View allAll Photos Tagged InformationManagement

Can't believe I missed Data Privacy Day (January 28) again! But here's a reminder - to protect & safeguard our private data & that of our children too... This is my 'Tiny big DATA by Su_G' in an Isobar Wallpaper mockup (c/o Roostery)

 

Words to live by for 'big DATA' lovers, & wallpaper heaven in a gradient! The word "DATA" fades in & out in a black to pale gray gradient - with a tiny "big" appearing just at the palest point. Looks terrific as wallpaper - for a tiny-BIG impression.

Line art.

© Su Schaefer 2017

 

See 'Tiny big DATA by Su_G' as fabric @ Spoonflower, or - even better! - 'Tiny big DATA by Su_G' as commercial-grade wallpaper (and other interior decor items) @ Roostery.

 

'BIG DATA... by Su_G' is a related design while 'big blue' data fans may prefer 'DATA, bright-dark-bright blue... '.

 

[2Tiny big DATA by Su_G_Isobar Wallpaper_Roostery-mockup]

Which Way To Go?

 

The Executives Images were taken in my studio with two studio lights to mimic the light form the sun. A small beauty dish with a diffuser high and behind on high power to create the sunlight and a very large Octagon on low power for fill-in more from the front. The desert image was taken in Egypt a few years ago. The sky, road sign and the executives (basically me in different clothes) were taken earlier today.

  

If you take enough shots, sooner or later you’ll have to start organizing them. Here in flickr we call them sets and collections. The question then is: what’s the best way to do it?

 

Of course, there isn’t any one or simple answer. Whether they are pro, novice, commercial, or artistic photographers, no two people will organize their collection the same way. Most people will employ at least some of the more universally accepted ways to group images: by date, event, person, or subject. They might use some of the traditional categories in photography: people and portraits; nature, landscapes, and flowers; travel, place and architecture; documentary and photojournalism; animals; still life; macros and abstracts… But no two people will use the exact same groupings, and the more specific arrangements within these very general categories will vary widely from person to person.

 

People will also differ significantly in their desire and the extent to which they organize their images. Meticulous photographers might create a very complex archive with all sorts of hierarchies and subgroups. Compulsive souls might even drive themselves crazy trying to construct the most efficient, comprehensive system. At the other extreme, free-wheeling people might barely organize their images at all, which may feel perfectly OK to them, although they might have a hard time finding things.

 

As in all classification systems or “taxonomies,” the more things you have, the more categories you’ll probably need. The process can get quite complex. There are many ways to slice a pie. The categories you start off with may not work well later on. And the way you organize images for your own personal archive may be different than the collections you create for showing your images to others, as in flickr. The former usually revolves around the necessity to keep images organized so you can find them. The latter is more about how you want to present your concept and vision of photography to others.

 

In either case, though, your taxonomy can reveal a lot about your work. What types of shots do you specialize in? Why types do you tend to ignore, or maybe even avoid? If you compare your classification system to those of others, you’ll quickly notice the differences. Your taxonomy reveals how you think, how you like to remember things, your personality style and life. What kind of a person focuses on travel, people, or texture shots? What kind of a person dislikes those types of shots? What does it mean if you are broadening or narrowing down the range of images you create?

 

The world is a very intricate place. Although we find it reassuring and useful to organize all that complexity into categories, everything out there rarely fits into neat little boxes. Things often fall into the cracks between the boxes. We are forced to create catch-all categories. Despite our best efforts, we eventually realize that everything slides along a complex network of overlapping continuums. When it comes right down to it, our system for ordering the shots we take of this intricate world say more about us than about some objective truth about photography or the world.

 

Some would even claim that creativity happens when we step out of those boxes that restrict the way we think about photography and the world we try to “capture” with it.

 

* This image and essay are part of my research project The CyberPsychology of Flickr . I’m using these kinds of images and essays to stimulate discussions about life in flickr. Feel free to offer your comments. I appreciate your input!

 

* This image and essay also are part of a book on Photographic Psychology that I’m writing within Flickr.

 

We need accurate information to plan and monitor eye services. SOUTH AFRICA.

Photo: Elmien Wolvaardt Ellison

Published in the Community Eye Health Journal  www.cehjournal.org: Vol. 23 No. 74 DECEMBER 2010

Boxed in: A snapshot of the BC government's current paper storage system, which the newly introduced Government Information Act aims to modernize with digital information management.

 

Learn more: www.newsroom.gov.bc.ca/2015/02/act-brings-bcs-information...

 

As the Human Face of Big Data project proves, Big Data is everywhere - and EMC technologies are helping the world to benefit from its dramatic power. Are you in? emc.im/RU2yw3

 

Volunteers’ commitment to record keeping has been crucial to the success of the Mectizan® Donation Program. BURUNDI

Photo: Adrian Hopkins

Published in the Community Eye Health Journal  www.cehjournal.org: Vol. 23 No. 74 DECEMBER 2010

I hope you find the poster helpful! E-mail me if you prefer a .PDF version of the poster. The .PDF is formatted for (tabloid) 11x17in. paper printing.

 

It can be printed to letter size sheets by selecting the corresponding options from your printer's print menu.

 

Take care!

Alfonso Lerma

KHA, Online-MSDS

419-287-6832

a.lerma@online-msds.com

www.online-msds.com

 

Plan, execute, settle and measure your supply chain with solutions from CTSI-Global.

 

► Benchmark ► Procure Rates ► Routing Guide ► Shipment Optimization

► Carrier Selection ► Shipment Execution

► Freight Audit and Payment

► Information Management

Tawnya Coulter, the Europe District records manager, receives the Achievement Medal for Civilian Service from Col. Peter Helmlinger, district commander, during an award ceremony Oct. 3 at the Amelia Earhart Center in Wiesbaden, Germany. Coulter, who had served in the position since April 2012, performed at the highest level and played a major role in keeping the district on track with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers record management program, according to the award citation. In addition to consistently completing her duties with excellence and self-motivation on the Information Management team, she implemented several successful initiatives to improve operations and procedures. (U.S. Army Corps of Engineers photo by Vince Little)

At the end of the day, or later in the week, information from the clinic-held record is entered into the computer database. SWAZILAND

Photo: Jenni Sandford

Published in:

Community Eye Health Journal  www.cehjournal.org: Vol. 23 No. 74 DECEMBER 2010

Revue de Santé Oculaire Communautaire: Vol. 9 No. 11 JANVIER 2012 www.revuesoc.com

A llama and a dino looking inside the library cause everybody wants to read!

Tawnya Coulter, the Europe District records manager, receives the Achievement Medal for Civilian Service from Col. Peter Helmlinger, district commander, during an award ceremony Oct. 3 at the Amelia Earhart Center in Wiesbaden, Germany. Coulter, who had served in the position since April 2012, performed at the highest level and played a major role in keeping the district on track with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers record management program, according to the award citation. In addition to consistently completing her duties with excellence and self-motivation on the Information Management team, she implemented several successful initiatives to improve operations and procedures. (U.S. Army Corps of Engineers photo by Vince Little)

Photo: Paddy Ricard.

Published in: Revue de Santé Oculaire Communautaire: Vol. 9 No. 11 JANVIER 2012 www.revuesoc.com

Photo: Victoria Francis.

Published in the Community Eye Health Journal Vol. 18 No. 56 DECEMBER 2005 www.cehjournal.org

© Elmien Wolvaardt Ellison

 

Published in: Community Eye Health Journal Vol. 26 No. 83 2013 www.cehjournal.org

Under Atea Insikt får du inblick och förståelse i success-stories från olika delar av verksamheten, men också om fallgropar och lärdomar på vägen. www.atea.se/insikt/

Photo: Pak Sang Lee.

Published in:

Community Eye Health Journal Vol. 14 No. 36 2000 www.cehjournal.orgCommunity Eye Health Journal Vol. 15 No. 44 2002 www.cehjournal.org

Staff being trained to use the Health Management Information System (HMIS). KENYA

Photo: Wanjiku Mathenge

Published in:

Community Eye Health Journal  www.cehjournal.org: Vol. 23 No. 74 DECEMBER 2010

Revue de Santé Oculaire Communautaire: Vol. 9 No. 11 JANVIER 2012 www.revuesoc.com

Patients’ records must provide an accurate account of their hospital stay. SOUTH AFRICA

Photo: Elmien Wolvaardt Ellison

Published in:

Community Eye Health Journal  www.cehjournal.org: Vol. 23 No. 74 DECEMBER 2010

Revue de Santé Oculaire Communautaire: Vol. 9 No. 11 JANVIER 2012 www.revuesoc.com

Photo: Anaïs Rolland-Jacob.

Published in: Revue de Santé Oculaire Communautaire: Vol. 9 No. 11 JANVIER 2012 www.revuesoc.com

Photo: Ferdinand Ama.

Published in: Revue de Santé Oculaire Communautaire: Vol. 9 No. 11 JANVIER 2012 www.revuesoc.com

Photo: Laura Crow/Sightsavers.

Published in: Revue de Santé Oculaire Communautaire: Vol. 9 No. 11 JANVIER 2012 www.revuesoc.com

(From left) Jason Dukes, from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Europe District Information Management section, James Franklin and Ryan Boone, both from the District Logistics Management section, load a container with office supplies and IT equipment May 7, 2009, in Wiesbaden, Germany, headed for a new district project office in Bulgaria. (U.S. Army Corps of Engineers photo by Carol Davis)

© Jonathan Pons

Published in:

Community Eye Health Journal Vol. 25 No. 78 2012 www.cehjournal.org

Ilustración para un informe publicado en el diario Uno (20 enero 2011).

© Heiko Philippin

 

Published in: Community Eye Health Journal Vol. 26 No. 83 2013 www.cehjournal.org

1 3 4 5 6 7 ••• 18 19