
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What is a business model?
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- Feb 2016
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bangordailynews.com bangordailynews.com
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He expects that the logging project near Quimby’s land will likely generate about $755,250 at the state’s average sale price, $50.35 per cord of wood. The land has about 1,500 harvestable acres that contain about 30 cords of wood per acre, or 45,000 cords, but only about a third of that will be cut because the land is environmentally sensitive, Denico said. The Bureau of Parks and Lands expects to generate about $6.6 million in revenue this year selling about 130,000 cords of wood from its lots, Denico said. Last year, the bureau generated about $7 million harvesting about 139,000 cords of wood. The Legislature allows the cutting of about 160,000 cords of wood on state land annually, although the LePage administration has sought to increase that amount.
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- Jan 2016
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www.forbes.com www.forbes.com
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Now fintech platform OpenLedger and Danish bitcoin exchange CCEDK are joining forces with MUSE, a music-tailored blockchain, to make monetizing music as easy as new peer-to-peer (P2P) platforms made distributing it 15 years ago.
PeerTracks, a music streaming and retail platform company, is the first outfit to use the brand new MUSE network, in partnership with CCEDK and OpenLedger.
http://www.peertracks.com/faq.php<br> https://www.openledger.info/<br> https://www.ccedk.com/about
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www.forbes.com www.forbes.com
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Ami Bloomer's new company Clozer provides on-demand sales representatives globally.
Ami herself currently calls it "the Uber of sales". But that must be a very loose comparison. Anyone who can drive a car could work for Uber, but salesmanship is a talent.
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www.linkedin.com www.linkedin.com
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Job functionOther,Marketing
But, but… Eric said it wasn’t marketing!
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www.huffingtonpost.com www.huffingtonpost.com
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In 2014, U.S. based education technology (EdTech) companies raised $1.2 billion in funding across 357 venture rounds.
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scripting.com scripting.com
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stack fallacy - Tech companies often fail when they create a new product by building upward from their existing product. They may know the technology well -- but fail to do enough research about what customers want. It is easier to innovate downward, by developing a product that you need yourself.
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pressblog.uchicago.edu pressblog.uchicago.edu
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one wonders about the relationships between scholarship, technology, and the academic institution that engendered that turn from printing materials to printing ideas.
One sure does.
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This is from 18 August, 2015, so it's possible things have changed. But it's interesting anyway, and many links are given.
Most music streaming services have been paying artists on a per-click basis. So most subscribers' money doesn't go to the artists they are listening to, but rather whichever artists get the most clicks. And this system is extremely vulnerable to click fraud.
The author argues that Subscriber Share is a better system. With that method, your subscription fee is divided among the artists you listen to according to the percentage of time you spend listening to them.
FAQ includes additional links and replies to counter-arguments.
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- Dec 2015
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Guide to freelancing from Due, an online invoicing and time-tracking company. They also have guides for programmers, designers, consultants, photographers, and payroll.
Tags
Annotators
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larrycuban.wordpress.com larrycuban.wordpress.com
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numbers have to be interpreted by those who do the daily work of classroom teaching
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bits.blogs.nytimes.com bits.blogs.nytimes.com
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nearly $8 billion prekindergarten through 12th-grade education technology software market
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www.bhorowitz.com www.bhorowitz.com
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When faced by a dangerous competitor, people tend to look for escape hatches or silver bullets. There aren't any. You have to face them head on, and make your product better than theirs, or die trying.
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www.microsoft.com www.microsoft.com
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Under our Affordable Access Initiative, Microsoft is providing grants to commercial entities for scalable solutions that enable people in underserved communities to access the Internet and use cloud services.
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www.knewton.com www.knewton.com
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purchasable à la carte
How many units of learning per dollar?
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no research
In direct opposition with the model for most universities, these days. So that may be the fork in the road. But there are more than two paths.
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Universities bundle services like mad
Who came up with such a scheme? A mad scientist? We’re far from Bologna.
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perfect storm of bundling
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only unbundling health clubs suffer
There might be something about the connection between learning and “health & wellness”.
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Unbundling has played out in almost every media industry.
And the shift away from “access to content” is still going on, a decade and a half after Napster. If education is a “content industry” and “content industries” are being disrupted, then education will be disrupted… by becoming even more “industrial”.
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consumer choice will inevitably force them to unbundle.
The battle is raging on, but the issue is predetermined.
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edumorphology.com edumorphology.com
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Yes, my intention was to show the most easily replaced in dark and move it to the least easily replaced.
One linear model, represented in something of a spiral… Agreed that the transformative experience is tough to “disrupt”, but the whole “content delivery” emphasis shows that the disruption isn’t so quick.
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www.forbes.com www.forbes.com
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customers become less willing to pay
There are a few key cases, here. a) Public Education (much of the planet) b) Parent-Funded Higher Education (US-centric model) c) Corporate Training (emphasis for most learning platforms, these days) d) For-Profit Universities (Apollo Group and such) e) xMOOCs (learning as a startup idea, with freemium models) f) Ad-Supported Apps & Games (Hey! Some of them are “educational”!)
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