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My Digital Universe

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Much of my life, & almost all of my work, takes place online. I design online courses for a living; I do our banking & much of our shopping online. We use Roku to access streaming movies & television shows. I download blogs, personal documents & ebooks to read on my Kindle.

I am immersed in the web: digital artifacts entertain and provide the content I crave for personal and intellectual growth. This tree is my attempt to organize the essential tools I use to participate and interact in connecected online environments. I have also included skills that I want to develop that will strengthen my presence on the web and improve my ability to interact with other digital citizens. Welcome to my digital universe. Photos du journal. Blockly - A visual programming editor.

A Necessary Call to Action: Addressing the Digital Imperative. The digital revolution—the pervasive incorporation of digital technology into virtually everything—is arguably the greatest force of change in today’s economy. Across industries and regions, digital innovation is disrupting traditional businesses and giving rise to a sweeping range of new capabilities, products, services, channels and competitors. For most organizations, responding to digital opportunities and threats has become a matter of necessity, not choice. And the response must go beyond mere tinkering; digital lip service will not suffice. Instead, the digital imperative calls for wholesale transformation that cuts across every aspect of how companies engage externally and operate internally. And the magnitude of these transformations requires transformational leadership. It‘s Different This Time Skepticism in the face of such claims is understandable. No Exemptions from Digital Transformation Third, market forces are changing the rules that govern how all the players interact.

Linux. Top 7 Most In-Demand Tech Skills For 2013. If you promised yourself you were going to beef up your tech skills in 2013, now is the time to get moving. But where to start? With so many languages, platforms, protocols and other technologies, it's hard to know what's worth spending your limited free time to learn. Based on surveys and data from a variety of sources, ReadWrite has put together a list of seven of the most sought-after tech skills for this year. 7. All Things "Cloud" The cloud computing craze is still going strong, if tech job hiring trends are any indication. Specifically, companies are looking for software developers who specialize in things like virtualization and Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) development, with familiarity with Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS) technologies.

According to one survey of IT execs, 25% of companies are planning on hiring people with SaaS and related cloud-computing expertise in 2013. See also: Tech Jobs in 2013: Open Source All The Way Down 6. 5. 4. 3. 2. iOS Development. 10 Technology Skills That Will No Longer Help You Get A Job. Update: Want to know what happend to the engineer in the 1976 photo above? Click here to find out how he he managed to stay relevant for almost 40 years: How To Thrive In The Tech Industry For Decades. If you want to know the most in-demand tech skills, that info is readily available. Want to learn the programming skills most coveted by employers? Done. But what are the skills and specialties that no one wants any more? (See also the Top 7 Most In Demand Tech Skills For 2013 and 15 Programming Skills Most Coveted By Employers.) A survey of 1,100 tech-hiring professionals by Dice, a job firm for tech professionals, offers some insight. 1. Many IT professionals, from engineers to help desk support workers to system administrators, have significant XP experience.

(See also Microsoft Is Trying To Sell Windows 8 To Enterprises, But Most Want Windows 7 Instead.) 2. Web developers, app developers and designers have long relied on Adobe Flash to create interactive features. It did not. 3. 4. 5. Gozaik Blog. Pearl Reviews. Am - a fun and beautiful way to animate your photos. About. 2.0 Released. You asked for it, you got it: jQuery 2.0 has arrived! As promised, this version leaves behind the older Internet Explorer 6, 7, and 8 browsers. In return it is smaller, faster, and can be used in JavaScript environments where the code needed for old-IE compatibility often causes problems of its own. But don’t worry, the jQuery team still supports the 1.x branch which does run on IE 6/7/8. You can (and should) continue to use jQuery 1.9 (and the upcoming 1.10) on web sites that need to accommodate older browsers.

Where to Get It The final jQuery 2.0.0 files can be found here on the jQuery CDN: The files should also be available on the Google and Microsoft CDNs soon, but please give these folks a few days before releasing a storm of impatient tweets. If you’re upgrading from a version before 1.9, we recommend that you use the jQuery Migrate plugin and read the jQuery 1.9 Upgrade Guide, since there have been a lot of changes. How to Use It How 2.0 Changed What’s Next Who Helped How You Can Help. Coding Is the Must-Have Job Skill of the Future. Fast forward to 2020. What job skill must you have?

Coding. Well, we may be getting ahead of ourselves slightly. It's uncertain that HTML and CSS in their current form will be on the menu of the next decade. But what we do know is, for the foreseeable future, coding is one of the most important and desirable skills there is, no matter how it evolves. Coding is the new black. For those of us grown up and out of grammar school, there are two schools of thought: specialized education programs or teaching yourself. Like anything daunting, there may be some understandable hesitation about just how to jump in the water.

Asher Hunt, leading mobile designer at customer engagement management company LivePerson (formerly Look.IO), sees at it as a way to control the visual UI/UX (user interface, user experience) of a site. "Learning HTML and CSS creates a really valuable way for people to efficiently design for the web," explains Hunt. If this is too jargony for you, fear not. Digital learning foundation. Top 50 Computer Science Blogs : Comtechtor. In 2007, computer science lecturer Neil McBride argued that computer science was going the way of Latin languages…that a variety of factors might contribute to the death of this field, including robots, lack of interest and progress in computing itself.

Three years later, computer science seems to be holding its own and expanding into fields such as physics and game theory. At the moment, it’s no more dead than history. The following blogs exhibit life in the computer science field, from blogs for beginners to complex theoretical blogs that can challenge the best minds in this field. Computer Science Computational Complexity and Theory The Juncture of Physics and Computer Science dotphysics: Rhett Allain is an Associate Professor of Physics at Southeastern Louisiana University.

Did you just love this post? A Highlight and Note by tomparm from The New Digital Age: Reshaping the Future of People, Nations and Business. A Highlight and Note by tomparm from The New Digital Age: Reshaping the Future of People, Nations and Business. A Highlight and Note by tomparm from The New Digital Age: Reshaping the Future of People, Nations and Business. A Highlight and Note by tomparm from a Personal Document. Twitter. Related Pearltrees. Professional. Open source P2P digital currency. Gavin Andresen, Bitcoin Architect: Meet The Man Bringing You Bitcoin (And Getting Paid In It) Depending on whom you ask and when, Gavin Andresen is either bitcoin’s greatest champion or out to destroy the virtual currency. Andresen serves as the chief scientist of the Bitcoin Foundation, a group modeled after the Linux foundation that aims to provide some organization to bitcoin’s expansion, from establishing new ways to process transactions, to maintaining the Bitcoin.org site.

A kind of cash for the Internet, bitcoin marks the world’s first online, decentralized currency supported by peer-to-peer transactions, rather than government backing. Since mid March, the value of a single bitcoin skyrocketed from $47 to a record high of $250, then fell back down to its current price of around $72. Andresen acts as arbiter and architect for the bitcoin community and helps coordinate improvements to the core bitcoin software used by the worldwide community. Bitcoin prides itself on being a decentralized currency supported by a decentralized group. You’re paid in bitcoin. Stephen's Web ~ Stephen's Web.

OLDaily ~ by Stephen Downes. By Stephen Downes April 8, 2014 What Books Should Every Intelligent Person Read? : Tell Us Your Picks; We’ll Tell You OursDan Colman, Open Culture, April 8, 2014 I find the lists offered by Dan Colman and Neil DeGrasse Tyson to be a bit parochial, steeped in (their) local culture and issues of the day. Why else include Darwin and de Tocqueville? Why else include the Bible but not the Qu'ran or the Upanisads, or Sun Tzu but not Lao Tze? So, what would my list of (say, top ten) must-reads be? Rene Descartes, MeditationsDavid Hume, An Enquiry Concerning Human UnderstandingJohn Stuart Mill, On LibertyUrsula K.

Why these? [Link] [Comment] Digital Canada 150Press Release, Government of Canada, April 8, 2014 The Canadian government announces its digital economy strategy: "our vision is for a thriving digital Canada, underscored by five key pillars: connecting Canadians, protecting Canadians, economic opportunities, digital government and Canadian content. " [Link] [Comment] [Link] [Comment] Stephen Downes. Learning, networks, knowledge, technology, community. Gardner Writes. XML. Extensible Markup Language (XML) Nearby: XML Specifications and Translations of them. Introduction Extensible Markup Language (XML) is a simple, very flexible text format derived from SGML (ISO 8879). Originally designed to meet the challenges of large-scale electronic publishing, XML is also playing an increasingly important role in the exchange of a wide variety of data on the Web and elsewhere. This page describes the work being done at W3C within the XML Activity, and how it is structured.

You can find and download formal technical specifications here, because we publish them. You will find links to W3C Recommendations, Proposed Recommendations, Working Drafts, conformance test suites and other documents on the pages for each Working Group. Please do not send us email asking us to help you learn a language or specification; there are plenty of resources online, and the people editing and developing the specifications are very busy. Working Groups XSLT Working Group The Efficient XML Interchange Working Group Contact Note. XML Tutorial. Extensible Markup Language (XML) XML Introduction - What is XML?

Doing History Digitally | teaching and research in digital history. Teaching with TEI | Doing History Digitally. Why Isn’t the Digital Humanities Community Building Great MOOCs? In spite of the fact that I’m a mathematician, I’ve been fairly active in the digital humanities (DH) community for a while now. I’m interested in creative and effective uses of educational technology, and, in the humanities, that means tracking what’s happening among the DH community.

Many of the examples of educational technology I include in my talks and workshops come from this community, and here at Vanderbilt I’m an active participant in the DH seminar organized by our humanities center. I offer this to provide some context for the following question: Why isn’t the digital humanities community producing the most amazing MOOCs around? MOOCs are massive, open, online courses. Many members of the DH community appreciate and build projects that are massive, open, and online. Why are these DHers not leveraging this expertise to build the most interesting, most creative, and most significant MOOCs that higher education has ever seen? Okay, I admit, these questions are mostly rhetorical. Text Encoding Initiative. Official logo The Text Encoding Initiative (TEI) is a text-centric community of practice in the academic field of digital humanities, operating continuously since the 1980s. The community currently runs a mailing list, meetings and conference series, and maintains an eponymous technical standard, a wiki, a SourceForge repository and a toolchain.

The TEI Guidelines[edit] The TEI Guidelines, which collectively define an XML format, are the defining output of the community of practice. The format differs from other well-known open formats for text (such as HTML and OpenDocument) in that it's primarily semantic rather than presentational; the semantics and interpretation of every tag and attribute are specified. Technical Details[edit] The standard is split into two parts, a discursive textual description with extended examples and discussion and set of tag-by-tag definitions. Many users of the format don't use the complete range of tags but produce a customisation with a subset of the tags. Trevor Owens | User Centered Digital History.