ทุกวิดีโอที่ติดแท็ก ธุรกิจ - หน้า 3
Watch Business videos on y8.com right now! Relax and enjoy the great collection of Business related videos.Y8 videos is supported by ads, so there is no cost to watch all the videos.
-
CO AMA | RevUp 360 |Testimonials | Nick Vollten
วีดีโอ
80%749 ดูThis video was produced by V3 Media Marketing in Colorado. The goal of this corporate video was to interview Creative Circle's Nick Vollten for a customer video testimonial at the Colorado AMA RevUp 360 event. This video testimonial shares important insights about the great people, knowledge gained and the deep connections that are made at events hosted by the Colorado American Marketing Association. V3 Media was proud to support the Colorado American Marketing Association at the event. The event attracted marketing professionals from a wide variety of Colorado industries, such as manufacturing, energy, oil, gas, agriculture, technology, media, PR and beyond. Creative Circle is a specialized staffing agency in Colorado that connects innovative advertising, marketing, creative, digital, and interactive professionals with companies seeking talent on a full-time or freelance basis. For more than 50 years, the Colorado American Marketing Association (Colorado AMA) has challenged a community of innovative, marketing professionals to think a little differently about what they do and how they do it. V3 Media Marketing in Colorado is a full-service, award-winning video production and marketing company based out of Fort Collins with over 10 years of industry experience and clients nationwide. We are video production and marketing professionals that approach each project with a customized, personalized touch. We specialize in helping companies promote their brands, products and services with modern marketing techniques that leverage the power of video across a variety of platforms, including YouTube, Facebook, Twitter and beyond.
-
2016 Top Technology Investment Trends
วีดีโอ
80%1,006 ดูIn this provactive video Mr. Wardynski weights in on what he considers to be the top 3 technologies that CIO's need to be investing in for 2016. #2 may surprise you.
-
Rogers: Demand response - storage in our homes
วีดีโอ
80%593 ดูThe key problem in the existing grid, really, is how we've become used to electricity. So we're used to flicking on a switch and there being electricity there, and we're used to paying for that electricity with just a flat tariff, so we pay electricity per unit. And that's completely different to the actual costs of generating that electricity. So at peak times, electricity is very expensive, it's very hard to produce, you need a lot of generation capacity that just sits there waiting for that peak time, and then when you move to a grid where it's renewable, if you've got wind turbines and it doesn't happen to be windy that day, then that's a lot of your capacity that's just gone. So if you're trying to make the grid where you can make proper use of supply when it's available, the key game changer is storage. You can do it a little bit by moving loads around. So at peak time you don't want to run energy-intensive appliances, or if you're a large industrial company, you don't want to be running pumps at peak times. So if you can move these loads around, that gives you one degree of flexibility. Demand response is this idea that when electricity is expensive or when it's carbon-intensive because there's not much wind and it's all coming from coal-fired power stations, if you can delay using loads at that time, that's one advantage, and that's one way of reducing your carbon emissions. But the other real game changes is storage. Large utility scale storage has been around for a while in terms of pump storage. We pump water up to a reservoir and let it come back down again. And most countries have systems like that. But the game changer may be storage in our homes. So if you've got an electric vehicle, the battery of your electric vehicle will probably run your home for a day or two. So if you can move energy back and forth between your car battery and your home, or maybe you have a home storage battery, so maybe when your car battery is used up, you've used up its useful life for running your car but it's still got a lot of life in it, maybe that could be a home storage battery that could sit in your basement and then you can use energy from your battery when the grid is expensive or carbon-intensive and then overnight, when it's clean, you can be charging up the battery. So it's this idea of demand response being able to move loads around, which you can do, but to a limited degree, but the real key idea is storage. So since you can store that electricity, then the grid doesn't have to look the way it does at all. The grid is designed the way it is because electricity is hard to store. They go to enormous lengths to insure that when you put the switch on, there's electricity there, and there's an enormous overhead to actually doing that. But if you can store the energy locally, that changes everything. But that's expensive. Batteries are expensive, but the technology is improving and the price is coming down.
-
Technology is not emancipatory for humanity
วีดีโอ
80%1,147 ดูI don't think tech is an emancipatory tool for either humanity or for creativity. The creative will be creative, with or without technology. The creative always will have... And I wrote a book called 'The Cult of the Amateur', which argued that the more technology there is, particularly digital technology, the harder it is for creative people to make a living, the harder it is to get other people to pay them for their writing, their movies, their music, and I think that is a big problem with the internet age. I also don't think that tech enables creativity. It doesn't emancipate us. I think it's a very problematic way of thinking about technology. And I think it also is unfair on technology, it puts too much responsibility on technology. Technology is technology. Sometimes it can emancipates us. I mean, I couldn't live without the wheel or fire or electricity; I probably couldn't live without the internet. But that doesn't mean it has emancipated me; it hasn't made me into a different human being.
-
The business of mass media has lost its relevance
วีดีโอ
80%818 ดูThis idea of ‘content is subsidized or supported by commercials’, that business model, in terms of the value exchange, is out of whack. It has lost its relevance because ultimately a value proposition needs to be between two parties. I think at best it’s a bad solution to a bigger problem, but at worst it’s one-sided. So I think what’s wrong with it right now is: first of all, there are alternative propositions out there, alternative revenue streams, so many choices that consumers have now. And they’ve demonstrated that they won’t just pay with their time for value. They’ll pay with their money as well. So that part of the business model is actually changing more quickly than the other part, because now we see people buying movies online, NetFlex, paying on iTunes etcetera. HBO. Consumers have demonstrated that they absolutely will pay with their money for value. What it comes down to is that it’s not very consumer-centric at all, whether it’s the up front, which is the whole way that media is bought and sold essentially in the US, whether it’s the Super Bowl, it’s all really about the networks, it’s all about the sellers and it’s all about the buyers being the marketers and the agencies. But the consumer isn’t factored in that equation, and it’s time now to figure out how to bring the consumer into the equation. That’s the first part. The second part is to use and be very aggressive about the role that technology plays in making the whole model more efficient and more effective and weeding out the waste, because it is true that we are bombarded now as humans and consumers, and we have to get rid of the clutter, and we have to get rid of the wastage. Not just for the sake of the consumer, but for the sake of the market as well.
-
Increased complexity is driven by the adoption
วีดีโอ
80%662 ดูSo I’m not particularly fearing an explosion of complexity, because every new item that comes into our lives has a very strict threshold to pass: is it easy enough to use and it has rewards that far exceed the headache you have of just adapting the technology? If it doesn’t pass a threshold, we don’t adopt it. Next to that: things that were very complex before, they have been dropped. So we adapt. It may appear that the complexity is growing, but it’s really just a shift of in what way and how much we communicate.
-
making the rich billion people poor
วีดีโอ
80%727 ดูIf one looks into the future, and thinks about the options to avoid ecological collapse, then there is one quite ugly way of doing it. The way is not to make nine billion additional people rich, but essentially make the rich billion poor. Because if the rich billion become so poor that it does not consume meet and doesn’t drive cars, then that solves most of the environmental problems. And if the rich get poor, the poor need not get rich. Because the poor will not probably get richer than the rich will then be. There is maybe 2% of people who organize that. This is then the neofeudal global elite. And some of them would like that. It's not that Brazilianization is something that all elites are against. But it’s disaster for the normal people and it takes away the potential for a good world for 10 billion people. To realize that potential needs global co-ordination, it needs the right framework for the economy, prices must say the truth, then we have the chance with new technology and using our brains to build a good, equitable world for ten billion people, a balanced future, we say we need a ecosocial market economy, we need a global Marshall Plan, we need to co-operate, we need to cross-finance development, we need to do globally what we do at home anyhow. But they need to do it globally. We need a global contract, a fair contract. And the climate issue is a very important part of that.
-
Stjernstoft: Innovate with consumer technology
วีดีโอ
80%1,130 ดูI will say this is consumer technology. And it's so far ahead from enterprise technology. When I am using Facebook, or blogging, or chat, or MSN for example. When I use MSN I feel like email is so old-fashioned, it's so slow. So I understand that young people, they say to me 'I use email at work, but when I talk to my friends I don't use email because it's too bureaucratic, it takes too long a time, the user interface is quite bad.' And then, I can ask my kids 'Why aren't you using Messenger?'. Because when I open up my computer, it's there, and it's so simple. So, I would say that one lesson learned is that earlier it was enterprises and military who drove the technology and the innovation. But now the best innovation is happening on the consumer's side. They are young people, they are sitting in a small room at their home, and doing lots and lots of cool things. Look at YouTube for example, who was on YouTube ten years ago? I don't know. Five years ago? I don't know. Today, it's a top number first site. And how many television companies is owning YouTube? Zero. So I would say that the lesson learned is that we should use this in our companies. If we don't use it, for me it feels like you have a donkey at work and you have the Porsche at home. You understand? And why should I accept to have a donkey at work, when the Porsche is there and it's quite cheap? This is cheap, almost for free. So you don't need to have expensive, locked in software.
-
Warwick: History of implants in Warwick
วีดีโอ
80%979 ดูIf I go back for myself to 1998, the first implant that I had was just a RFID like a monitoring implant. Now in my building at the University of Reading and various doorways we have got linked up. So what we got it to do was if I walked down the corridor the computer knew it was me, from my implant, and opened doors, switched on lights, said hello, things like that. We were just trying to show how a building could interact with effectively the inside of my body. The implant was in my body. So he knew it was me from the technology and could do things for me, with me. In effect, you, as a person, and the building become a system altogether. So for me it was tremendously exciting. Very simple project and some people 'what did you do that for'. Well, it was partly opening up new possibilities, new ways of thinking about it. And for me it did open up the possibility thereof linking my nervous system, which I did subsequently four years after that, with the other implant. And that was really effecting the technology with what was going on in my body. The first one just said 'I am here' and the technology did things. This one depended on what signals were in my nervous system, therefore in my brain as well, that would effect the technology but also what the technology did effected my brain, to a tremendous extend. So I was able to control little robots, directly from my nervous system, I controlled a wheelchair, just to show what is possible for people with spinal injury. Directly from neural signals I controlled a robot hand, directly from my neural signals, which subsequently John Donahue did in Rhode Island about two years after that, to show exactly the same signals with a patient to control a robot hand. But we had already shown that it was possible. I guess a whole range of... any technology and I also did that from New York. I went to Colombia University, put my nervous system live on the internet and controlled the robot hand back here in the UK. So effectively the robot hand was part of my body but on a different continent. My body was stretched via the internet, which was tremendously exciting, just what that will mean in the future for people. But we can also stimulate my nervous system so we have experimented with extra sensory input or extending the sensory range using ultra sonic signals like some of our robots have here. The biggest thing for me was signals from my wife's nervous system actually effecting my brain, so when she closed her hand, my brain received a pulse. So we did communicate in a very basic way, telegraphically, which for me opened up what will be possible in the future. So I think that each experiment you do, then opens your mind to the possibilities which maybe you do not completely realise until you do it and then say 'oh yeah now we have done that, so that means we can do this as well', which is even more exciting.
-
Welding Engineering Technology
วีดีโอ
80%1,072 ดูA spotlight on the Welding Engineering Technology program at Ferris State University that I shot and edited.
-
Riley: Social learning - retraining the educators
วีดีโอ
80%1,064 ดูYou go to any educationalist, let's just take a state school or college, something like that, and you get the teachers and you put them all in a room. Some of them will be between the age of 30 and 40, some of them between 50 and 60, and you may have a few a little older than that. So they will broadly break down into people who think this technology is absolutely fantastic and they are fully operational and they are going to educate this way. Some of them will go: "Wow, this is new. That sounds like re-training to me, but I'm coming into it, I've got a long career ahead of me, I really want to be a great teacher, and my students need this, so I'm in." And some of them, which I call retired but unannounced, just go: "It's over. I am just going to give up. I'm just going to coast now till my retirement date, because I'm not emotionally, skillfully or even mentally equipped to be interested in this. What I really like is flat boards, the old way." So if you talk to that younger group, and even some of the middle group, what they tell you is: "Well, here's a really cool thing. Lectures used to be everybody sitting around listening to lectures, and lecturers find that really boring. They have to do the same lecture every time there is an undergraduate class." Then he goes home and they do their homework. I don't know if you've heard, but the other thing that happens on the internet is everybody cheats, apparently including the Defense Minister for Germany right now. So everybody cheats, but why do they cheat? They cheat because we learn communally. So you can either say 'people cheat' and you can take that moral overtone to it, and all old people go: "A lot of the students cheat today." Which makes me laugh. Or you can go: "This is great, there is an impulse, we actually learn better when we're with a lot of people." Which is what most good educators understand, social learning. So now the people with this technology go: Everybody gets together at the beginning of the class, and the teacher just goes: "All right, well, you've got the lecture, you've all watched it, now let's talk about the lecture." So he or she can assume that the students all saw the lecture over the weekend, in their own time, or when their kids were put to bed or after work or whatever is most convenient for that individual. And the individual knows that when they get to the classroom, they are going to have a communal experience about the knowledge. This is a better way of teaching. And so the only people that would reject that, are good people who are just not up for that change, they just like the old way. And that's completely acceptable for some as well. But all the energy is in this other camp. So that's a good question: Do we re-train, are there new skills? And I go: Yeah, but it's already happening. And again, any of those of us, everybody who you talk to who has teenage children is fully aware that this process is underway. So when you hear people fighting it, particularly in the education system, you're just hearing people who are afraid. And typically they're not afraid of educating children or teenagers, they're afraid for their own livelihood or they're afraid about their incompetence or, there are many other reasons why the educator should be afraid right now. But it's not about whether or not technology can improve education.
-
Kaufmann: Architects as collaborative creators
วีดีโอ
80%1,041 ดูI think the more that we can make architects more accessible, the more homes that end up being designed by architects, I think, the better. Because they've been trained, they've been educated to think about spaces in a really thoughtful way. Not just about making something look like a faux French chateau, not copying something out of a catalogue and, you know, as builders a lot of times they may just do that, they may not innovate but just sort of copy what they think people want or what they've heard people want, where as architects a lot of times will go beyond that. They'll actually create the thing; imagine the thing, before people say they want it. They design it, they build it and then people are like: Yes, this is so great. As well as then collaborating with builders in terms of thinking about how to build in this modern way. What can also be really great is when architects collaborate with builders. Not just draw something and hand it over to a builder and say: Okay, build this. But collaborate in terms of innovating how they're build, how they're constructed. We've been building buildings the same old, broken wasteful way we have for hundreds of years, super inefficient in terms of time and cost, not predictable and so much waste and so much energy and carbon is required for building an average home. It's ridiculous where as we've been using technology in every other industry to bring good design to the masses. So what's interesting is now that shift is starting to happen, finally, in terms of how we build buildings. To use less, use less materials, use less energy, which then for the person who might be buying the home it means less time, less costs and more predictability and a better home.
-
Spalter: Mobile phone as tool for civic engagement
วีดีโอ
80%1,323 ดูWe're seeing also, I think, and I'm happy to say it's becoming a little bit banal to speak about, but only a year and a half ago it was very new to speak about the use of mobile and wireless platforms as a form and a tool for civic engagement, civic enfranchisement. It was not only because of the remarkable use of mobility in presidential campaigns and other political campaigns like those of President Obama that we began to see mobility as not only a source for actually providing the lifeblood of our elections, which happens to be capital, fundraising, but also as a means of getting entirely new sets of American citizens, young and old, engaged, interested in and activated into the American political process. Now we're seeing much more sophisticated extensions of that early work, which I mentioned is only two years old. The Facebooks and the Twitters of the world have become dominant forces, not only because they're now both not just nouns but verbs, but because they have given rise to literally hundreds if not thousands of different kinds of applications that are facilitating more not less citizen participation. We're finding, not only in the United States but in governments around the world, more sophisticated and sensitive governments who understand the beneficial aspects of providing more not less access to transparency around technology platforms, particularly in the mobile space, that citizens can now interact with their legislators and governmental representatives in ways they never before could have done. They can keep in touch with the legislative voting records in real time of their elected representatives, and at the same time they can provide via their mobile platform very effective, targeted insight and analysis of what they think about votes that are pending or regulatory structures that are being discussed. We're seeing in the context of the United States' political dialogue, immigration reform, for example, has become a very important touch point for very important American constituencies, not least of which are the many millions of Hispanic American citizens that live in the United States who desperately want to find a more reasonable and progressive approach to how we both conceive of the policy framework for immigration but also the administration of immigration rules. It is significantly attributed to mobility, to mobile and wireless platforms, that the very atomised Hispanic American political constituencies in the United States have actually been able to become a united, cohesive political force around immigration. Mobility through crowd sourcing, through text-based, Spanish-language and English-language informational resources around what's going on in immigration reform issues. Many of the rallies, many of the efforts we've seen amongst the Hispanic American communities to not only educate their local publics but their legislators and media around immigration issues have largely been conceived and actually implemented on these wonderful new frameworks that are the mobile platforms and devices. The list truly goes on and on.
-
Decade of ubiquity - any time, anywhere, on demand
วีดีโอ
80%859 ดูStepping back and looking at the last decade, from maybe '99 to 2009 or 2000 to 2010, I think that once we suffered the whole dot-com bubble crash and everything else, generally speaking the spirit of innovation or the ability to throw a lot of risk capital at new and exciting ideas and technology advancements was flattened and almost dead. It's a bit sad to look at the last decade and say the most exciting things we have are Facebook widgets or Twitter applications. It's like wow. I grew up through the nineties and the early part of my career was there, but it was like every day or every week there as a new process or a new type of RAM, a new graphics thing. It was always new and advanced and faster and better and stronger. It was exciting, you couldn't keep up. As soon as you got used to games like Quake I, Quake II came along and completely changed the playing field. But the last ten years that's been gone missing. There haven't been a lot of exciting things, like "oh my god, this is it!" But now, again in the last year or so, a lot of these technologies that have been percolating in the background for years, are now at the point where they're tangible. You can play with them, you can grab onto them and do something with them, and people are beginning to put them together. That's going to start a cycle over the next ten years where there is massive convergence. And that convergence is ultimately going to result in ubiqitous computing, telecom and media. Just all over, all the place, all the time and on demand.
-
opportunity for content and services
วีดีโอ
80%869 ดูThe nice thing about transmedia is you can put something out there, very small, a character, a personality, a bit like the robots that we make of the demographic replicator. And prototype things quickly. The cost involved of actually acquiring a script... Get a book, turn it into a transcript, opting the actors, do the financing, get the film out there, get it tested before it goes live and people go: 'It's not good. Change the ending.' Why don't you just build the whole thing in front of the public and let the public kick at it a lot. Then you know you're making the thing they want to see. Now this has been done badly as well. Snakes on a Plane. Get people to chip in ideas and they just like... It's not going to fly. You still need quality people at the top to do the editorial if you're going to go down that route. And with that arbiters of taste. They have something special about them. They're the ones that do the stuff we all want to see and the stuff that gets pirated a lot. They're the bench-mark. So what the media industry needs to understand, what the technology guys have done well, and Google did this really well, is prototype and release early. You're going to shoot an episode because you think it's the cheapest bit of doing a twelve part? Why don't you just go and get the character to do five minutes to screen to introduce themselves and if the audience like that character, then do the episode. So why don't you get the actor to do his or hers interview piece? Audition as the character and let the audience see that: 'Yeah, he'd be good for that, I think.' Eight out of ten people say: 'Give it a go. Move on.' So you test everything first. Then build it up. Because if you're testing, you also see what other interests people have. And at the end of the day, when you get that film out there, the cinema is going to be selling services. So why aren't you already planning more services around the content that you want to make? We've got to stop thinking about pieces of content. Transmedia gives us the idea that there's services and content mixing together.
-
Something’s Happening Here—SmartGrid Innovation
วีดีโอ
80%680 ดูThis is a long-form overview of a dynamic partnership between a small Texas energy cooperative and a comprehensive technology innovator. Cavelle Consulting Group and Abiyoyo Productions created this video to showcase what two companies could do with innovative leadership and technology. Their work to create a sustainable energy grid has helped to conserve energy and increase transparency for consumers in a service area just outside of Austin, TX.
-
Dorr: Digital technology and movies
วีดีโอ
80%1,130 ดูParadigm for film, or the model for film is not exclusive, but it's the kind of thing we all kind of think about is: a 90-minute uninterrupted experience that tells a story. Now, can it be longer? Yes. Can it be shorter? Yes. But the point is it's an immersive experience, it's uninterrupted, and it's often engaged in a social way in a theatre. And I've produced movies, and yes, sitting in a movie theatre with an audience watching the movie which you've produced is both a terrifying and exciting experience. It's exciting when you feel like they're laughing at the right place and crying at the right place, and they actually have some response. Because that's what you want. It's terrifying if they don't get it, you know. But that's what happens sometimes. I think, two things: people still want to be moved emotionally, they still want to be immersed in storytelling and they still want to have social experiences. And some of these social experiences will be in physical places. They'll continue to be in physical places which we call movie theatres. But... And those social experiences will be redefined online as well, and may not be in theatres. Or, in addition, the talking about the movie will not simply be in the movie theatre itself, or to your friends when you go home. They'll also be online. So there are various opportunities to engage people socially, physically or online, that will be combined with each other. So that you'll get the phenomena of come on down to the theatre. The filmmaker will be there. Or one of the cast members will be there. Or there will be a discussion about the movie. Or there'll be something. People are still attracted to that and still want to do that. So I say to movie theatres: "Don't tell people not to bring their cell phones." Actually encourage them to bring their cell phones. And before the movie goes up, provide them interactive experiences by using the screen that you're not showing a movie on yet to find out more about the movie, to find out more about the filmmaker, to find out whatever it is they're interested in. Then you ask them politely to turn it off, because none of us want to be disturbed when they see the movie. And then when the movie is over, have them turn it on again to find out more if they want. In other word, use these devices to enhance the social experience. That's what they should be doing. But instead they're going: "No, no, no." Instead it again the fear. I would say, turn the fear into hope and engage. And I think filmmakers, if they're in the position... Right now, when you have more and more movie theatres that are being corked up digitally, there are opportunities now where you can come see a movie and after the film is over, you could do a Q&A with a filmmaker simulcast to hundreds of theatres, where the filmmaker's on one location, but everybody can Tweet him and ask him questions. They could do all kinds of stuff, because people want that experience. That's why film festivals are successful. They want to engage. That's not going to go away. The question is: how do you recontextualize that experience in a way that people haven't seen it before, by taking advantage of these new tools?
-
\“What is Morar’s technology advantage?”
วีดีโอ
79%800 ดูMorar Presentation 2: “What is Morar’s technology advantage?”
-
Wrap.co - The Narrative Web.
วีดีโอ
80%1,074 ดูWelcome to Wrap.co - The Narrative Web. Produced by Tedshots.
-
Destek Technology at Sandfields Business Centre
วีดีโอ
80%921 ดูThis video is about the success of Destek Technology at Sandfields Business Centre
-
OTKA Client —-Adobe
วีดีโอ
80%809 ดูAdobe employs OKTA technology into the creative cloud.
-
Lietaer: Taxes versus contributions
วีดีโอ
80%865 ดูThe irony of the whole thing, in today's societies, governments are now, having saved the banking system, at a huge expense, are now being squeezed to reduce everything else. Because they have now increased indebtedness dramatically. In some countries it's doubled. Thinking about this, it is government that imposes that only bank debt money can be used to pay taxes. That is the mechanism by which the monopoly is enforced. And government needs to either raise the taxes or borrow, just as you and me, and has given the monopoly of the creation of the money to the banking system. Well would it not make sense that the government issues a currency itself for certain functions and requires that that currency be paid in part by making contributions? Let's make a distinction between taxes and contributions. Taxes are in national money, or actually in bank debt money, to be precise, and the other one would be in another currency, a currency that the government chooses for its priorities. It could be a currency for learning, it could be a currency for environmental restoration, it could be a currency for whatever the priorities that it decides. And my proposal would be, well, create an E-Bay market, an open market, where I have, if everybody needs to contribute ten hours, say, over that currency, well, we create an E-Bay, I am a guy who's too busy and not interesting in these things, you are a good person, you have done fifty of those hours, well, you sell them to me, and I pay you in euros. I need to pay ten hours, because that's the requirement. It would be a completely different society, immediately, where government can actually, a democratic government, hopefully, we're not talking about creating a dictatorship here, it should be a democratic government, that people could decide what it is they want to contribute to. And with the kind of issues that we're dealing with today, an ageing society, how will you take care of that? If you think in the conventional way, there are only two solution. Let's take the economic effects and the financial effects of ageing. The Anglo-Saxon solution, the Americans and the English, is we have a pie of a certain size, more people need to eat from it, fine, we cut the slices smaller and smaller. And maybe that way they die quicker, which is one way of solving the problem. The second solution, let’s call it the Germanic one, or the Scandinavian one, is a promise is a promise, let's go bankrupt. That's it. Tell me another solution. The third solution is the one the Japanese invented already. You create another medium of exchange that actually fills in some of the issues. And there's still a big role... In Japan, if an elderly person breaks her leg, they're being paid in national currency by the insurance, no problem, so it's like here. But they have a second option. That person can go home much faster, because in the neighbourhood there are other people, neighbours, that will help with their shopping, with the food preparation. That's not covered by national healthcare. There's a community that's ready to act. So it's a completely different game. That's what I see as a possibility. We have some huge possibilities. And these things are now technologically so easy. In other words... The payment issue, the future is going to be mobile phones. Everybody knows it. There are more mobile phones than bank accounts by a factor of three on the planet, so why should we not use the mobile phone as a payment system for doing those things? So the technology is there. We're ready to use it.
-
Hotel Fleuris Palawan
วีดีโอ
80%992 ดูSituated in the heart of Puerto Princesa, Hotel Fleuris Palawan was established to add exquisiteness to the city. Despite the high technology that has infiltrated the country, Hotel Fleuris’ heart still dances to the beat of instinctive ways. And it’s a place where guests can find a home away from home, with a highly trained, guest friendly staff. Hotel Fleuris Palawan has forty-seven (47) elegantly furnished guestrooms including thirty-eight (38) deluxe rooms, Eight (8) Suite rooms and one (1) special room for disabled. All guestrooms are equipped with air-conditioning system, cable television, mini bar,hot and cold shower, IDD and NDD telephone and WiFi connection in some areas of hotel providing delightful accommodation in Palawan. The restaurant serves continental and Asian cuisines. Its piano lounge and poolside courtyard are ideal for leisurely get-togethers. Hotel Fleuris Palawan makes an astonishing commitment to providing an excellent experience for the selective travelers. It aspires to continue to be progressively better, organized and dedicated to total quality and unspoiled services to the guests. (source: fleuris.com)
-
Intro to NeighborLink
วีดีโอ
80%1,013 ดูNeighborLink is a faith-based community development organization that leverages technology to bridge the gap between marginalized homeowners and volunteers. Picture an online bulletin board for service projects that no other organization wants to do. There are currently 4 NeighborLinks and 2 other organizations using our website tool. Visit NLFW.org or NeighborLinkNetwork.org for more information.
-
Inayatullah: Six pillars of mapping the future
วีดีโอ
80%1,283 ดูI use the mapping metaphor because I'm visually challenged, because I can never find myself in any city. That's my way to understand the world better. Pillar one is mapping. If we're in some place we need a map of the future, some probabilities, some data points. Pillar two is anticipating. How might the map change? What if there's... in terms of genomics technology, virtual technology, changing spirituality, how would the map I have of the world start to shift because of emerging issues? So we disturb the map. Pillar three is timing of the future. If I have this information, what is the appropriate time to act? So is the future linear, is it a pendulum, is it cyclical, is it spiral? Based on these potential shapes of the future, I can enhance my strategy. If I know we're stuck in a pendulum, do I want to waste my time on this side when I know it's going to shift? The fourth pillar is deepening, going to the inner story, linking the story with systemic change. The fifth one is the scenarios, creating alternatives. And the last one, of course, is the crucial one, transforming the future. It can't just be the map. The map changes as we change. The universe is not closed in my sense, it's open even though there's deep structures. The most important pillar is eventually having a vision of the future and the method I use is backcasting. Once you're in that future, what happened? How did we get there? And backcasting is powerful because sometimes we imagine a world we want, then we go into despair. Oh my God, I can't create it, it will never happen. But if we can show how we got there, then strategy becomes simple. It could be just three things need to be done. I was working with one city and they had a wonderful vision of 2030. We finished the visioning part, the six pillars and they were all depressed. I said: Why, what's wrong? They said: We don't think we can reach it. So then we did the backcast. Once we did the backcast, they realized: Oh my God, only three things we have to change. So backcasting takes the impossible process and makes it possible. So six pillars: mapping, anticipating, timing, deepening, creating alternatives and transforming.
-
ReBusiness Chamber Challenge Award
วีดีโอ
80%1,159 ดูTompkins County Solid Waste recognizes 2 Ithaca businesses who excelled at Reusing, Reducing, Recycling & Rebuying....Singlebrook Technology & Jamex, Inc. recycletompkins.org wellsaidmedia.com facebook.com/wellsaidmedia
-
Fireside Chat with Kamran Elahian
วีดีโอ
80%1,740 ดูKamran Elahian is a serial entrepreneur, venture capitalist, and philanthropist with over 29 years of experience in the high-tech sector. He has co-founded 10 companies, 3 of which failed; 3 of which made exits, including CAE Systems, (acquired by Teletronix for $75 million), PlanetWeb, and Greenfield Network (acquired by Cisco Systems); and 3 of which went public, including Cirrus Logic (which had an IPO at a $150 million valuation and achieved a market cap of over $3.5 billion), NeoMagic (which had an IPO at a $300 million valuation and achieved a market cap of $600 million), and Centillium Communications (which had an IPO at a $700 million valuation and achieved a market cap of over $4 billion). He is currently the Chairman and Co-Founder of Global Catalyst Partners, an international, multistage, technology-oriented venture capital firm that has invested in leading-edge technology companies in the U.S., China, Japan and Israel. Mr. Kamran is also the Chairman and Co-Founder of the Global Catalyst Foundation, a private foundation established by the principals of Global Catalyst Partners.
-
Expect Labs At The CES Mobile Apps Showdown
วีดีโอ
80%872 ดูWatch Expect Labs' CEO Tim Tuttle present MindMeld at the CES Mobile Apps Showdown. Video courtesy of Living in Digital Times.
-
Moving Beyond the App with Trevor Roald
วีดีโอ
80%1,314 ดูAt the recent AIBTM event at McCormick Place in Chicago, Trevor Roald of QuickMobile took a minute to sit by the Pool and share his thoughts on the future of mobile technology and event apps. Rather than take a “whiz bang” view of app features, Trevor focuses on the business objectives of mobile apps and that that can mean to meetings, events, and the bottom line.
-
The Technology Strategy Board
วีดีโอ
80%1,173 ดูThe Technology Strategy Board
-
Business | Negocios
วีดีโอ
80%1,570 ดูe-mail: inportuguese@gmx.co.uk phone: +44(0)7 952 552 195 skype ID: sky.in.portuguese website: voiceoverinportuguese.com Client: SAP sap.com/index.html SAP AG is a German multinational software corporation that makes enterprise software to manage business operations and customer relations. Headquartered in Walldorf, Baden-Württemberg, Germany, with regional offices around the world.
-
Development of Private Equity in China
วีดีโอ
80%907 ดูCapture a rare insight from the grass roots of Chinese private equity. Introducing Shaojun Wang, founder of Beijing Capital Investment Co., Ltd and pioneer of venture capital and private equity in China. Watch out for more episodes on PE in China and how foreign investors are gaining exposure to China's growing agriculture, clean energy, and healthcare technology sectors. For more information email: info@genevaroadshow.tv
-
MegaMind Brain Supplement Review
วีดีโอ
80%874 ดูexcelerol.com Watch a product review of the brain supplement ( MegaMind Brain Supplement). We instead recommend excelerol. Excelerol is a new cutting edge nutraceutical dietary supplement. Excelerol supports memory, focus, concentration and alertness. The ingredients in excelerol are backed by extensive clinical and scientific research. Some people say that excelrol is the best brain supplement . Excelerol's unique blend of high quality active ingredients and unique liquid capsule suspension technology make sure that you have the highest quality in every capsule. Although many of the ingredients in excelerol such as citicoline and phosphatidylserine have a significant amount of scientific based research we make no claims as to what benefits you might enjoy from our product. Excelerol is part herbal supplement and part nutraceutical. Several of it's ingredients like citicoline and phosphatidylserine may be important chemical nutrients for the brain.
-
International Trade and the Role of Technology
วีดีโอ
80%1,004 ดูReynold Martens, Executive VP, GHY International ghy.com, shares his insight as author of 2 leading white papers on the subject of Trade Compliance Strategy and the role that technology plays as the glue that binds it all together.
-
planphilly
วีดีโอ
80%1,506 ดูIn the 1930s and 1940s, baseball was played at the 44th and Parkside Ballpark, where the originally Negro National League-affiliated Philadelphia Stars began a legacy that community organizers are attempting to restore for future generations. Today a memorial park, located at Belmont and Parkside avenues, commemorates the site where the Philadelphia Stars once played. The Philadelphia City Planning Commission, along with grassroots organizations such as the Business Association of West Parkside, the Parkside Association of Philadelphia and the Philadelphia Business and Technology Center, is looking to create a memorial baseball field for the historic team near its original location.
-
Corps plots to improve processes
วีดีโอ
80%1,101 ดูThe U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Nashville District is plotting to use geospatial data to improve its processes across the full spectrum of operations business lines by offering geospatial information systems basic training to its employees. The technology is expected to reduce wasted time and effort searching for hard copy files contained in filing cabinets while increasing availability to digital data, which would be accessible online for both internal and public use. (Video by Lee Roberts)
-
enabling the adoption of new technologies
วีดีโอ
80%985 ดูThe "American Idol" example is fantastic, because "American Idol", the first time it was run 7.5 million people texted in, which is interesting, because it was the largest single mobile texting event in the world, and even more interesting, because America at that point had a very low mobile phone penetration.But the interesting thing that got me very excited was that 30 per cent of those people had never sent in a text message before, and I think that is really interesting, because “American Idol" was creating the context for people to want to change that behaviour around technology.Now I would say, as a brand strategist, or advising as a consultant to another mobile telecoms operator, or even in fact a mobile phone manufacturer, who are producing more and more complex technology: You are the ones that should have done "American Idol", you are the ones that should have created the format, because I believe that you never tell anyone that you are going to educate them. You tell them you are going to give them a really good time, you entertain them, and that can be done in all sorts of really interesting ways.
-
the holy grail of happiness
วีดีโอ
80%942 ดูApparently we have an ability to project ourselves in an ideal situation. This has a Plato dimension. But somehow we have an idea of an ultimate state, like we also develop ideas of an ultimate being. We are not sure other mammals are doing the same thing. I'm definitely not sure other mammals are not doing the same thing. But we know this about human beings and apparently we need this too. We need this to suffer and we also need this for our redemption. This ultimate state is a projection to live for. But in our state of ‘makeability’, we think we can actually reach this in this lifetime. There's something else. We have combined our enlightenment and our age of reason and our state of technology. This is very dangerous, because we can make everything. At the same time, we are denying the things we could believe in, like the hereafter. Since we are not really believing this anymore, we have to do it in this lifetime. So this lifetime is the time into which we have to cram everything. We have to fill it with kicks. We have to fill it with events. We have to fill it with the ultimate things. We have to see that we matter during this lifetime, and that we leave something behind, and that we have significance. And sometimes we have a very short life to do this. So we have a kind of urge and we have a kind of pressure to do this. I think the transition is that people are now trying to have more identity, to find more acknowledgement, they are juggling these concepts of image and identity and roles and selves. Recognition and acknowledgement and significance during this lifetime.
-
Rossem: 60,000 Years of Globalization
วีดีโอ
80%840 ดูMy idea is that it’s a little bizarre to use the term globalization to refer to the last quarter of a century. Especially in the Netherlands, a country that has been living off a worldwide trade system since the 16th century and was the wealthiest nation in the world for two centuries because of the exploitation of that worldwide trade system, with the aid of very modern financial arrangements. That’s odd, but the experts disagree about that. There are some who say, like I do: Globalization is as old as humanity, or at least as old as Columbus, who drew North and South America and parts of Oceania into that trade system. Or not he himself, but the European expansion that followed in his wake. While the opposing standpoint is that that’s all true, but that the explosive increase in volume is so large that, using the classical Marxist dictum, quantity changes into quality, so that we should now speak of a qualitatively new development. Personally, I don’t agree with that. For me, globalization started 60,000 years ago, when Homo sapiens was so fed up with the insects and the heat that they left East Africa and at a relatively rapid speed, considering the limited technology, populated the entire world. With the exception of Antarctica, but still the whole earth. 40,000 years ago it was done. By then they’d crossed to Australia. How they did that is a mystery. But the species initiated globalization a long time ago.
-
Lang: Control life vs democratize food
วีดีโอ
80%917 ดูMany people are looking to genetic engineering, biotechnology... To what I call the 'nomics', the proteomics, nutrigenomics, etc. Lots of, essentially unlocking the gene. The double helix. That we now know what it is, it has been mapped for humans, etc. There is a whole argument that that biotechnology revolution has barely begun. And that it can provide the answer to all my new fundamentals. In much the way that the green revolution did in the 1970's. Plant-breeding revolution developed in the 1960's at, in wheat and rice, and a little bit in potatoes. The technology is there. By large most of us think it is irrelevant actually, the huge international assessment of agricultural science technology in development. 450 scientist from around the world collaborated and looked at the future of food. And essentially said, mainly looking for Africa. So the genetic engineering is irrelevant. It is actually re-schilling people, enabling small farmers to conserve their soil, conserve water, to be more sustainable, would actually both improve them and also create more food and create jobs at the same time. It is a different vision. So we have the high-tech vision and a low-tech vision. So it is not a question of technology or not, but which technology and how, and under whose control. And that, as we know in Europe, has been the fight of the genetic engineering in food. Actually it was a fight about company control. And that the science, the technology was being distorted. It was built around preserving individual agrichemical companies, connection between their products and plants. So making their plant seed resistant to their agrichemical. This was controlling life, not democratizing food
-
Designing sustainist solution for climate change
วีดีโอ
80%663 ดูA sustainist may not look very different from people who've been campaigning for lower carbon footprints and things that help with the climate change. That's certainly the case. But whereas certainly historically in this sort of sloganeer way like ecology and technology were opposites. And you were either, you know, if you go for technology you were sort of damaging the environment, and if you were an ecologist, you were very wary about what technology you use and technology itself was a sort of sometimes a demon. From a sustainist point of view, with this accepting the complex world, accepting that we're on this juncture where connectivity and localism and sustainability are all part of our new culture, that these are no longer opposites. You can be, you know, you have a cause already, whole decades of history of like green tech or eco-tech or whatever, in the technical fields we know that. But if you look at it culturally, it's quite a shift to not position technology with ecology. So the sustainist view is also sometimes we have to refrain from certain behaviours or buying certain things if we want our carbon footprints down. Sometimes we can have better technologies and have a lower carbon footprint, so then technology becomes not the problem but it becomes the answer. I'm not arguing that there's always a technical fix, but that automatism, that no, you can't use technology to get your carbon footprint down, you have to change your lifestyle, that is like, that's the old way, and sustainist is the new way where you look very critically of course on which technology you use, not just whether they are environmentally sound, but also whether the technology increases or decreases connection, for example, with your locality or with your friends or with things that you find important on the other side of the world. So it changes the question and the phase we're in now, the moment that's emerging is what are then those new criteria for sustainist development and sustainist design and sustainist solutions, given that climate change is not going away. It's going to get worse, unless we change. I mean, we caused it, so we also better think about how to make the change to turn the corner.
-
Power: People adjusting to smart technology
วีดีโอ
80%688 ดูIt certainly helps that you can do everything on a smart phone or in the cloud and everything is sort of out there, you know. I find it very interesting that kids don't have anything anymore. They don't have any LPs, any books, any DVDs. They don't have anything. You can go to their houses, I go to their houses and they haven't got anything. They just have a laptop and a smart phone, that's it. So is it smart people? It's people choosing to adjust to the technology. And the technology is probably more advanced than most people can cope with, and there's more information being generated. Now, as one of the guys said today, there's more information generated in the medical healthcare profession each year than there was in the previous thousand years. So now the information is coming faster than it can be even consumed. That's like food going into your mouth before you can chew and swallow. So I think you have to then filter. I use a filtering system called My6Sense, a little app on Android and iPhone, and that filters my Ecademy blogs, my tweets, my friends feed, my LinkedIn, my Facebook, my Twitter. It filters them all, and based on the way I use it, it learns, it's intelligent learning, and it just gets smarter and smarter and smarter and smarter. So even with all this data coming in, it's actually quite easy to manage and not stressful. It's only stressful when you don't know how to manage it. When you don't understand something, it's more stressful. But the thing I've learned with the internet is when you don't understand something, it's really important. The moment you don't understand something, it's really important. Like kids with Twitter. I say to my kids, you don't understand Twitter, you don't understand Twitter. And they go, oh Dad, it's not important. I say, trust me, it's important.
-
hiding the technology from its function
วีดีโอ
80%827 ดูIf we think about the user of the computer, the main feature is making it much easier and less complicated to customize the way the computer or the software application works. And I think we already see this in Web 2.0 and things like Facebook. They give really an enormous and unprecedented amount of flexibility to the end-user to customize the way those things look, the way they work, the way they interact with other programs. Not so long ago, if you had tried to do that you really needed a degree in computer science. Yet kids, everyone can use something like Facebook. What that shows us is that there is a way to make computing much more natural, to hide the technology from the actual functioning of the technology. I think that in the end will probably be the central feature of this new model.
-
Sennet: Passive relation to technology
วีดีโอ
80%759 ดูIt's true that there are ways in which not having to think about one thing frees us to think about something else. But against that, I'd say the problem is this, that when we make something, we have to think about what we're making. And when we encounter resistance, difficulty, our address to those sorts of challenges makes us more skilled. If you take a project and you take someone else's model for your own behaviour, you become just as good as what you're programmed to be. You never build up skills. So using social networking sites, for instance, you don't actually build up skills of friendships, because the level of competence is predetermined by the programme. This is an important issue when we think about cooperation, real-world cooperation about demanding projects. If we just think that the media tools that we're using are just sort of passive instruments, we're really succumbing to a kind of hidden logic in those tools, which says that you're going to get no more skilled at communication than what has been set into the programme. My concern about all of this is that a passive relation to technology ultimately is de-skilling to the user. That's why I've become so interested in the whole question about craftsmanship. And my belief is that there's something we can learn from material craftsmanship that will help us understand better how to engage with and become better craftsmen in using very new kinds of tools, which are largely disembodied. They're screen tools rather than hand tools. Which means that we have to rethink things like user-friendliness, whether this is really an overarching goal. When we want a tool to be user-friendly, i.e., that someone else did the thinking for us, and when we want tools that are more open, more indeterminate, and more difficult to use, but in which we built up a skill in ourselves by addressing that difficulty.
-
Rao: Push and pull of technology and culture
วีดีโอ
80%832 ดูI think the answer to the connection between technology and culture is two-way. One is, definitely technology does shape culture. For instance, if you look at the culture of learning now. Many people begin with doing a Google search or a Twitter search or something to find something. Second, you can't really push culture the way you want to sometimes. Sometimes culture must decide when to adopt a technology. Finding this balance between push and pull of technology versus culture and culture versus technology is a whole Holy Grail of innovation, marketing, new kinds of media, etc. . For instance definitely Google has changed the way a lot of kids these days do their homework and schoolwork. But at the same time, suppose I want to push 3G in a new country, I can't just tell people: "Hey, do 3G." And they will do it. So that's a good example of the push and the pull. The students who pull Google into their working habits, but a marketeer cannot push the technology into a culture. So a lot depends on when a culture is ready to accept new ideas and when a culture is innovative enough to accept new kinds of things and new types of tools. Only then will you find the correct answer between these.
-
Indicators of fluidity - improving product design
วีดีโอ
80%754 ดูAll of these things, energy maybe not so much - but time, attention and stress are fluid and situation matters. An individual mood even matters. There are times when I do want to get there by walking, because I want to take longer, because I have the time and that's more relaxing. So, I'm actually getting something back. I'm gaining from an expenditure. Why would I pay all this money, go across town, rush to sit in my seat and listen to a piano concert for an hour and a half? Because I'm getting something from it and I'm getting more than I gave. These trade offs are actually important and we're doing them all the time, explicitly and inexplicitly. I would say that what a culture or a society emphasises is a way of characterizing its preference for certain kinds of living, early kinds of living. Café society, siesta time, not rushing dinner, all of these are indications of a particular fluidity. Which maybe we're losing with al the technology and the constant awe and all that kind of thing. The focus on this and the ability to be aware of it, I think, also improves product design. Because if I have a product that's a delight to use and takes a little longer, but is easy to remember, that's going to be preferential to its opposite. You can actually do a kind of comparison, but it's very subjective. Putting this awareness in the mind of designers is very fulfilling.
-
Riley: Technology around human needs
วีดีโอ
80%626 ดูWe're all getting older, we need better health care. Number two: We're all getting older, and our ability to work is changing, and so therefore there is a worldwide growth and demand for education. And education used to be organized around factories, and now it needs to be organized around knowledge and mobility and all of those kind of things. Those are two drivers: Number one, more people need more health care more of the time more affordably; number two, more people need more education more of the time more affordably. So if you were looking forward ten years, you'd be asking questions about, Okay, well, how does that manifest? And how can technology answer? So then if you look at say education, there are issues that range from 'You know what, the world is an interesting place, I just want to improve myself' to 'You know, I've got some pretty serious study to do to get accredited and get a different kind of job.' Or, I just came back from Bangladesh, if you're in Bangladesh, everybody is really hungry for a good education, but nobody can afford it. So the problem there is: How can you distribute education efficiently to a large number of people? Because you know that they really want to be educated. So what are they wanting to be educated in? and so on. So I think technologies are going to really move quickly to begin to answer these really big human needs, of which I have just mentioned two. But those two alone will transform the world. If you can figure out how to educate people throughout their entire life relatively affordably and easily, and solve the problem of accreditation, and distribute it globally... Well, recent uprisings in the Middle East just become a warmer pact to whole-sale transformation of the way people live their lives. So it's way more interesting than Twitter, right? Twitter is just like where we all gossip and we all like to share stuff, but it's capped, it's kind of 'get the news out' behavior, and sometimes that's really significant in countries that have limited access to good media, and sometimes it's just really annoying, in America, when politicians are twittering that they've gone to good restaurants, or they've just voted on a bill, that's kind of annoying. But you can actually see that these underlying drivers are going to start being answered by technology, and they are very, very, very disruptive.
-
McCracken: Impact of social media on culture
วีดีโอ
80%872 ดูThe impact of social media on culture has been extraordinary. I think it's really encouraged people to define themselves... to define the self very differently and to define the group very differently. The metaphor I use here is maybe not a perfect metaphor, but I think selves are cloudier, more multiple, you have more connections with more people, you have a more diverse sense of self, and now these platforms for exploring aspects of the self and connecting with people like you. And then the social group is now extraordinarily different. I mean, I grew up in a world in which social connections began to atrophy almost immediately upon your introduction to someone. Unless you kept in touch the connection atrophied. And if you left it too long, you would have to get to know them all over again. You'd have to go through the rituals of introduction and you'd have closed the distance, and that just doesn't... If you're fifteen, you will never lose a friend. They'll end up as part of your cloud. You may not be in active contact with them, but you can get back in touch with them instantaneously and they can make themselves enormously useful to you when you do get in touch. So that's changed. The fundamental dynamics of selfhood, both instrumental and expressive, have been changed by the social media. Not just the dynamics of selfhood, but the dynamics of the social group. So that's clear. I would hope that these technologies... I think we're just beginning to glimpse... To be more professional about culture, I think we need better metrics, and I'm hoping social media will supply some of those metrics, so that we'll be able to... You know, if you just take something simple like a word cloud, where you get words from a blog in their size proportional to the number of times the word is used in the blog, that's a wonderfully accessible visual way to represent the content of a blog. You just need to look at it to get a sense of who this person is and where they are. So that's a wonderful instrument for keeping track of... I love the idea of dynamic word clouds where you can see key terms to the extent that they're genuinely picking something up, and that's really the art of the deal. Creating instruments that are really detecting things happening in culture as opposed to something epiphenomenal. But if you can do that, this is really a great opportunity to see things changing in real time. And that's my hope, that eventually we'll have big boards hooked up to streams of real-time data, that allow us to see changes happen in real time. Because we're kind of getting there. As it is now, we can hope to go out there and get a snapshot of the culture, but we now know things are changing so quickly that that snapshot is out of date within 48 hours or a couple of weeks. So at some point, we're going to need real-time feeds, and they're going to have to be data-based and so... My favourite example here is a project done by a couple of guys at MIT, I'm not going to think of their names off-hand. As an experiment they put cameras in the trees of Cambridge. The purpose of the camera was to register only the colour of the clothing worn by people who walked by the camera. So all of Cambridge, from the Harvard side to the MIT side, cameras were watching that community. And so they can show you colours rippling through the community as they become fashionable and they show in the stores. The nice thing about Cambridge is that it's not a very big community, but there's a huge difference between the student body at Harvard and at MIT. You can see colours rippling through Harvard and then just stopping at that part of the community and never making it to MIT. You can see MIT being relatively unsystematic in its colour choices, because it's just not very fashion-driven. So that's an example of real-time data, and nobody really cares about how kids in Cambridge dress, but you can imagine putting cameras of this kind in a neighbourhood in Paris filled with fashionistas or the next generation of fashion adopters. And for Roitfeld, the editor of the Paris Vogue, to sit at her computer and watch this neighbourhood as she launches the fall Vogue, and she knows when it's hit the stands and she'll watch these colours get into the system and then onto the street and then ripple through some neighbourhoods and not other neighbourhoods. Fantastically interesting. So I'm hoping the social media and other uses of digitally-based technology will give us better data.
-
Scott Brenton: The Mission of the Orr Fellowship
วีดีโอ
80%1,119 ดูScott Brenton: The Mission of the Orr Fellowship
-
LR’s Global Technology Centre in Southampton
วีดีโอ
80%1,400 ดูLloyd's Register's Global Technology Centre is the cornerstone of our global marine research and technology network, find out more about some of the exciting work we are doing there in this video. This is a clip from the film 'A Maritime Nation', produced by the UK Chamber of Shipping and ITN Productions. Find out more at lr.org/gtc
-
Trans-Plan My Green Route Intro 2011
วีดีโอ
80%923 ดูTrans-Plan is on the way towards a green eceonomy. As a team whose guiding principle is to think outside the box, we are invested in the design and devlopment of innovative solutions that use eco friendly resources. We would like to enncounrage everyone in the community to find their own road to help solve environemental problems. We invite everyone to do all kinds of things in their communities to enhance green technology. Trans-Plan endevours to do its part. Our aim is to modernize the transportation and traffic engineering sector but also to promote energy efficiency. Aside from designing and developing sustainable solutions, we have organized "My Green Route" to serve as a venue for everyone to discuss and share view on how we can be more involved in the betterment of our community.
-
1st Saudi graduate at Stanford in 15 years
วีดีโอ
80%870 ดูFahad Al Saud is a social entrepreneur, innovative philanthropist and devoted humanitarian. A Stanford graduate in engineering, he joined Facebook as Analyst & Head of User Operations Arabic in 2008, which earned him the distinction of being named Most Influential International Youth at the 2011 Arab Youth Media Forum. A frequent NATO lecturer on the Middle East’s social media & privacy issues, Fahad’s contributions to the privacy and security sectors gave rise to his 2011 appointment as Ambassador of Privacy to the Arab World by Dr. Anna Cavokian, Canada’s Information & Privacy Commissioner. Currently, Fahad consults the Saudi government on cyber-technology and other youth focused capacity building programs within his home Kingdom; he has successfully introduced a number of ventures in online gaming and social networking, including KSA’s first “Start-up weekend”. In October 2012, Playsino acquired Fahad’s Popover Games, a multi-player heritage games company for Facebook and other mobile platforms. As co-founder, Fahad was pivotal in one of the first international sales of an Arab-owned social gaming company. His latest venture continues to align with his pride in the Middle East: NA3M (New Arabic Media), which represents a new age commitment to entrepreneurship in the region, through the support of technologically driven start-up companies.
-
Three Critical Factors to Building a Team
วีดีโอ
80%836 ดูJeff is a serial entrepreneur in the internet, technology, and entertainment industries. He has founded, co-founded, and been the CEO of numerous start-ups and larger companies, and has led his companies through acquisitions and public offerings (Priceline.com, uBid.com, CTI, and others). Recently Jeff was inducted into the Entrepreneur’s Hall of Fame by the CEO Council, and as a board member of numerous international entrepreneurship organizations he travels the world mentoring and speaking to entrepreneurs globally (recently Egypt, Malaysia, Peru, Algeria, Spain, and more). Currently, Jeff is a co-founder and partner at ColorJar, the Idea Accelerator that helps entrepreneurs launch and grow their businesses. Jeff has produced feature films (Cabin Fever), hosted music concerts and tours (Elton John, Boyz II Men, others), and sponsored charity events (NSYNC, Evander Holyfield, others), and serves on boards of both businesses and non-profits in the US, Europe, Asia, and Africa.
-
The Need to MAKE - Meet David Yepez
วีดีโอ
80%1,204 ดู“As a kid...I always had to be physical, to be crafting, making something.” Meet David Yepez, a woodworker who comes to 3rd Ward to make extraordinary furniture, grow his business, and get inspired. ------- 3rd Ward is a 30,000 square foot one-stop shop for education, creativity, innovation, and more. 3rd Ward offers multi-disciplinary classes, flexible workspace, and a fun, inspiring community. Facilities include photo studios, media lab, wood/metal shop, jewelry studio, and more. Its frequent events and diverse class curriculum make 3rd Ward approachable to anyone -- whether you make a living off your art and design, or are a 9-5er looking to unwind in the off-hours. 3rd Ward 195 Morgan Avenue, Brooklyn NY 11237
-
O2 Campaign: Master your Business
วีดีโอ
80%920 ดูO2 and advertising agency VCCP have released a new brilliant video recently. The commercial is from the “Be More Dog” campaign. Watch the videos and have a good laugh.
-
Bronze Real Estate Video Package
วีดีโอ
80%1,122 ดูThis is our Bronze Package for your next real estate listing. § Fully Customized Intro - listing agent or property owner can be listed and as much or as little of the address as desired. § 60 minutes of flying on location, includes exterior photos and video only. § BackYard highlight (can also be substituted for another aspect of the house where special emphasis can be placed) - we will showcase your deck, pool, entertaining space or property lines. § A Unique Line of Discovery through your property - this will be a continuous shot that cannot be achieved through traditional videography and will showcase the capability of UAV technology. § Aerial Survey of the Surrounding Area(s) - included to give location perspective § 2-3 minutes of professionally edited video - which can be downloaded or embedded on any social media or website platforms § 2 hours of post producing editing, will include 1 revision (complete redesign will have additional costs). § travel fees may apply. $250.00 - Bronze Package (loyalty discount, military discount available).
-
KDY Conversations: Daan Roosegaarde
วีดีโอ
80%1,258 ดูWatch the Founder of Studio Roosegarde – Daan Roosegarde's interview at Kyoorius Designyatra 2015. Artist and innovator Daan Roosegaarde (1979) is internationally known for creating social designs that explore the relation between people, technology and space. His Studio Roosegaarde is the social design lab with his team of designers and engineers based in the Netherlands and Shanghai. Roosegaarde is Young Global Leader at the World Economic Forum, in the top 5 of Sustainable Trouw 100 as most influential Dutch green leader, and selected as Talent of the Year 2015 by Kunstweek. With projects ranging from fashion to architecture his interactive designs such as Dune, Intimacy and Smart Highway are tactile high-tech environments in which viewer and space become one. This connection, established between ideology and technology, results in what Roosegaarde calls ‘techno-poetry’. Roosegaarde has won the INDEX Design Award, World Technology Award, two Dutch Design Awards, Charlotte Köhler Award, Accenture Innovation Award, and China’s Most Successful Design Award. He has been the focus of exhibitions at Rijksmuseum Amsterdam, Tate Modern, National Museum in Tokyo, Victoria and Albert Museum, and various public spaces in Rotterdam and Hong Kong. Selected by Forbes and Good 100 as a creative change-maker, Daan Roosegaarde is a frequent invited lecturer at international conferences such as TED and Design Indaba, and TV media guest at De Wereld Draait Door and CNN. [Edited by Aneesh Malankar; Copyright © Kyoorius 2015. All rights reserved.]
-
Corporate video that tells global story in minutes
วีดีโอ
80%618 ดูA montage of video, interviews and still images of a leading global technology company, this classic corporate video tells a complex story international story in under five minutes.
-
Folders - The Business App
วีดีโอ
80%933 ดู„How does a real estate agent named Steve and an eccentric billionaire with her three poodles relate to a serious business app?" Watch the commercial and experience how much Folders - The Business App - simplifies your business activities. Find out more at folders-app.com Title: Folders – The Business App Product: Folders Production Company: Cyclonfilms, Capetown Director: Daniel Bruce Company: novomate AG/movento Schweiz AG Copyright © 2013. novomate AG/movento Schweiz AG. All rights reserved.
-
Local Business Internet Videos Interviews
วีดีโอ
80%1,360 ดูCLICK >>> LocalVIDEObiz.tv Local Business Internet Videos Interviews with Local Marketing Guy, Rob Smith is the most unique internet video interviewing web site. Local businesses will not only be able to highlight their service and share the video with their customers, clients and prospects, but the video will be launched to multiple video sharing sites, social bookmarking sites and ping Google. This is not like the local news outlet that is that has an online video interviewing site, but this has real online marketing value with keyword loaded videos that favor the local business on a web site that have a new media marketing blogging web site. The unique thing about web sites like this, local businesses will be able to do this themselves. The goal is to one, get out and meet local businesses across the United States and give them an one time marketing value with the keyword loaded blog and video launch on LocalVIDEObiz.tv to give them relevance in the local market place(s) online. This can be achieved by any business by themselves if they use web sites tools like what LocalVIDEObiz.tv. If you need help acquiring a new media marketing tool like Local VIDEO Biz, just ask The Local Marketing Guy - Rob Smith. > Rob Smith The Local Marketing Guy LocalVIDEObiz@gmail.com 970-430-6020
-
Nick Costides for the Enterprise Mobile Summit
วีดีโอ
80%979 ดูVP of Customer Technology at UPS, Nick Costides shares his excitement about the future of mobile technology and hints at what he will be speaking about at the Enterprise Mobile Summit in Atlanta on March 14, 2013.
-
Why Intelligent Assistants Will Become Pervasive
วีดีโอ
80%998 ดูWhy will smart personal assistants soon be found everywhere? Listen to our founder outline the three technology trends that will contribute to the ubiquity of intelligent assistants. TRANSCRIPT: Hi, I'm Tim Tuttle. I'm the CEO of Expect Labs. At our company, we are building technology to make it easy to build these intelligent assistants that can understand the things that you say and find the right information for you. We're at a really remarkable time in the evolution of this technology and within just a few years, most of us are going to be using these intelligent assistants routinely everywhere. They'll be in every application that we use. They'll be the primary interface for many applications that we use to find information. They're going to be in our home; we'll be able to interact with our devices by voice. They'll be in our office; many of the applications that we use at work everyday will have these intelligent assistants. When I say this, a lot of people are skeptical, because scientists have been talking about these AI assistants for a long time and they haven't really emerged. And on top of that, some people have used some of the early versions of intelligent assistants, maybe an early version of Siri or another intelligent assistant, and they haven't necessarily worked very well. Well, we think all that's going to change. We think it's going to change because of a few basic reasons that finally make this possible for the first time. The first reason is that the advances that have happened in machine learning techniques over the past few years have seen dramatic improvements in the accuracy of these systems. Specifically, you look at something like speech recognition where the accuracy of speech recognition systems stayed roughly constant for nearly a decade. In recent years, the accuracy has improved dramatically due to techniques like deep learning and the availability of large data sets. And this is happening across many of these large unstructured problems that scientists have been trying to solve for awhile. So that's very exciting. Many of these core AI problems will be solved. The second reason that we think intelligent assistants is going to become pervasive is because we now live in a world where we use so many devices everyday, and these devices have great sensors that allow us to capture these contextual signals that become very informative about what types of information they want at specific times. And so we have wearables, we have mobile phones that are with us. We are in rooms that have all these connected devices. And these devices can see and hear us and measure other data signals. That becomes very powerful to be able to have a system be intelligent about what you want. So, that's never happened before. We've never lived in this world with so many devices. And then the third reason that it's going to happen is because for many types of devices, it's absolutely essential. It really is the only way that you can interact with devices. And I'm talking about things like wearables, or Google Glass, or your connected home, your thermostat, where there is no keyboard, there is no large touchscreen. So, if you want to be able to interact with these devices, it has to be through voice and very coarse-grained touch gestures and so it'll be critical for making those devices useful.
-
How It Works: Smarter Commerce
วีดีโอ
80%1,480 ดูThe 'how' and 'why' of smarter commerce — told through hand-drawn illustrations and simple narration.
-
How It Works: Analytics
วีดีโอ
80%1,551 ดูInformation is flowing like mighty rivers from a trillion connected and intelligent things . . .